ON SALE SOON
Wednesday, May 27 2026, 10:00 AM MST

Live Nation Presents
ADÉLA: THE RED BOTTOMS TOUR
Tue, 6 Oct, 8:00 PM MST
Doors open
7:00 PM MST
Crescent Ballroom
308 North 2nd Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85003
ON SALE SOON
Wednesday, May 27 2026, 10:00 AM MST
Description
Live Nation Presents
ADÉLA: THE RED BOTTOMS TOUR
Tuesday, October 6th 2026
Doors at 7:00 / Show at 8:00
16+
Advance General Admission Tier 1 Ticket: $25 + fees
Advance General Admission Tier 2 Ticket: $27.50 + fees
Day of Show General Admission Ticket: $30 + fees
ADÉLA EARLY ENTRY VIP PACKAGE : $100 + fees
One general admission ticket with FIRST access to the floor*
Specially designed VIP gift item
Exclusive VIP tour poster featuring a special message from ADÉLA via a QR code
Commemorative VIP laminate and lanyard
Early entry into the venue
Pre-show tour merchandise shopping opportunity
Red carpet photo opportunity to celebrate the evening**
Designated check-in and on-site VIP event staff
*Location may vary.
**No artist participation.
ADÉLA EARLY ENTRY UPGRADE PACKAGE: $75 + fees (does not include GA)
Specially designed VIP gift item
Exclusive VIP tour poster featuring a special message from ADÉLA via a QR code
Commemorative VIP laminate and lanyard
Early entry into the venue
Pre-show tour merchandise shopping opportunity
Red carpet photo opportunity to celebrate the evening**
Designated check-in and on-site VIP event staff
Does not include a concert ticket
*Location may vary.
**No artist participation.
Event Information
Age Limit
16+

Dance
Adéla
Adéla
Dance
In a landscape often bound by formulaic conventions, ADÉLA emerges as an artist who refuses to conform. The 22-year-old singer doesn’t just make pop music — she distorts it, challenges it, and makes it feel larger than life, yet always rooted in unfiltered emotion. “I want to create a world that's relatable on a human level,” she says. “I want to talk about things that are maybe uncomfortable. That’s who I am also as a person: I’m super blunt and kind of clinical, in a sense. Feelings, both positive and negative, hold the same weight to me.”
That balance between grandeur and sincerity is central to her debut EP, The Provocateur. It tells the story of a woman who’s willing to do anything to become an entertainer, a dramatized yet deeply personal reflection of ADÉLA’s journey. The release of The Provocateur in August of 2025 via Capitol Records confirmed ADÉLA’s arrival, garnering her praise from outlets such as Vogue, Interview Magazine, The FADER, Harper’s Bazaar, NYLON, Rolling Stone, and PAPER Magazine, the last of which declared that her “fame comes at no surprise.” With this acclaim in tow, ADÉLA quickly sold out her debut solo live performances in London, New York, and Los Angeles. She is currently opening for Demi Lovato on her North American tour, four days into which she released her single “KGB,” the first taste of her forthcoming debut album. Co-produced by Blake Slatkin (SZA, Charli xcx, Malcolm Todd), Dylan Brady of 100 gecs, and The Dare, “KGB” explores the singer-songwriter’s upbringing and quest to make it out of Slovakia to become the artist she has emerged as since her debut in 2025. Upon its release, the single debuted at #11 on the Billboard Hot Dance/Pop charts, marking her first Billboard entry.
ADÉLA has known what it means to be shaped by the machine and to fight against it. Raised in Slovakia, the singer, born Adéla Jergova, often felt at odds with her homeland’s conservative values. “In Eastern Europe, we often think in a very limited way,” she says before elaborating. “We don’t see ourselves as worthy or able to achieve huge things because it simply has never happened before.” Rather than allow others to discourage her childhood dream of becoming a pop star, she kept it to herself. ADÉLA channeled that energy into years of rigorous ballet training, her natural talent and unrivaled work ethic driving her to go professional at age 11. By 14, she had moved to Vienna and London to attend elite ballet academies, but when music’s pull became too strong to ignore, she left to pursue it full-time.
Outside of school, she studied American pop culture obsessively. “I was like, If I want to be on the Disney Channel, I need to be able to speak perfect English," she says. So every day, ADÉLA taught herself by watching hours of makeup tutorials and celebrity interviews on YouTube, mimicking the way the people on screen spoke. She also took vocal lessons — going as far as successfully seeking out Olivia Rodrigo’s teacher — and eventually began songwriting as a means of processing the growing pains of adolescence.
In 2020, ADÉLA’s self-made education led her to her biggest challenge yet. She moved to Los Angeles to join the Dream Academy, where she competed for a spot in a global girl group — a years-long process documented in the Netflix series Pop Star Academy. It was a demanding yet invaluable experience that schooled her thoroughly in the principles of being a performer, reinforcing the discipline, resilience, and artistry she’d been perfecting since childhood. But after pouring everything she had into the competition, ADÉLA was ultimately eliminated. The aftermath was brutal. “The year that followed was the worst of my life,” she says. “Seriously. It sucked.” With no clear path forward, she took the time to experiment, make music, and rediscover who she was outside of the program. “I had to find my people, try different vibes, hair colors, clothes, and just live life.”
ADÉLA emerged from that period of reinvention sharper, hungrier, and fully in control of her vision. She’s hands-on in every aspect of her work outside of her music, too, from video treatments and choreography to costuming and makeup — something she can credit to a lifelong study of her musical heroes, Madonna, Beyoncé, and Lady Gaga, and also her years in ballet. As she steps into this new chapter of her career, she thinks back to her time rebuilding. Just as she had set out as a child to learn English and become a Disney star, she opened up a Google Doc and hatched a plan, starting with a written mission statement in answer to one specific question: What does ADÉLA, the artist, want?
“I just want to encourage people to fucking be themselves — unless you're a psychopath,” she jokes, before thoughtfully adding: “If I do my job right, people will love these songs because they’ll find themselves in them.”
As her rapidly growing fanbase anxiously anticipates her debut album, set for release later this year, co-executive produced by Blake Slatkin and Dylan Brady, it’s clear to see that the sky is the only limit for the rising pop star.