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Concerts

Hayley Williams Plays Two Sold-Out Nights at Massey Hall, Cardi B Comes to Toronto and Hamilton: Canadian Concerts of the Week

Plus, Magi Merlin plays a hometown Montreal gig, Canadian singer-songwriter Kathleen Edwards plays Western Canada and more.

Hayley Williams

Hayley Williams

Zachary Gray

Paramore's Hayley Williams is returning to Toronto on her own, playing back-to-back nights at Massey Hall. The pop-rock star is celebrating her Grammy-nominated album, Ego Death At A Bachelorette Party, with two sold-out shows in the city.

U.K. rapper Dave is bringing his signature soulful introspection to the west coast, while Cardi B plays back-to-back nights in two Ontario cities. Montreal-based singer Magi Merlin plays a hometown show showcasing her unique brand of alternative R&B and soul, and Canadian singer-songwriter Kathleen Edwards performs her innovative alt-country and folk sound in Calgary.


Concert of the Week

Hayley Williams, Massey Hall, Toronto — March 31; April 1

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“I’ll be the biggest star,” Hayley Williams sings on the title track of her third solo album, Ego Death At A Bachelorette Party. In some ways, she manifested her reality.

The Paramore leader is gearing up to perform two sold-out nights at Toronto’s Massey Hall — the only Canadian dates on her solo headlining tour. It was less than a year ago that Williams released Ego Death — but in an unconventional way. Last August, she shared individual singles on her website and later uploaded them to streaming platforms.

With the help of fans, she named the LP, sorted out the tracklist and officially released the album as a full body of work at the end of the month, with an additional single, “Parachute” tacked on. She added two more songs (“Good Ol’ Days,” “Showbiz”) before capping it at 20 songs. “We wanted to make music tangible again,” the singer’s co-manager, Leah Hodgkiss, told Billboard.

Ego Death secured Williams her first-ever solo Grammy nominations and served as a turning point for the Mississippi-born singer. It became her highest charting album in the U.S., peaking at No. 12 on the Billboard 200. When she quietly announced her forthcoming tour dates on her ’90s computer desktop-themed website, fans quickly noticed that Williams was scheduled to play quite small venues in comparison to her growing fanbase.

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Tickets for Williams’ sole Canadian date sold out instantly, with many fans left empty-handed. In an effort to take a stance against ticket resellers, the singer has opted into Ticketmaster’s face value resale program, leaving some hope for listeners of the “Ice In My OJ” singer — except for the racist or anti-trans fans.

This trek marks Williams’ first outing on her own, following Paramore’s stadium opening slot in Europe for Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour two years ago. Williams was gearing up to tour her first solo record, Petals For Armor, at the beginning of the decade, but it was cancelled due to the pandemic and never rescheduled.

Tickets are available here.

More Canadian Concerts of the Week

Dave, Thunderbird Sports Centre, Vancouver — March 28

“After a lifetime,” Dave says on social media, he’s coming back to Canada — his first shows here in four years. The U.K. singer and rapper is hitting the road in support of his album, The Boy Who Played the Harp, which peaked at No. 19 on the Billboard Canadian Albums chart last year. Known for his signature soulful storytelling, he blends his rap sensibilities with powerful live instrumentation that keeps concertgoers captivated.

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Tickets are available here.

Cardi B, Scotiabank Arena, Toronto – March 30; TD Coliseum, Hamilton — March 31

ICYMI: Cardi B is coming to Ontario — playing back-to-back nights in the province, including a nearly sold-out show in Toronto and one that’s about 80% sold-out in Hamilton. Addressing the latter concert, the New York rapper took to social media to share her frustration: "Y'all better go buy them tickets. Y'all not breaking my perfectly sold-out streak. I'm not playing with y'all Banadians." Well, you heard her!

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Tickets are available here.

Magi Merlin, Casa del Popolo, Montreal — March 31

After supporting R&B songstress Yaya Bey on tour at the beginning of the year, Montreal-based alternative soul singer Magi Merlin is embarking on a headlining tour of her own, where she'll play a show at the intimate venue Casa del Popolo, in what she calls “her first hometown show in forever,” on social media. She’ll be joined by a string of local artists, including Jashim, Béli, Fraud Perry and Nkusi. “Show up or I’m holding a grudge,” she joked.

Tickets are available here.

Kathleen Edwards, Bella Concert Hall, Calgary — April 1

One of the forebears of modern alt-country and folk, singer-songwriter Kathleen Edwards is spending an evening in Western Canada in support of her acclaimed album, Billionaire. Since her debut in the early 2000s, the Ottawa native has become a staple in the Canadian music songbook — with tracks like “Soft Place to Land” and “Goodnight, California” — known for her lyrical sharpness and unflinching life observations that elevate her on-stage performance.

Tickets are available here.

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Paul McCartney
Mary McCartney

Paul McCartney

Pop

Paul McCartney Announces Reflective ‘The Boys of Dungeon Lane’ Solo Album, Drops Wistful ‘Days We Left Behind’ Single

The 14-track collection of songs inspired by McCartney's youth and he played the majority of the instruments on it.

Paul McCartney is going back to the start on his upcoming 18th studio album, the nostalgic The Boys of Dungeon Lane. The 14-track collection announced on Thursday morning (March 26) is due out on May 29 through MPL/Capitol Records and is prefaced by the wistful first single, “Days We Left Behind.”

McCartney’s first release since 2020’s McCartney III is described in a press release as a look backward at the former Beatle’s formative years, revisiting those youthful times that “shaped not only his life, but the very foundations of modern popular culture. In a career defined by timeless storytelling and unforgettable characters, Paul now tells the most personal story of all, his own. The Boys of Dungeon Lane is his most introspective album to date and takes the listener back to where it all began.”

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