1 different presale code are verified and working.
Get Rod Stewart presale tickets
Citi® Cardmember Preferred Tickets |
---|
Presale codes were last updated (10 hours, 20 minutes ago) at 09-24 21:26 Eastern. Some presale codes are reserved exclusively for our members, learn why we do this here.

Tonight's the Night in Vegas with Rod Stewart
Rod Stewart came up in London R&B clubs, broke through with a pioneering blues-rock outfit and a rowdy bar band, then built a solo career on that sandpaper voice and sharp hooks. After a recent detour into swing and R&B with a big-band project, this Las Vegas encore leans back into the rock and pop hits that first filled arenas.
Sing-along anthems, polished pacing
Expect a set that favors chorus-ready singles like Maggie May, Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?, Young Turks, and Forever Young, with a few ballads slotted between uptempo runs. The crowd tends to be a mixed, multi-generational room: longtime fans trading grins with adult kids, destination travelers in smart-casual, and locals looking for a crisp night out. Trivia fans will note that Maggie May started as the B-side to Reason to Believe, and that the hit's mandolin hook came from a session guest who went uncredited on early pressings.Deep-cut nods for lifers
You might also catch his soccer habit, with team colors on mic stands and the occasional ball kicked out at the end. Treat the song list and staging talk here as informed speculation, not a locked-in script. He usually spaces the show with short stories that tee up the next era.Tartan, Glitter, and the Rod Stewart Crowd
You will see tartan scarves, sharp blazers, and a few vintage tees mixed with Vegas sparkle. Some fans rep green-and-white soccer stripes, and the band sometimes nods back with subtle stage colors.
Choruses built for the room
The loudest sing-alongs hit on Da Ya Think I'm Sexy? and Sailing, where the chorus turns into one big choir. Expect friendly chatter before the show and warm cheers for deep cuts; people come to celebrate eras, not just one single. Merch skews classic: bold-font tees, satin-style jackets, and a scarf or two that winks at his British roots.Rituals, not rush
Chants rise in waves rather than mosh energy, and the mood stays easy even when the tempos jump. Photo moments pop when mic stands spin and the hat comes out, a small theatrical touch fans echo on the way out.How Rod Stewart's Band Makes the Songs Land
The voice is the center: grainy, warm, and delivered with a talk-sung ease that saves power for the refrains. Key choices are often nudged down a half-step live, which deepens the tone and keeps long phrases in a relaxed pocket.
Acoustic sparkle, rhythmic lift
The band shapes arrangements with acoustic guitar, mandolin, and fiddle up front, then brings in sax and backing vocals to lift the choruses. Songs like Maggie May and You Wear It Well often open on strummed 12-string and mandolin before the rhythm section kicks in. Young Turks usually trades the original synth sheen for a springier, live drum bounce, which helps the room move without racing the tempo.Stories, colors, and clean exits
Between numbers, short stories set up the next era, and the lighting follows suit with simple color washes and vintage video to match the mood. A lesser-noted habit is stretching a tag for call-and-response, then snapping back to the final chord together for a clean cut.Kindred Spirits for Rod Stewart Fans
Fans of Bryan Adams will click with the punchy guitars, big choruses, and affable stage banter. Billy Joel overlaps on piano-driven classics, similar age-spanning crowds, and a hits-forward show arc.