This event is all ages.
Presale begins Thursday, May 14th at 10am.
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The general on sale begins Friday, May 15th at 10am!
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The Maine
The Maine are a thrilling aberration in the unruly world of modern rock music: a band whose following has organically grown to unprecedented heights nearly 20 years into their career, thanks to the raw emotional power of their cathartic breed of alt-rock. In a bold new pinnacle for the Arizona-bred five-pieceâvocalist John OâCallaghan, guitarists Jared Monaco and Kennedy Brock, bassist Garrett Nickelsen, drummer Pat Kirchâtheir tenth studio album Joy Next Door arrives as their most high-concept work yet while doubling down on The Maineâs singular balance of sonic ferocity and unflinching sincerity. Completed just before embarking on their biggest tour to date (the 2026 headline run I Love You ButâŚI Chose The Maine), the result is a glorious testament to a band whose unbridled passion only burns brighter with time.
With its title inspired by OâCallaghanâs recent move back to his childhood neighborhood, Joy Next Door intimately chronicles the chaotic beauty of the human condition. âThe title refers to being reminded of a more carefree time in your life, but itâs also about acknowledging that joy can coexist with fear and worry and doubt, and all the other complicated feelings we all struggle with and maybe try to suppress,â says OâCallaghan. âFor me itâs the most difficult record weâve ever done as far as the lyrical elementâmainly because I wanted every single song to tell the truth about what was happening with me internally, with an openness that I havenât always fully embraced.â
To amplify the impact of that viscerally personal storytelling, The Maine recorded Joy Next Door in the exact sequence of its tracklist. âWeâd never worked that way before, but it really helped us to capture all the emotional peaks and valleys that are such a huge part of this album,â says Kirch. Co-produced by OâCallaghan and Beach Weatherâs Sean Silverman at The Maineâs own studio, Joy Next Door ultimately embodies a relentless intensity and reveals a band transformed into an unstoppable force through their expansive live experienceâincluding, in the past few years alone, performing at major festivals like Boston Calling and When We Were Young, embarking on an arena tour with Fall Out Boy, and headlining the fourth biannual iteration of their massively successful 8123 Fest.
After opening on the acoustic-guitar-led confession of âGreen,â Joy Next Door tears through wildly combustible songs like âHalf a Sparkâ: a frenzied meditation on longing to return to the recklessness of youth. Next, on âPalms,â the album turns triumphant as the band offers up a galvanizing anthem for claiming authorship over your own life. âIf âHalf A Sparkâ is an attempt to escape or deny your current reality, then the sentiment behind âPalmsâ is more like, âFuck fate, I get to decide,ââ says OâCallaghan. Later, on the exhilarating lead single âDie To Fall,â Joy Next Door takes on a breakneck momentum and delivers a full-tilt burst of life-affirming energy. âThat song came from feeling like Iâm watching life from the sidelines, and being envious of those with the ability to live in the moment,â says OâCallaghan. âI wanted the song itself to sound like completely letting goâalmost like youâre being shot out of a rocket.â
True to The Maineâs ethos of perpetual evolution, Joy Next Door radiates a potent urgency partly born from their refusal to retread well-worn terrain. âWeâve done a ton of exploration over the last 20 years, and doing the opposite of what feels familiar is usually the best way to get to a place we havenât gone yet,â says OâCallaghan. âWith this record in particular, I remember telling Sean, âIâm 37 and donât want to make an album that sounds like Iâm trying to be 23.â The important thing was to create something that we all loved, with the level of authenticity that people have come to expect from us.â Since the arrival of 2008âs Canât Stop Wonât Stop (the first of five LPs to chart on the Billboard 200), that authenticity has earned The Maine one of the most devoted fanbases in American rockâa close-knit contingent called the 8123 Family, named for a parking garage where the band members often hung out in their early years. Known for cultivating an extraordinarily deep connection with their fans (including committing to meeting all audience members in admission-free post-show gatherings and phoning fans as thanks for pre-ordering their albums), The Maine have watched their following expand exponentially and extend to younger generations in recent years. âItâs crazy to be two decades in and going out on our biggest tour ever, and in some cities playing venues with double the capacity of places weâve played before,â says Kirch. âThere isnât anything in particular we can identify to explain why thatâs happened, but it feels really great to keep building an audience thatâs beyond so passionate. It feels like a Grateful Dead type of thing, where we have fans whoâve been to hundreds of shows and still travel all over to see us live.â
Looking back on their journey so far, The Maine express an immense gratitude for what OâCallaghan sums up as the âsymbiotic relationship between us and our fans.â âThere are so many people whoâve grown up with us and have become familiar faces at this point,â he notes. âTheyâre the ones whoâve given us the ability to be a band for so long, so weâre always thinking about how we can nurture that connection as much as possible.â âOne of the most common things we hear from fans is that weâve brought them a sense of community,â Kirch adds. âI always loving hearing that, because thatâs exactly what the band did for me. Itâs incredible that we have these amazing fans who are all in on our music, all the way down to the deep cutsâbut the best part is knowing weâve helped them find a place where they belong.â