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There are 24 active Aaron Lewis presales right now.
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General Sale
Aaron Lewis
Peppermill Concert Hall
Mar 11, 2026 • 9:00pm
West Wendover, NV
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General Sale
AARON LEWIS
Riverside Casino & Golf Resort Outdoor Stage
Aug 2, 2025 • 7:00pm
Riverside, IA
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General Sale
Aaron Lewis and The Stateliners
First Financial Music Hall
Feb 22, 2025 • 8:00pm
El Dorado, AR
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General Sale
AARON LEWIS
River Spirit Casino Resort
Feb 20, 2025 • 8:00pm
Tulsa, OK
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Roots and Riffs with Aaron Lewis
[Aaron Lewis] came up as the voice of [Staind], then carved a lane in country and Americana.
From post-grunge heart to country grit
The current chapter finds him balancing [Staind]'s return on Confessions of the Fallen with solo nights that lean acoustic, spare, and blunt. Expect a set that swings from Country Boy and Am I The Only One to bare-boned takes on It's Been Awhile and Outside. The room usually blends rock lifers in sun-faded tour shirts with newer country fans in clean flannels, plus plenty of couples catching a night out. Older heads nod when he revisits early 2000s choruses, while first-timers lock in when the storytelling turns plainspoken and dry.Songs you will probably hear
A neat bit of lore: the first hit version of Outside began as an on-the-spot performance during Family Values, before the studio cut even existed. Another under-the-radar detail is his habit of tuning a half-step down or dropping to D for sturdier low notes on legacy songs. In the early days, [Staind] tracked key sessions at Long View Farm in Massachusetts, a rustic studio many classic acts favored. Fair notice: songs and show elements mentioned here are informed guesses, not confirmed details.The Aaron Lewis Crowd, From Faded Tees to Fresh Bootcuts
The scene at a [Aaron Lewis] show skews relaxed and practical, with flannels, worn denim, and a few throwback [Staind] hoodies in the mix.
Blue-collar polish, early-2000s echoes
You will spot work boots next to clean sneakers, hunting caps beside vintage trucker hats, and a surprising number of denim jackets with stitched patches. Merch leans simple and dark, with lyric lines and understated logos, and people trade stories about first tours they saw in the early 2000s. Chant moments tend to be communal rather than rowdy, like the first line of It's Been Awhile or the chorus of Am I The Only One swelling without a cue.Rituals that feel personal
Between songs, folks often fall quiet for the spoken intros, then clap on the off-beats once the strum settles in. Post-show, small groups linger to compare which deep cuts did or did not show up, and a few scan the stage for a handed-off pick or setlist. It feels like a mixed neighborhood bar, where rock memories and country storytelling share the same table.How Aaron Lewis Builds the Room Quiet, Then Loud
[Aaron Lewis] carries a grainy baritone that can sit almost spoken in the verses, then lift just enough to crest the chorus without strain.
Quiet thunder in simple frames
Live, he stretches space between lines, letting the guitar ring so the words land, and the band builds around that with brushed snare, pedal steel, and warm bass. Older [Staind] songs often arrive in drop tuning or a half-step down, which thickens the guitars and lets him keep the low center of his voice. He favors steady downstrokes and clipped strums, trading busy picking for pulse, and that keeps the focus on phrasing. When a song wants lift, the drums shift from brushes to sticks, the bass walks up a touch, and the steel or a second guitar answers the vocal line.Little switches that change the feel
A lesser-noted move is his habit of shaving a bar before the last chorus on a few songs, which makes the return hit harder without turning up the tempo. Lighting tends to stay in warm ambers and cool whites, matching the set's dynamic arc rather than chasing each beat. It is music-first pacing, with arrangements that feel sturdy even when it is just voice and a lone acoustic.If You Like Aaron Lewis, You Might Also Roll With These Acts
Fans of [Aaron Lewis] often also ride for [Staind], since the melodic grit and reflective choruses come from the same well.