Find more presales for shows in Newmarket, GB
Show Five presales in more places
Keep On Movin' with Five
Formed by the team behind the Spice Girls and signed early by Simon Cowell, Five fused boy-band hooks with hip-hop chants and rock heft.
From chart charge to reunion chapter
Today they perform as a tight trio, a new chapter that reshapes parts and harmonies after earlier lineup exits, and that shift frames how this show feels. Expect them to lean on confident vocals and crowd-led choruses to spotlight the catalog without overstuffing the mix.Hits primed for a twilight sprint
A likely set packs Keep On Movin', Everybody Get Up, Got the Feelin', and If Ya Gettin' Down in quick succession so energy never dips. At a racecourse, the crowd skews mixed-age, with groups in smart-casual from the stands next to fans in retro track jackets who know every countdown shout. Five once cut We Will Rock You with members of Queen, and songwriter Richard Stannard, who powered early Spice Girls hits, also shaped their biggest singles. These after-racing shows often favor medleys and tight transitions, swapping long intros for punchy drops and space for chant sections. Note: the potential set choices and staging ideas here are informed guesses, not confirmed plans.The Five Crowd, Up Close
The scene blends race-day smart with 90s pop flair, so you will spot blazers next to vintage track tops and bucket hats.
Retro fit with race-day shine
Chants kick early, with the classic Five countdown before Everybody Get Up and the call of Five will make you get down now echoing between songs. Hands go up on the first piano hits of Keep On Movin', and phones usually light the middle eight without anyone being asked.Chants, logos, and shared memory
Merch skews nostalgic: bold 5ive-era logos, varsity fonts, and tour-year back prints sized for layering over a windbreaker. You will also see handmade tees and glitter-letter signs, a nod to school-disco roots more than arena polish. Between sets, DJs lean into late-90s and early-2000s bangers, which keeps groups dancing rather than drifting to the exits. It feels communal but unforced, the kind of crowd that enjoys a chant, laughs at a missed cue, and sings the last chorus like a promise.How Five Make It Hit Live
Five's live blend rides three distinct voices: Scott's grit, Ritchie's smoother middle, and Sean's clear top line that carries the choruses.
Tight parts, bigger hooks
They redistribute verses from the original five-piece cuts so each voice lands where it adds weight, which keeps the hooks tidy and the pace brisk. Expect arrangements that punch the downbeat, with live drums or triggered hits giving Everybody Get Up that bounce you feel in your chest. They often tag a stomp-clap into the outro to nod at We Will Rock You, a clever cue that turns the crowd into extra percussion. Keys sometimes sit a touch lower live to favor blend and stamina outdoors, trading brightness for a fuller, chesty sing.Bounce, breaks, and big drops
Dance breaks are built as short bursts, so the band can drop the instrumental and let chants breathe before slamming back into the chorus. A neat quirk: they rotate the rap bridge in If Ya Gettin' Down, sharing lines so no one gasps through the final chorus. Lighting tends to go bold in solid color blocks with crisp strobes on drops, framing the music rather than overpowering it.If You Like Five, You'll Like These Too
Fans of Backstreet Boys will feel at home with Five's mix of stacked harmonies, talk-rap breaks, and audience call-backs.