Mon May 11 2026
7:30 PM (Doors 6:30 PM)
$49.73
All Ages
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It’s been decades since NEW FOUND GLORY’s likeness was chiseled onto pop-punk’s Mount Rushmore, but as the Coral Springs, Florida, quartet approach their landmark 30th anniversary,they still have a lot to say. LISTEN UP!, their 11th studio album and firstfor Pure Noise Records, stands as a testament to resilience, shaped by guitarist Chad Gilbert’s ongoing battle with an aggressive metastatic cancer. It’s the same full-hearted sentiment that colored their 2023 acoustic EP, Make The Most Of It, here delivered in three-minute bursts of the band’s trademark pop-punk sound: the shiny melodies that launched them onto TRL in the early 2000s, the ghosts of the tight-knit punk and hardcore scenes they came up in as teenagers.
It’s the style that’s made NFG a multigenerational affair, as era-defining tracks from gold andplatinum albums like 2000’s New Found Glory, 2002’s Sticks And Stones and 2004’s Catalyst get the same fervent live response as the fan-favorite collection of covers like “Kiss Me” and “Let It Go.” The band has come a long way from their humble South Florida beginnings, asdetailed on the Listen Up! stand out “Beer And Blood Stains,” a nostalgic riff-factory detailing the band’s early battle scars at local clubs, where danger meant more than catching a stray elbowin the swirl of a circle pit. “Looking back, was it fun or crime?” Pundik muses on the track before elevating the album’s simple-yet-profound mission statement: “It’s good to be alive.”
$49.73 All Ages
It’s been decades since NEW FOUND GLORY’s likeness was chiseled onto pop-punk’s Mount Rushmore, but as the Coral Springs, Florida, quartet approach their landmark 30th anniversary,they still have a lot to say. LISTEN UP!, their 11th studio album and firstfor Pure Noise Records, stands as a testament to resilience, shaped by guitarist Chad Gilbert’s ongoing battle with an aggressive metastatic cancer. It’s the same full-hearted sentiment that colored their 2023 acoustic EP, Make The Most Of It, here delivered in three-minute bursts of the band’s trademark pop-punk sound: the shiny melodies that launched them onto TRL in the early 2000s, the ghosts of the tight-knit punk and hardcore scenes they came up in as teenagers.
It’s the style that’s made NFG a multigenerational affair, as era-defining tracks from gold andplatinum albums like 2000’s New Found Glory, 2002’s Sticks And Stones and 2004’s Catalyst get the same fervent live response as the fan-favorite collection of covers like “Kiss Me” and “Let It Go.” The band has come a long way from their humble South Florida beginnings, asdetailed on the Listen Up! stand out “Beer And Blood Stains,” a nostalgic riff-factory detailing the band’s early battle scars at local clubs, where danger meant more than catching a stray elbowin the swirl of a circle pit. “Looking back, was it fun or crime?” Pundik muses on the track before elevating the album’s simple-yet-profound mission statement: “It’s good to be alive.”
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