ReportWire

Tag: Red Rocks Amphitheatre

  • Hiker injured after falling off trail at Red Rocks in Colorado

    [ad_1]

    A hiker was injured on Christmas Eve after falling 20 feet from a trail near the visitor center at Red Rocks Park & Amphitheatre.

    West Metro Fire Rescue first posted about the rescue operation at 4:23 p.m. Wednesday. By that time, paramedics had already taken the hiker to the hospital in critical condition, the agency said.

    Limited information was available about the Wednesday incident, but West Metro officials said members of the agency’s technical team hiked up the trail to carry the unidentified patient out to a waiting ambulance.

    West Metro officials did not specify which trail the hiker fell from.

    [ad_2]

    Lauren Penington

    Source link

  • 2026 Denver concert season taking shape: My Chemical Romance, Ed Sheeran and more

    [ad_1]

    It’s not too early to start planning for 2026 concerts, given that tickets for some of these just-announced shows are already on sale as of this week. Here are seven big shows coming to metro Denver next year.

    Chris Pizzello, Invision/AP

    Cardi B performs at the BET Awards on Sunday, June 23, 2019, at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles.

    Cardi B

    Bronx hip hop queen Cardi B is taking to the road for her new album “Am I the Drama?” with a March 9, 2026, concert scheduled for Ball Arena. Tickets for that Little Miss Drama tour stop are available as of Monday, Sept. 22 via ticketmaster.com.

    Yonder Mountain String Band

    Colorado bluegrass favorites Yonder Mountain String Band are set to play Frisco’s 10 Mile Music Hall (Jan. 8, 2026), followed by a two-night run in Denver at Cervantes Masterpiece Ballroom, Jan. 9-10, 2026, as part of a winter tour that extends through March. Tickets are on sale at 10 a.m. Friday, Sept. 26, at etix.com. Prices are not yet available.

    Ed Sheeran

    British singer-songwriter Sheeran returns to Empower Field at Mile High on July 4, 2026, as part of his seemingly never-ending tour over the past three years (also part of the North American leg of his Loop Tour). The public on-sale period begins at 10 a.m. Friday, Sept. 26, via promoter AEG Presents’ axs.com. Ticket prices were not immediately available.

    Ray LaMontagne

    The 20th anniversary of this singer-songwriter’s album, “Trouble,” arrived back in 2024, but LaMontagne is still plotting his “Trouble” shows with a sentimental Red Rocks Amphitheatre concert on Aug. 26, 2026, with opener Weather Station. Tickets, $80-$272, are on sale at axs.com.

    My Chemical Romance

    This pop-punk act is joining dozens of other big names in playing one of its classic albums all the way through on tour — in this case, the moody 2006 chart-topper “The Black Parade.” The band’s nostalgia run has a wide canvas, with an Aug. 27, 2026, concert already set for the 50,000-seat Coors Field, including opening act and ’90s trailblazers The Breeders, which is enjoying its own comeback in recent years. Tickets are on sale at noon on Friday, Sept. 26 via ticketmaster.com. Prices are not yet available.

    Wil Baptiste, left, and Kev Marcus are the classical/hip hop duo Black Violin. (Colin Brennan, provided by Gold Mountain Entertainment)
    Wil Baptiste, left, and Kev Marcus are the classical/hip hop duo Black Violin. (Colin Brennan, provided by Gold Mountain Entertainment)

    Black Violin

    Downtown Denver’s historic Paramount Theatre already has an impressive 20 comedy, touring-celeb and music shows (including ABBA and Bee Gees tribute acts) booked for 2026. But our current favorite is Black Violin, the classical-meets-hip-hop duo of Lauderdale, Fla.’s Kev Marcus and Wil B. The act plays on April 21, 2026; tickets, $48.70, are on sale at ticketmaster.com.

    Subscribe to our weekly newsletter, In The Know, to get entertainment news sent straight to your inbox.

    [ad_2]

    John Wenzel

    Source link

  • Pilot program for public transportation at Red Rocks Amphitheatre launches this weekend

    [ad_1]

    MORRISON, Colo. — Red Rocks Amphitheatre hosts hundreds of shows and welcomes more than a million visitors each year, but for many, getting to and from the venue has always been an issue.

    “I know it’s just such a pain to drive here,” said Daniel De La Corte, who was tailgating before Friday night’s Atmosphere & Friends concert.

    Denver7 has reported on the push to expand public transit to the Jefferson County foothills. Now, a new public transportation option is in the works, and Saturday will mark the first test run.

    “I hope that tomorrow is like planting a flag in the ground, that this is coming, that we need people to use it and to participate,” said Ean Thomas Tafoya, the vice president of GreenLatinos.

    Denver7

    Pictured: Ean Thomas Tafoya

    Bringing public transport to Red Rocks is an idea Tafoya has backed for more than a decade.

    “This is a solution that, clearly, we need,” Tafoya said.

    From 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 20, shuttle buses will conduct a trial run between the Jefferson County Government Center and Morrison, with stops at Red Rocks, according to Jefferson County.

    • Check out the shuttle buses’ stops on the map below
    Red Rocks shuttle pilot program (Locator map)

    Next year, from Memorial Day through Labor Day, the plan is to run buses from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekends.

    The pilot program will run from 2026 to 2028. It’s paid for by an $840,000 grant from the Regional Transportation District (RTD).

    RED ROCKS.png

    Denver7

    Concertgoers walking into Red Rocks Ampitheater for a show

    While the service will end before the start of most concerts, Tafoya said the plan is to expand those hours in the future.

    “I hear people about being critical,” said Tafoya. “They want the whole tamale all at once, but we’re going to phase it in, and that’s the process.”

    Ahead of Saturday’s pilot, several people at Red Rocks told Denver7 they see it as a long-overdue solution.

    “Everybody needs access, everybody should have access,” said visitor Adriana Jimenez.


    D7 follow up bar 2460x400FINAL.png

    The Follow Up

    What do you want Denver7 to follow up on? Is there a story, topic or issue you want us to revisit? Let us know with the contact form below.

    [ad_2]

    Claire Lavezzorio

    Source link

  • Through the Lens: Scramble Campbell is Red Rocks’ unofficial artist-in-residence

    Through the Lens: Scramble Campbell is Red Rocks’ unofficial artist-in-residence

    [ad_1]

    Editor’s note: An untold number of unheralded artists live in Colorado, those creators who can’t (or don’t want to) get into galleries and rely on word of mouth, luck or social media to make a living. You’ve likely seen them on Instagram, at festivals or at small-town art fairs. This occasional series, Through the Lens, will introduce you to some of these artists.

    The last time you saw a concert at Red Rocks Amphitheatre, there’s a good chance that live-music artist Keith “Scramble” Campbell was there, painting a 3-by-4-foot abstract acrylic artwork of the very band you came to see.

    A fixture at the venue, Campbell has created more than 630 live paintings since his debut there in 2000, when he painted the band Widespread Panic. Immersed in the rhythm of the music, the artist moves with the beat, using his paintbrush like an instrument to capture the vibrant spirit and energy of the performance onto his canvas.

    Inspired from a young age by New York graffiti artists Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat, as well as the Spanish surrealist Salvador Dalí, he found his calling in emulating American speed painter Denny Dent, known for creating large-scale, 8-foot canvases of musicians in just 10 minutes, often at the Cherry Creek Arts Festival. Discovering live music painting, he says, transformed his life and solidified his path as an artist.

    “It seems easier to tell you which artists I haven’t painted versus the ones that I have,” he said recently. “I’ve painted over 1,000 live shows and 4,000 canvases in my career. It is a lifetime of going to shows all over the world. It isn’t just Red Rocks. If it’s live music, I will paint it.”

    Q: Where does your name come from?

    A: I was a speed roller skater in the 1970s and ’80s. I had a friend who called me Scramble because of the way I scrambled around the rink. Early on, I was heavily influenced by artists Andy Warhol, Bob Ross, LeRoy Neiman and Dalí. When I decided to make art my career, I felt like all of the influences from these artists were like an alphabet soup of names, a scramble of influences on me. I decided that Scramble would be a fitting name for me. (I also felt that it sounded a lot more creative than Keith and it rhymed with Campbell.)

    Q: Could you give us a brief history of how you became an artist?

    A: When I was in the seventh grade, I wanted to quit school because I knew I wanted to be an artist. My mother luckily convinced me it was wise to stay in school.

    In the late ’80s, New York City was deep in the rave culture and the graffiti scene with rising artists like Haring, Warhol and Basquiat.  They showed their work through nightclubs and public art. They were doing paintings on walls, in the subways and on the streets directly bringing art to the people. I was entranced by their work.

    In 1991, I answered an ad looking for a visual artist to paint live during a music festival. The man who placed the ad was Perry Farrell, of Jane’s Addiction. The music festival was Lollapalooza.

    When I got the job, it felt like the beginning of my career. I had had so many rejections over the years of trying to get into galleries and art shows. It was when I made the crossover from the art world into the music world that I really discovered my path as an artist.

    Live-music painter Keith “Scramble” Campbell looks through some of his archives in his studio at his home in Wheat Ridge on July 24, 2024. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)

    Throughout the ’90s, I did music festivals such as the New Orleans Jazz Festival, Lollapalooza, the HOARD festival, Bonnaroo, Woodstock ’94, the Lilith Fair and even the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. I have painted Widespread Panic 170 times.

    Q: What kind of artist are you?

    A: At heart, I am really a musician with a paintbrush. My instruments are my canvases, paintbrushes and paints.

    Acrylic paints are the medium of choice for live-music artist Keith “Scramble” Campbell. Here, he paints during a Tedeschi Trucks Band show at Red Rocks in Morrison on July 26, 2024. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)

    I like to think of myself as a conduit of music, transcribing their energy and their music into a dance on canvas.

    As a live artist, my paintings reflect the concert. I let the music and the environment dictate how I paint. If it’s windy and the music is hardcore, my paintings will reflect that. I’ll paint fast and furiously, the work looking abstract and impressionistic. I dance and move with the music as I paint. If there is a slower song in between, that is the time I take to fill in the details. The musicians, the weather, the people all play a role in the painting I create. I am trying to tell a story of that night. If it rains or is windy, I add that in my paintings. If there is a rainbow I will put that in there.  I am capturing the entire night into one canvas.

    Q: What kind of music do you like to paint to, and do you specifically stay within a specific genre?

    A: I don’t stick to any one genre. I have painted over 1,000 different bands and 4,000 canvases that include jam bands like Widespread Panic and Leftover Salmon to up-and-coming Christian rock bands. Next month, I’ll be painting King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard, an Australian rock band. I’ve had the opportunity to paint jazz legends Fats Domino, B.B. King, Chuck Berry, Little Richard and Jerry Lee Lewis. I’ve painted Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, Prince and other legends like Diana Ross, Melissa Etheridge, Carlos Santana, Blues Traveler, Lady Gaga with Tony Bennett, Johnny Winter and Tom Petty.

    It seems easier to tell you which artists I haven’t painted versus the ones that I have.

    Live music artist Keith “Scramble” Campbell, right, gets inundated with requests for selfies with fans while he paints during a recent Tedeschi Trucks Band show at Red Rocks in Morrison on July 26, 2024. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)

    Q: How did you end up becoming what seems like the artist-in-residence at Red Rocks?

    A: After a show in Florida, Todd Nance, the drummer for Widespread Panic, traded a summer tour pass for a painting I had done of the band. I ended up at my first Red Rocks show where the band played in June 2000. It was love at first sight when I did that show.

    Since then, I have done over 630 paintings at Red Rocks. I buy my own tickets and pay for every single concert that I go to. Red Rocks does not pay me to be there but they do allow me the space in which to paint.

    Live music artist Keith “Scramble” Campbell starts painting Margo Price, the warm-up act to Tedeschi Trucks Band at Red Rocks in Morrison on July 26, 2024. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)

    Q: Do you remember the first piece of art you ever got paid for?

    A: It was 1987 at one of my first group shows at a shopping mall where I sold a drawing of Joey Ramone. It was a studio piece before I was a live-music artist. I guess I have always been a music artist. even from the start.

    Live music artist Keith “Scramble” Campbell paints musician Margo Price, the warm-up act to Tedeschi Trucks Band, as she performs at Red Rocks in Morrison on July 26, 2024. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)

    Q: Where can we see your art?

    A: On my website (scramblecampbell.com), but I invite people to come see me live at Row 23 at Red Rocks. I also have small paintings, postcards, magnets and other items for sale at the Red Rocks Trading Post.

    Q: Do you have a favorite art piece?

    A: I did a painting of Lou Reed in 1998 in Bethel, N.Y., on the original Woodstock grounds for the 29th anniversary of the original Woodstock. I got to talk to him and meet him afterwards and he signed the back of my painting. There are also paintings I’ve done of legendary musicians, like B.B. King and Fats Domino, who have since died. All of these paintings I love and will never sell.

    Q: What memorable responses have you had to your work?

    A: I showed David Crosby a painting I had just done of him and he said, “Not bad for speed painting.” Another time when I showed my painting to James Brown, he said, “Son, I’d like to thank you for coming out and painting my portrait.” He signed the entire back of the painting and said “I feel good. James Brown.”

    Live music artist Keith “Scramble” Campbell paints during the Tedeschi Trucks Band performance at Red Rocks in Morrison on July 26, 2024. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)
    Live music artist Keith “Scramble” Campbell paints during the Tedeschi Trucks Band show at Red Rocks in Morrison on July 26, 2024. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)

    [ad_2]

    Helen H. Richardson

    Source link

  • Big concerts and comedy shows in Denver in June

    Big concerts and comedy shows in Denver in June

    [ad_1]

    Sylvan Esso plays Red Rocks, July 18, 2018. (Courtesy Kevin J. Beaty)

    The summer solstice won’t hit until June 20 this year, but the Real Hot Girl vibes are already in full swing at some of Colorado’s biggest venues.

    Big acts at Empower Field

    The home of Denver football is joining in on the concert fun, hosting two superstar country acts where touchdowns are scored: Morgan Wallen and Zach Bryan.

    Closing out 2023 as Billboard’s top new artist, Bryan will be in town on June 14 and 15 for “The Quittin Time Tour.”

    Later in the month, Wallen will be in Denver for two nights on June 27 and 28 after sitting atop the country charts.

    Also on the schedule: In the week between the country superstars, legendary rock band The Rolling Stones will play at Empower Field on June 20.

    Amphitheatre fun!

    The first screening of this year’s Film on the Rocks (“The Matrix”) will be on June 10, with more music and comedic acts filling out the month’s calendar.

    Comedians Steve Martin and Martin Short will humor Red Rocks Amphitheatre on June 14.

    Legendary diva and Motown legend Diana Ross will be at Red Rocks on June 27.

    Brooklyn MC Nas closes out the month with the help of the Colorado Symphony on June 30.

    Ruby Hill’s Levitt Pavilion will also host free and ticketed shows at their outdoor venue throughout the month. That includes this year’s The Drop 104.7 4th annual block party on June 8 where Chicago rapper Common will perform, with Denver’s very own Chinelo Tyler opening

    Here are some of the big shows in Denver in June:

    Wanda Sykes at Paramount Theatre

    Date: Saturday, June 1
    Time: 5 & 7:30 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $49.50

    Sarah McLachlan at Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    Date: Friday, June 7
    Time: 7:30 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $149

    Common, The DROP 4th Annual Party at Levitt Pavilion

    Date: Saturday, June 8
    Time: 7 p.m.
    Price: Free

    Steve Martin and Martin Short at Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    Date: Friday, June 14
    Time: 8 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $150

    Zach Bryan at Empower Field

    Date: Friday & Saturday, June 14-15
    Time: 7 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $135.50

    Janet Jackson and Nelly at Ball Arena

    Date: Sunday, June 16
    Time: 8 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $40

    Megan Thee Stallion at Ball Arena

    Date: Monday, June 17
    Time: 8 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $49.50

    The Rolling Stones at Empower Field

    Date: Thursday, June 20
    Time: 7:30 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $125.50

    Diana Ross at Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    Date: Thursday, June 27
    Time: 7:30 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $59

    Morgan Wallen at Empower Field

    Date: Thursday & Friday, June 27-28
    Time: 6 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $140

    New Kids on the Block with Paula Abdul & DJ Jazzy Jeff at Ball Arena

    Date: Friday, June 28
    Time: 7 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $29.95

    Nas with the Colorado Symphony at Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    Date: Sunday, June 30
    Time: 6 p.m.
    Price: Starting at $79.95

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Where are Denver’s worst parking lots? Here are the city’s biggest offenders — and a few in the suburbs, too.

    Where are Denver’s worst parking lots? Here are the city’s biggest offenders — and a few in the suburbs, too.

    [ad_1]

    Too few parking spaces, lengthy queues for open spots, cramped designs that can’t handle crowds — Denver-area drivers brace themselves for headaches when they try to navigate the most stress-inducing parking lots in the city and beyond.

    The Denver Post went searching for the worst parking lots in metro Denver, with help from more than 100 people who weighed in with their opinions in an informal survey on social media platforms X and Facebook. Within Denver’s city limits, older central neighborhoods like Capitol Hill — where space is at a premium — host parking lots that received an onslaught of criticism.

    But that doesn’t mean suburban communities are immune to precarious parking set-ups.

    Poor parking lot experiences can affect drivers’ loyalty to a business, one expert says. Consumers are constantly forming judgments about brands, so “parking is one of the critical elements for brands to get right,” said Brent Coker, a marketing lecturer at the University of Melbourne.

    “Everything that happens to a consumer informs their attitude, which defines their future behavior,” including purchase decisions made minutes later, the Australian said. “If the carpark sucks, then yeah — that’s gonna give someone a negative attitude.”

    Here are the parking lots that stand out the most in Denver:

    1. Trader Joe’s urban locations

    Grocery store chain Trader Joe’s has two Denver locations in older neighborhoods, with small lots that challenge drivers in Capitol Hill on Logan Street and in Hale on Colorado Boulevard.

    “It’s no secret that Trader Joe’s parking lots are a nightmare,” said customer Rob Toftness, 42. “You add in their tight quarters with drivers’ inability to behave like adults, and you have a difficult recipe.”

    On a rainy Monday afternoon, shoppers weren’t deterred from completing their errands at the Capitol Hill store. They stepped in front of cars waiting for openings in the lot. Drivers tried to squeeze into narrow spots, parking haphazardly before darting into the store themselves.

    Four cars were queued in the left lane on Logan Street, turn signals blinking as they waited to enter.

    However, for cyclists and pedestrians, the store is a breeze to navigate. Toftness, a Five Points resident, opts to ride his bike along the 7th Avenue bikeway, then locks it at the bike rack while he shops.

    In an episode of the company’s podcast, Inside Trader Joe’s, co-host Matt Sloan said, “We don’t open stores with the world’s most ridiculous parking lot on purpose.” The size of a Trader Joe’s lot is based on the store’s square footage, with the chain’s locations often smaller than the average grocery store, especially when they’re squeezed into older neighborhoods.

    “Stores of a more recent vintage — more recently open stores — have larger parking lots when we can get them,” Sloan added.

    Trader Joe’s spokesperson Nakia Rohde declined to respond further.

    A shopper exits a King Soopers grocery store on Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2024, in Capitol Hill in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

    2. King Soopers in Capitol Hill

    The King Soopers grocery store on East Ninth Avenue leaves local customers lamenting the amount of time it can take to secure a parking spot in the main lot.

    Those who choose to park in the overflow lot are also inconvenienced, as the anti-theft wheel locks on shopping carts engage at the edges of the main lot, forcing patrons to carry their groceries across a busy street. Nine cars idled in the parking lot on a Monday afternoon, as drivers tried to park or back out of spots.

    Kara King, 33, said she’s never secured a parking spot on her first go-round.

    “You constantly have to circle the lot, waiting for one to open up,” the Speer neighborhood resident said. “Otherwise, your option is to park on the street and haul your groceries to your car.”

    King Soopers spokesperson Jessica Trowbridge didn’t respond to requests for comment.

    3. Whole Foods Market in Cherry Creek

    At the Whole Foods Market on East First Avenue in Cherry Creek, customers’ criticisms are largely directed at its lot design.

    “Whole Foods in Cherry Creek is awful,” said customer Krista Chism, 48. “All the spaces are designed for compact cars.”

    She called the lanes “too narrow,” which heightens the risk of hitting another vehicle parked behind her car while reversing. When she visits, “I seriously weigh the cost of paying to park against the possible cost of someone hitting my car,” the Park Hill resident said.

    This Whole Foods location has long been notorious, with Westword referring to it in 2011 as “singularly the worst parking lot in the city.”

    The Whole Foods media team didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    4. Denver Botanic Gardens

    Visiting the Denver Botanic Gardens often comes with parking difficulties on busy weekends, despite a dedicated parking garage. The gardens are most heavily trafficked by guests during events, including Blossoms of Light, Glow at the Gardens, the Spring Plant Sale and the Summer Concert Series, said Erin Bird, associate director of communications. Popular times for visitors also include warm, sunny weekends and Scientific and Cultural Facilities District free days.

    Bird said representatives understood visitors’ parking frustrations and urged guests to take extra time to secure parking in either the garage or the surrounding neighborhood.

    “The Gardens’ multi-level parking structure was designed to maximize the limited space we have due to our location that borders city parks in an established residential neighborhood,” she said. “Timed entry has eased some of the parking strain.”

    Denver's flagship REI store on the ...
    Denver’s flagship REI store on the South Platte River, pictured on Sept. 11, 2012, has a front surface lot (shown), an underground garage and auxiliary lots. (Photo by John Leyba/The Denver Post)

    5. REI Co-op’s flagship store

    The REI Co-Op Denver flagship store on Platte Street near downtown is the source of consistent parking gripes, including tight spaces, incidents of bike theft and the price to pay to park for lengthy shopping trips (after a 90-minute grace period).

    Patrons say the outdoor co-op attracts the most crowds during the weekend, but that doesn’t mean its ground-level parking areas don’t fill up at times during the week, too. On a recent Wednesday evening, the metered street parking was also mostly occupied as a few customers dashed across the busy street to the former Denver Tramway Powerhouse building that now houses the retail chain.

    The REI store earns 4.5 out of 5 stars on Google reviews, but at least 20 one-star reviews mention parking troubles. The designs of one surface parking lot and the underground garage are noted as cramped. One reviewer wrote: “The store itself really is great. But PLEASE fix the parking.”

    The REI media team didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    What about the suburbs?

    Outside of Denver, plenty of parking lots throughout the metro area give shoppers and visitors grief, too. Here are some notable ones:

    Costco: The warehouse club chain’s locations in Lone Tree, on Park Meadows Center Drive, and in Arvada, on Wadsworth Boulevard, draw particular complaints about parking lots that rattle the nerves. Costco stores face guff elsewhere, too: On Reddit, a thread asking the question “What’s your Costco’s parking lot situation?” has garnered hundreds of responses. Objections include waiting for spots during busy shopping hours and aggression in parking lots, such as honking, cursing and even car accidents. The Costco media team didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    Construction workers pour concrete in the upper parking lot at Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre on Feb. 6, 2024, in Morrison. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)
    Construction workers pour concrete in the upper parking lot at Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre on Feb. 6, 2024, in Morrison. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)

    [ad_2]

    Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton

    Source link

  • Tim McGraw, Gucci Mane, Marshmello and more: Big acts coming to Denver in April | Denverite

    Tim McGraw, Gucci Mane, Marshmello and more: Big acts coming to Denver in April | Denverite

    [ad_1]

    Red Rocks Ampitheatre. (Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite)

    Country, EDM, hip hop and comedy stars will be some of the big names to visit Denver in the month of April

    It’ll be slim offerings in the month of April for Ball Arena, especially after the cancellation of both Drake shows.

    One big name still on the Ball Arena calendar? American country singer and songwriter Tim McGraw, who kicked off his “Standing Room Only” tour on March 14 following the release of his 17th studio album. He’ll be hitting more than 30 cities, including Denver on April 4.

    Meanwhile, Red Rocks Amphitheatre will be in full swing in April, hosting headliners like Marshmello, SVDDEN DEATH, Alesso and Ice Cube.

    Click here for the full Red Rocks 2024 concert lineup

    This year’s 4/20 festivities will also bring in big music acts. “420 On The Rocks” at Red Rocks will be headlined by rapper Wiz Khalifa, Flatbush Zombies, Earthgang, Chevy Woods and more.

    On the same day, the annual Mile High 420 Festival at Civic Center Park will be headlined by Gucci Mane, Ohgeesy, Afroman and more.

    Rising comedy star Matt Rife will also be in town at the Bellco Theatre on a six-show run for his ProbleMATTic World Tour, April 5 to April 7.

    Here are some of the big shows in Denver in April:

    Tim McGraw at Ball Arena

    Date: Thursday, April 4

    Time: 7 p.m.

    Price: Tickets start at $95

    Marshmello and SVDDEN DEATH at Red Rocks Amphitheatre 

    Date: Thursday, April 4

    Time: 8 p.m.

    Price: Tickets start at $95

    Matt Rife at Bellco Theatre 

    Date: April 5-7

    Price: Tickets start at $70

    Alesso at Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    Date: Thursday, April 11

    Time: 7 p.m.

    Price: Tickets start at $60

    Ice Cube, The Game, Bone Thugs-N-Harmony at Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    Date: Friday, April 19

    Time: 6:30 p.m.

    Price: Tickets start at $110

    Wiz Khalifa, Flatbush Zombies, Earthgang at Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    Date: Saturday, April 20

    Time: 6 p.m.

    Price: Tickets start at $115

    Mile High 420 Festival at Civic Center Park

    Date: Saturday, April 20

    Time: 1 p.m.

    Price: Free

    [ad_2]

    Source link