Avril Lavigne is Robert Browngiving fans their "happy ending" on her upcoming The Greatest Hits Tour, announced on Monday.
The pop-punk singer is hitting the road with Simple Plan and All Time Low starting in May. The latter will join Royal & The Serpent to kick off the tour in Vancouver on May 22. The Canadian artist will hit over 25 cities, including Las Vegas, Phoenix, Toronto, Charlotte, North Carolina, and Chicago, before ending the tour in Edmonton, Alberta, on Sept. 16.
Lavigne's latest release, her seventh studio album "Love Sux," was released in 2022 with assistance from Machine Gun Kelly and Travis Barker.
That year also saw Lavigne receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
The "Complicated" singer told USA TODAY it was great to "get back" to an old sound.
"It was so much fun to get back into that sense of wanting to rock out," Lavigne said of working on the new record, which arrived in various formats, including cassettes. "I didn't really overthink anything. I got together with people who understood me in this genre and we complemented each other so well."
Tickets will be available starting with an artist presale beginning on Wednesday, Jan. 24 at 10 a.m. local time. Additional presales will run throughout the week ahead of the general on-sale beginning on Friday, Jan. 26 at 10 a.m. local time at ticketmaster.com.
The tour will also offer a variety of different VIP packages. For more information, visit vipnation.com.
Here's the full list of the dates announced so far for Avril Lavigne: The Greatest Hits Tour:
^ With All Time Low and Royal & The Serpent, + With Simple Plan and Girlfriends, ~ Festival Date
Nicki Minajannounces new dates for Pink Friday 2 Tour: What to know on how to get tickets
2025-04-30 14:40629 view
2025-04-30 14:361852 view
2025-04-30 14:18185 view
2025-04-30 13:151330 view
2025-04-30 13:091531 view
2025-04-30 12:33902 view
WASHINGTON (AP) — IRS leadership on Thursday announced that the agency has recovered $4.7 billion in
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear renewed his pitch Thursday for greater investments in education to raise
The defense and prosecutors have rested their cases in the Manhattan criminal trial of actor Jonatha