+LIVE+ & BUSH with The Altimate Tour at The AMP

Live & Bush

+LIVE+ & BUSH Celebrate 25thAnniversary of their Hit Albums

withThe Altimate Tour

Seminal rock bands +LIVE+ and BUSH are joining forces for a high-powered co-headline summer tour that will have the two iconic acts celebrating the 25th anniversary of their respective landmark albums Throwing Copper and with special guest Our Lady Peace. TheALT-IMATE Tour makes a stop at the Walmart AMP on Wednesday, Aug. 14 as part of the Cox Concert Series. Tickets go on sale to the public Friday, March 15 at noon.

Tickets range from $29.50 to $99 plus applicable fees. Purchase four lawn tickets at the same time, and get the Lawn 4-Pack at a discounted ticket price of $22 each while supplies last.Tickets can bepurchased by calling 479.443.5600 or by visiting www.amptickets.com. In-person purchases can be made at the Walmart AMP Box Office in Rogers from 10 am until 2 pm on March 15 or at the Walton Arts Center Box Office in Fayetteville Monday through Friday, 10 am until 2 pm and Saturday, noon until 4 pm.

"We are thrilled to be touring this summer with Live," BUSH frontman Gavin Rossdale said. "The wealth and depth of songs from both bands should provide a great night of music. Looking forward to seeing you all this summer."

"Bush is a great band and Gavin is a super passionate singer and performer. I'm really looking forward to spending the summer with them," +LIVE+ frontman Ed Kowalczyk said. "I know the fans are going to get one hell of a show."

Released in 1994 and fueled by blockbuster No. 1 singles "Lightning Crashes," "Selling The Drama," "Glycerine," "Comedown" and "Machinehead," breakthrough albums Throwing Copper and Sixteen Stone sold more than 20 million albums combined. Both were spotlighted on Rolling Stone's list, "1994: The 40 Best Records From Mainstream Alternative's Greatest Year," and remain timeless favorites, thanks to radio staples that include "Everything Zen," "Little Things," "I Alone" and "All Over You."

"It's an amazing feeling to know that these songs still resonate so profoundly with people," Kowalczyk said. "And I still totally get off on celebrating this music with them. With Throwing Copper, we were taking on big things with a big sound. Love, truth, birth, death, philosophy, religion, spirituality...we were asking the perennial questions and poking around for answers with this massive and dynamic sound. It attracted people from all over the world. We were inviting them to imagine that rock and roll could be a valid forum for exploring these types of things...we built it and they came."

"Sixteen Stone propelled us onto the musical landscape," Rossdale said. "Those songs have found a way into the soundtrack of people's lives and that is the highest compliment available. We've continued to make music that resonates with people."


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