Green Day’s Massive ‘Saviors Tour’ Is Coming To Comerica Park – Details Here
While concert season may be winding down for 2023, we now have something to look forward to in 2024. Green Day announced their massive ‘Saviors Tour’ will be coming to Comerica Park in Detroit on September 4th, 2024. It’s their first trip back since playing there in the summer of 2021.
Green Day won’t be alone when they come to Detroit’s Comerica Park. They’ll be joined by The Smashing Pumpkins, Rancid, and The Linda Lindas! That’s a huge lineup for a massive show. This is going to be an incredible night. There’s cause to celebrate, too. Green Day will be celebrating 30 years of their album Dookie and 20 years of American Idiot.
The band will release their latest album, Saviors, on January 19th. It’s going to be a busy couple of months ahead for Green Day. On November 19th, they’ll play the halftime show at the 110th Grey Cup. That’s the championship game in the Canadian Football League. They’ve already released two singles from the upcoming Saviors album. “The American Dream Is Killing Me” and “Look Ma, No Brains!” are the two songs that have already been publicly released. With “Look Ma, No Brains!” being released today, November 2nd.
Green Day ‘Saviors Tour’ Coming To Detroit
Tickets for the ‘Saviors Tour’ go on sale Friday, November 10th at 10 am Eastern. However, there will be a special fan pre-sale that starts on Wednesday. November 8th at 10 am. More info on that can be found at GreenDay.com. The tour will kick off with a European run starting on May 30th in Spain. From there, they’ll hit France, Germany, and Italy, before closing out the Euro leg with a show at the iconic Wembley Stadium in London on June 29th.
The North American run will start on July 29th in Washington D.C. The ‘Saviors Tour’ will conclude in San Diego on September 28th. There’s so much to celebrate, this is going to be an amazing tour.
Green Day joins an impressive list of bands who have rocked Comerica Park. That list includes Dave Matthews Band, who was the first concert at the stadium back on July 5th, 2000. Def Leppard, Poison, and Joan Jett have all played there too. As has native Detroiter Kid Rock. Elton John, Chris Stapleton, and The Red Hot Chili Peppers have all played at the Tigers home field, as well.
Read more about Green Day coming to Comerica Park in Detroit here.
Green Day: Top 40 Songs Ranked
Back in the early ‘90s, when Lollapalooza and MTV’s 120 Minutes were the barometers of cool, you would have been excused for laughing if someone told you that Green Day would be one of a handful of bands of that era to stay relevant for two decades and would also get into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
But the band who got famous for singing about being bored and stoned exceeded all expectations through soul, ambition, and sheer songwriting chops. They started out as an indie-label punk band, but their songs were just so catchy… and they were signed during the post-Nirvana rush, when major labels were looking to sign anyone credible and moderately popular on indie labels. Unlike a lot of those bands, Green Day transcended the era. 1994’s Dookie — with the help of an opening slot on Lollapalooza, an iconic and muddy set at Woodstock ’94 and a fistful of unforgettable tunes that MTV and radio couldn’t get enough of — made them one of the biggest bands of the alternative rock era.
Towards the end of the ’90s, as the Lollapalooza bands started to fade as TRL and nu-metal gained influence, Green Day’s album and ticket sales (like many of their peers) went down. But 2004’s American Idiot was one of the most surprising comebacks of all time. The album was both lyrically and musically more ambitious than anything they’d done before, it saw them diving into politics… which no one expected from Green Day. It was a big swing and they knocked it out of the park: it was their first #1 album, sold over six million copies in America and saw them headlining stadiums. They haven’t quite reached that peak on their subsequent albums, but they remain a huge concert draw, headlining stadiums and festival shows.
We ranked their best songs from their days on indie label Lookout! Records through the new tracks, including radio hits, deeper cuts and even a few things from their side-projects. What’d we miss?
Meltdown started on the mighty WRIF on the evening of Halloween, 1995. Technically, his first on-air shift was the morning of November 1st. Moving to the Motor City from Buffalo, N.Y., he has built a career and family. Over his almost three-decade stint at RIFF, he's had the privilege to work with some of the biggest personalities in Detroit radio history. He boasts of being just the second-afternoon drive jock in the station's illustrious 53-year history.
Along with his love for rock music and attending concerts, he's also an avid Harley-Davidson enthusiast and hockey player. He plays year-round and manages to squeeze in a few charity games throughout the year. Meltdown writes about the Detroit Red Wings, rock music, and Detroit concert venues.