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Concerts

Bryan Adams Will Play 19 Canadian Cities on 'Roll With The Punches' Tour in September, Elvis Costello Coming to Toronto

Also announced this week, Pulp will be making a trip to Toronto, while Montreal Jazz Fest releases its full lineup.

Bryan Adams

Bryan Adams

Courtesy Photo

Canadian rock icon Bryan Adams is playing across the country this fall.

The "Summer of '69" singer will play 19 Canadian cities on his 'Roll With the Punches' tour. He's already taken that show on the road to Australia and New Zealand this year, and hits the U.K. and Ireland in May.


He'll kick off his North American leg on September 11 in Kamloops, B.C., playing dates across the country all the way to St. John's, Newfoundland on October 15, before heading south of the border. Saskatchewan rockers The Sheepdogs will join Adams for the Canadian leg, with Amanda Marshall supporting in Calgary and Kelowna.

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The tour accompanies his forthcoming album of the same name, which is set for release this summer on Adams' label Bad Records. Adams promises new tracks as well as "all the classics" for this tour. Presale begins Tuesday, April 29 and general sale starts Friday, May 2 at 10 AM local.

Bryan Adams 'Roll With the Punches' Canadian Dates

Thu Sep 11 – Kamloops, BC – Sandman Centre*

Fri Sep 12 – Vancouver, BC – Rogers Arena*

Sat Sep 13 – Victoria, BC – Save On Foods Memorial Centre*

Tue Sep 23 – Prince George, BC – CN Centre*

Wed Sep 24 – Kelowna, BC – Prospera Place+

Fri Sep 26 – Calgary, AB – Scotiabank Saddledome+

Sat Sep 27 – Edmonton, AB – Rogers Place*

Sun Sep 28 – Regina, SK – Brandt Centre*

Mon Sep 29 – Winnipeg, MB – Canada Life Centre*

Thu Oct 2 – St. Catharines, ON – Meridian Centre*

Fri Oct 3 – Toronto, ON – Scotiabank Arena*

Sat Oct 4 – Ottawa, ON – Canadian Tire Centre*

Sun Oct 5 – Windsor, ON – Caesars*

Tue Oct 7 – Peterborough, ON – Peterborough Memorial Centre*

Wed Oct 8 – Montreal, QC – Bell Centre*

Thu Oct 9 – Quebec City, QC – Videotron Centre*

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Sat Oct 11 – Moncton, NB – Avenir Centre*

Sun Oct 12 – Halifax, NS – Scotiabank Centre*

Wed Oct 15 – St. John's, NL – Mary Brown’s Centre*

*with The Sheepdogs

+with Amanda Marshall

Also announced this week, two legacy English rock acts will be crossing the pond to play Canada's biggest city this fall.

Elvis Costello & The Imposters will perform at the historic Massey Hall on September 26 as part of the Radio Soul! tour, featuring Costello's early material. The show draws on material from Costello's breakout My Aim Is True to 1986's Blood and Chocolate, and gets its name from the first draft of the song "Radio Radio." Tickets go on sale April 25 at 10 AM.

Britpop outfit Pulp are coming to Toronto on September 16 to play the outdoor Budweiser Stage. The band are touring their first new album in two dozen years, More, set for release on June 6. The tour follows a North American run from last year, with frontman Jarvis Cocker promising this year's tour will have even more to offer. Tickets go on sale April 25 at 10 AM.

For music fans seeking summer activity, Montreal Jazz Fest has announced its full 2025 lineup. The longstanding festival will bring hip-hop hero Nas, funk master Thundercat, alt-rockers Violent Femmes and local indie stars Men I Trust to Montreal this summer. But that's just the tip of the iceberg, with over 350 concerts programmed, two thirds of which are free.

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There will also be celebrations for Oscar Peterson's centennial; Montreal-born Grammy-winner Allison Russell; acclaimed Quebec composer Jean-Michel Blais; Americana guitarist Yasmin Williams; and much, much more. Check out the full program here; tickets are on sale now.

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Billboard Canada 2025: The Covers
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Billboard Canada 2025: The Covers

Here are all of Billboard Canada’s covers of 2025, spotlighting artists, executives and career moments that shaped the year.

A Billboard Canada cover marks a moment when an artist, a career or an industry story reaches a point worth reflecting on. Across 2025, those moments ranged from chart-defining comebacks and first-ever interviews to farewell tours and leadership milestones that shaped Canada’s live and recorded music landscape. Each cover reflected not just who was in focus, but why that story mattered at that specific time.

This year was bookended by big Canadian rock comeback stories: Sum 41 calling it quits after one of their most successful albums, and Three Days Grace entering one of their highest-charting phases after a reunion with original lead singer Adam Gontier. It was a year of rising stars entering the next level, like The Beaches, and artists returning to their roots, like Daniel Caesar and his intimate show at NXNE 2025. And it was a major year for Live Nation, the dominant live promotions company that has helped turn Toronto into one of the biggest global touring markets.

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