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Buffett announces Palm Springs show in March 2023
Singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band announced the dates of their forthcoming Life On the Flip Side Redux Tour 2023. The band is making a Southern California stop at the new Acrisure Arena in Palm Desert on Tuesday, March 7.
Tickets for the show go on sale Friday, Dec. 2 at 10 a.m. at Ticketmaster.com.
The soft opening for the newly built 11,000-seat and 300,000-square-foot Acrisure Arena will feature an evening of comedy with Chris Rock and Dave Chappelle on Dec. 14; a performance by the Doobie Brothers on Dec. 15; Latin Grammy-nominated Banda Grupo Firme will follow on Dec. 16; and Maroon 5 will headline on New Year’s Eve.
Music + Concerts | Jimmy Buffett will headline the new Acrisure…
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Music + concerts, music + concerts | jimmy buffett will headline the new acrisure arena in palm desert in march, tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. friday, dec. 2..
Singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band announced the dates of their forthcoming Life On the Flip Side Redux Tour 2023. The band is making a Southern California stop at the new Acrisure Arena in Palm Desert on Tuesday, March 7.
Tickets for the show go on sale Friday, Dec. 2 at 10 a.m. at Ticketmaster.com .
Buffett is known for hits such as “Margaritaville,” “Cheeseburger in Paradise” and “Take Another Road.” He also recorded “Mack the Knife,” a cover duet with Frank Sinatra for his last studio album. Buffett also launched Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville, a United States-based hospitality company that manages and franchises a casual dining American restaurant chain, like the one at Universal Studios Hollywood’s CityWalk , a chain of stores selling Jimmy Buffett-themed merchandise and casinos with lodging facilities.
The soft opening for the newly built 11,000-seat and 300,000-square-foot Acrisure Arena will feature an evening of comedy with Chris Rock and Dave Chappelle on Dec. 14; a performance by the Doobie Brothers on Dec. 15; Latin Grammy-nominated Banda Grupo Firme will follow on Dec. 16; and Maroon 5 will headline on New Year’s Eve.
For the venue’s official grand opening, The Eagles will perform Feb. 24 and 25, 2023. Sporting events and other family-friendly shows are also slated for the arena’s programming.
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Review: Jimmy Buffett and Jason Mraz turn Snapdragon Stadium into a giant beach party, 8 miles inland
The first concert at the new stadium in San Diego’s Mission Valley had a capacity of 28,000 and drew a near full-house. The audio quality was much better than at many stadium shows
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Jimmy Buffett and Jason Mraz have each performed numerous times in San Diego over the years — Buffett since the early 1970s and native Virginian-turned-Oceanside resident Mraz since the late 1990s. But Saturday night was the first instance in memory at which either played second fiddle here to a large, new, outdoor concrete edifice.
So, take a bow, Snapdragon Stadium, which opened last September as the home of San Diego State University’s Aztecs football team — and this weekend made its largely promising debut as a concert venue.
“I don’t usually wear a suit, but this is such a special occasion I had to dapper it up a bit,” said Mraz, 45, prior to performing the buoyant, reggae-infused “Wise Woman,” the fourth song in his engaging, hour-long set. “I thought this day would never get here, but I’m glad it did.”
Longtime Buffett collaborator Mac McAnally was, in fact, the first artist to perform at Saturday’s concert. The show had been pushed back from its original date last October, after Buffett was hospitalized for undisclosed reasons.
Now 76, the star of the night was in good spirits as he took to the stage at 7 p.m. He warmly greeted the audience, then introduced McAnally, who did an engaging, five-song opening set with percussionist Erik Darken.
“We finally made it!” Buffett, clad in a track warm-up suit, told the cheering audience. “Thank you for waiting.”
Prior to his first number, “Blame It On New Orleans,” McAnnaly said: “We are honored to kick off the inaugural concert at Snapdragon Stadium.”
Buffett and Mraz delivered crowd-pleasing sets with their respective bands, each of which performed with a winning combination of polished precision and festive celebration.
Mraz and his brassy band performed tender ballads, funk-fueled romps and the disco-styled “I Feel Like Dancing” with equal poise and verve. He gave some extended solos to his musicians — something rarely heard in a stadium setting — and tenor saxophonist Carlos Sosa and guitarist Molly Miller were especially impressive.
Buffett opened with the tropical-flavored “Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes,” the title track of the 1977 album that propelled him from cult status to stardom. He concluded a bit more than 90 minutes later with an animated version of Crosby, Stills & Nash’s “Southern Cross.”
In between came 16 other songs, including such favorites as “Fins,” “A Pirate Looks at 40,” “Cheeseburger in Paradise” and the inevitable “Margaritaville.”
Buffett fondly recalled his first gigs here, 40 years ago, “at a coffee shop at SDSU” — the now-defunct Back Door — and sprinkled in a number of local references during his set. (Mraz in turn gave a shout out to Java Joe’s, the Ocean Beach coffee house where he got his start.)
Buffett’s enduring appeal was perhaps best summarized Saturday by Lauren Mackin, who flew in from Arizona with her husband, Brian, a 27-time Buffett-concertgoer, their 19-year-old son, Darren, and his girlfriend, Emily.
“The great thing about a Jimmy Buffett concert,” Lauren Mackin said, “is that it’s like you’re at a karaoke bar with 50,000 of your best friends that you didn’t know you had.”
The concert’s promoters declined to disclose the attendance, but it looked like close to a full house for the 28,000-capacity show at Snapdragon. The new venue is at the same Mission Valley site that once housed San Diego Stadium, San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium, Qualcomm Stadium and SDCCU Stadium — to cite the four successive names of the larger stadium that used to stand there.
With a concert capacity of 28,000 — 7,000 less than for football games and other sporting events — Snapdragon is, by comparison, an intimate, streamlined venue. It seats half as many people as the sprawling, 53-year-old stadium it replaced.
The sight-lines were good from most of the nearly dozen locations I watched from during the course of Saturday’s nearly four-hour event. And the sound was much better than at any concert I can recall attending at the previous stadium.
The crisp, well-balanced audio mix may also reflect the skill of Buffett and Mraz’s respective sound engineers. They, thankfully, resisted the urge to turn everything up to 11, which has long been an unfortunate tendency for far too many stadium music acts.
Where Snapdragon faltered Saturday was in the extremely long wait times for concertgoers to purchase food and, more often, drinks.
While there’s no known scientific study, so far, that confirms Buffett’s fans consume significantly more alcoholic beverages than college football-game attendees, the inordinately long lines at his concert here suggest that may well be the case.
Then again, by the end of the night, a couple seated in front of this reviewer posed for a selfie with 10 empty plastic cognac glasses that they had consumed during the concert.
And Buffett, a billionaire whose empire includes more than one alcohol-related product, was happy to toast the crowd in song, at one point ad-libbing the lyric: “What would Jimmy Buffett do right now? Go to the Belly Up and buy you a drink!”
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Singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band announced the dates of their forthcoming Life On the Flip Side Redux Tour 2023. The band is making a Southern California stop at the new Acrisure Arena in Palm Desert on Tuesday, March 7. Tickets for the show go on sale Friday, Dec. 2 at 10 a.m. at Ticketmaster.com. The soft opening for the
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Singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band announced the dates of their forthcoming Life On the Flip Side Redux Tour 2023. The band is making a Southern California stop at the new Acrisure Arena in Palm Desert on Tuesday, March 7. Tickets for the show go on sale Friday, Dec. 2 at 10 a.m. at Ticketmaster.com.
Jimmy Buffett and Jason Mraz have each performed numerous times in San Diego over the years — Buffett since the early 1970s and native Virginian-turned-Oceanside resident Mraz since the late 1990s.
Jimmy Buffett (December 25, 1946 – September 1, 2023) was a musician, author, and entrepreneur, well-known for popularizing Gulf and Western music and the "island escapism" lifestyle associated with it. Originally from Pascagoula, Mississippi, Buffett began his career in the late 1960s and early '70s busking on the streets of New Orleans and ...
James William Buffett. (December 25, 1946 - September 1, 2023) The beloved singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett passed away at his home in Sag Harbor, Long Island on Friday September 1, 2023 surrounded by family and friends. Buffett, 76, had been fighting Merkel Cell Skin Cancer for four years. He continued to perform during treatment, playing his ...