Find more presales for shows in Maryland Heights, MO
Show TRAIN Drops of Jupiter: 25 Years in the Atmosphere presales in more places
Comet Tails and Coffee: Train at 25
San Francisco's Train built a soulful pop-rock lane on clean hooks, piano lift, and Pat Monahan's high, grainy tenor. This run centers on the 25th year of Drops of Jupiter, the record that turned them from steady climbers into radio fixtures.
Twenty-Five Years Since a Dream
Across many lineup shifts, Monahan has been the constant, and the show frames that arc with stories that nod to long drives, small clubs, and second chances. You can expect a balance of 2000s staples and a few deep cuts from the Drops of Jupiter era.Songs You Will Probably Hear
Likelier anchors include Drops of Jupiter (Tell Me), Meet Virginia, Calling All Angels, and Hey, Soul Sister, with room for a surprise B-side. The crowd skews cross-generational, from people who bought the CD on release week to teenagers who found the songs on a playlist, trading quiet smiles when the piano intro lands. One neat footnote: the string chart for Drops of Jupiter (Tell Me) came from Paul Buckmaster, the arranger behind classic Elton John tracks. Another tidbit: the song grew from a dream Monahan had after his mother's passing, which is why the lyric feels both cosmic and grounded. Heads up: details about the setlist and production here are informed guesses based on recent shows and history.Planet of Fans: Life Around a Train Show
The scene feels warm and relaxed, with vintage tees from the Drops of Jupiter era next to newer prints featuring planets and lyric snippets.
Gentle Nostalgia, Not Costume Play
Denim jackets, soft plaids, and quietly well-worn sneakers outnumber flash, and a few fans bring small constellation pins or starry scarves. Chorus moments turn into communal singing, like the 'hey' echoes in Hey, Soul Sister and the long 'angel' in Calling All Angels.Shared Choruses, Quiet Exits
Between songs, people swap first-heard memories, often car radios and college dorm stories, and the nostalgia sits lightly rather than heavy. Merch tends to lean into vinyl reissues, clean poster art with orbit themes, and playful nods to the band's wine label. During the encore, phones go away more than you might expect, as folks try to catch the piano intro to Drops of Jupiter (Tell Me) with ears instead of screens. After the bows, the lobby hum is mellow, with fans comparing set highlights and quoting one stray lyric that stuck all night.Engines, Ukes, and Angels: Train's Live Build
Pat Monahan's top end is bright but controlled, and the band leaves space for that tone by keeping guitars chiming rather than crunchy.
Voice Up Front, Band in the Pocket
Arrangements favor piano leads and clean electric lines, with bass and kick providing an easy pocket that supports swaying rather than moshing. On Hey, Soul Sister, the ukulele stays front and center while the tempo sits a touch faster than the studio cut, which gives the chorus extra bounce. Calling All Angels often adds warm B3 organ and stacked harmonies, thickening the lift without crowding the vocal.Small Tweaks, Big Payoff
They sometimes drop a song's key a half step across the tour, which softens the edge and lets Monahan lean into chest voice on the big notes. Mid-set, the band likes a short cover or a mash of two refrains, a trick that resets ears before returning to their own hooks. Lighting is clean and thematic, with soft whites on the ballads and amber sweeps on the rockers, always in service of the melody.Orbit Neighbors: Artists Train Fans Tend To Love
Matchbox Twenty fans overlap due to polished rock songwriting and singalong choruses that live well under big summer skies.