The famous downtown Las Vegas music festival is turning into a two-night affair in its first year of sole ownership by Rolling Stone.
Music
On a Vegas weeknight, Lady Gaga’s “Jazz + Piano” show returned to Park MGM, and Flavor Flav joined Brian Newman on stage at NoMad Library.
Megan Thee Stallion, “Loud & Proud” wrestling, Las Vegas Restaurant Week and the Punk Rock Tattoo Expo top this week’s lineup.
Spots where Elvis Presley reflected and Frank Sinatra reclined are among the hidden spaces, places and items to be found in Las Vegas theaters.
The Sphere’s Jim Dolan says of the famous Las Vegas venue’s audiovisual technology: “We’ve only scratched the surface.”
Barry Manilow is taping his annual Westgate Christmas show for network TV.
It’s Thursday night in downtown Las Vegas and the biggest punk band ever, Green Day, is playing a venue around the size of one of the stadium dressing rooms they’ve occupied in the past.
Green Day has formally announced its show at Fremont Country Club, set for Thursday night.
Green Day plays When We Were Young on Friday and Saturday. But first, Fremont East.
Usher is being recognized for his upcoming Super Bowl performance and community efforts.
The long-awaited opening of the Sphere took place Friday night with U2 christening the one-of-a-kind venue.
The venue is an attraction in and of itself. Every component of it: the inner bowl, its exoskeleton, and even the atrium, which greets visitors upon entrance with scads of innovative flourishes.
From Foo Fighters to Arctic Monkeys, Billie Eilish to Kanye West, many notable headliners have rocked the downtown festival.
Ten years after they helps launch Life is Beautiful, The Killers are back, joining hip-hop prime mover Kendrick Lamar and electronic music duo Odesza as this year’s headliners.
Rockie Brown’s pop-rock band plays Sunday at Rolling Stone Stage.