Jack White released an excellent, new album. Here’s how to see him live

Roughly every two years, Jack White quietly drops a masterpiece.
The tireless Rock Hall of Famer — who fronted The White Stripes, Raconteurs, Dead Weather, Them Crooked Vultures and penned the music for the classic 2007 film “Walk Hard” — has been doing this for decades now.
From 2001’s “White Blood Cells” to 2003’s “Elephant” to 2005’s “Get Behind Me Satan” to 2007’s “Icky Thump” to 2008’s “Consolers of the Lonely” (with The Raconteurs) to 2010’s “Sea of Cowards” (with The Dead Weather) to his solo 2012 “Blunderbuss” to 2014’s “Lazaretto” to 2018’s “Boarding House Reach” to 2022’s “Fear of the Dawn” to 2024’s “No Name” to 2026’s “Frozen Charlotte,” the man is nothing if not consistent.
And his latest is one of his best.
Comprised of 13 fuzzy, urgent tracks, White is still operating at the height of his powers. Songs like “G.O.D. And The Broken Ribs” and “Raising The Grain” will have you head-banging like nobody’s business while “You’ll Never Fix Me” and the groovy “Dollar Bill” just might make you bust a move.
Not bad for a 51-year-old elder statesman of rock and roll.
If you’d like to see Jack White shred live, last-minute tickets are available for his summer 2026 tour.
That includes five shows and a festival in California. They’re slated to take place at:
Bill Graham Civic Auditorium
San Francisco, CA
Thursday, Sept. 24
The Fox Theater
Pomona, CA
Friday, Sept. 25
Ocean Way Festival
Santa Monica Beach, CA
Sept. 26-27
Hollywood Palladium
Los Angeles, CA
Monday, Sept. 28
Hollywood Palladium
Los Angeles, CA
Tuesday, Sept. 29
The Sound
Del Mar, CA
Wednesday, Sept. 30
At the time of publication, the lowest price we could find on inventory for any one gig of his was $65 including fees on SeatGeek.
Prices start at $120 including fees for his cheapest California concert (that’s the Sept. 28 Hollywood Palladium show).
Make sure to use promo code NYPOST10 for $10 off purchases over $250 at checkout (Editor’s Note: this discount is only valid for users’ first purchase on SeatGeek).
And if you haven’t seen White live, make it a priority.
“Everything he plays, slays,” The Post reported after seeing him live in February 2025. “…thanks to him, there just may be hope that this woebegone genre we call rock and roll still means something.”
For more information, our team has everything you need to know and more about seeing Jack White live in 2026 below.
What do tickets cost to see Jack White on tour in 2026?
A complete calendar including all North American tour dates, venues and links to the cheapest tickets available can be found here:
| Jack White tour dates | Ticket prices start at |
|---|---|
| July 17 at the MGM Music Hall at Fenway in Boston, MA | $72 (including fees) |
| July 18 at the College Street Music Hall in New Haven, CT | $131 (including fees) |
| July 19 at The Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, NY | $211 (including fees) |
| July 21 at the Everwise Amphitheater in Indianapolis, IN | $84 (including fees) |
| July 23 at Radius in Chicago, IL | $121 (including fees) |
| July 24 at The Salt Shed in Chicago, IL | $203 (including fees) |
| July 25 at the Pine Knob Music Theatre in Clarkston, MI | $65 (including fees) |
| Sept. 18 at the MegaCorp Pavilion in Cincinnati, OH | $127 (including fees) |
| Sept. 18-20 at the Borderland Festival in East Aurora, NY Three-day passes | $411 (including fees) |
| Sept. 19 at the Borderland Festival in East Aurora, NY Single-day passes | $218 (including fees) |
| Sept. 19-20 at the Iron Blossom Festival in Richmond, VA Two-day passes | $301 (including fees) |
| Sept. 20 at the Iron Blossom Festival in Richmond, VA Single-day passes | $233 (including fees) |
| Sept. 24 at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco, CA | $127 (including fees) |
| Sept. 25 at the Fox Theater in Pomona, CA | $151 (including fees) |
| Sept. 26 at the Ocean Way Festival in Santa Monica, CA Single-day passes | $593 (including fees) |
| Sept. 28 at the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles, CA | $120 (including fees) |
| Sept. 29 at the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles, CA | $130 (including fees) |
| Sept. 30 at The Sound in Del Mar, CA | $260 (including fees) |
| Oct. 2 at Fontainebleau in Las Vegas, NV | $129 (including fees) |
| Oct. 3 at the Arizona Financial Theatre in Phoenix, AZ | $109 (including fees) |
| Oct. 4 at the Revel in Albuquerque, NM | $168 (including fees) |
| Oct. 6 at the Moody Amphitheater in Austin, TX | $141 (including fees) |
| Oct. 7 at The Bomb Factory in Dallas, TX | $141 (including fees) |
| Oct. 9 at The Truth in Nashville, TN | $114 (including fees) |
| Nov. 8 at The Armory in Minneapolis, MN | $143 (including fees) |
| Nov. 9 at The Sylvee in Madison, WI | $194 (including fees) |
| Nov. 10 at Landmark Credit Union Live in Milwaukee, WI | $114 (including fees) |
| Nov. 12 at Citizens Live in Pittsburgh, PA | $194 (including fees) |
| Nov. 13 at The Fillmore in Charlotte, NC | $176 (including fees) |
| Nov. 14 at The Fillmore in Charlotte, NC | $247 (including fees) |
| Nov. 16 at the Hard Rock Live in Orlando, FL | $160 (including fees) |
| Nov. 17 at The Fillmore in Miami Beach, FL | $112 (including fees) |
| Nov. 18 at The Fillmore in Miami Beach, FL | $130 (including fees) |
| Nov. 20 at the Coca-Cola Roxy in Atlanta, GA | $139 (including fees) |
| Nov. 21 at the Coca-Cola Roxy in Atlanta, GA | $141 (including fees) |
Which festivals is Jack White performing at in 2026?
As part of the international jaunt, White will shred at a trio of U.S. festivals. To make sure you’re in the loop, here’s everything you need to know about the multi-day musical extravaganzas:
| Jack White 2026 festival dates |
|---|
| Borderland Festival Sept. 18-20 at the Knox Farm State Park in East Aurora, NY Alabama Shakes, Lord Huron, Pixies, The Head and The Heart, Jesse Welles |
| Iron Blossom Festival Sept. 19-20 at Midtown Green in Richmond, VA LCD Soundsystem, Dijon, Geese, Portugal. The Man, Phantogram |
| Ocean Way Festival Sept. 26-27 at the Santa Monica Beach in Santa Monica, CA The Killers, Olivia Dean, Khruangbin, Hot Chip, Durand Jones and The Indications |
What songs does Jack White perform live in 2026?
Based on our findings at Set List FM, these are the tracks White took to the stage at his most recent concert in Essex Junction, VT on July 15.
01.) “Intro Jam”
02.) “That’s How I’m Feeling”
03.) “Black Math” (The White Stripes song)
04.) “Derecho Demonico”
05.) “Dollar Bill”
06.) “Raising the Grain”
07.) “Love Interruption”
08.) “Hotel Yorba” (The White Stripes song)
09.) “Broken Boy Soldier” (The Raconteurs song)
10.) “Cannon” (The White Stripes song)
11.) “Lazaretto”
12.) “G.O.D. and the Broken Ribs”
13.) “You’ll Never Fix Me”
14.) “The Hardest Button to Button” (The White Stripes song)
15.) “Old Scratch Blues”
16.) “Fear of the Dawn”
17.) “Steady, as She Goes” (The Raconteurs song)
Encore
18.) “Icky Thump” (The White Stripes song)
19.) “It’s Rough on Rats (If You’re Asking)”
20.) “Seven Nation Army”
Jack White new music
On July 10, Jack White released his seventh studio album “Frozen Charlotte.”
It’s an early contender for record of the year.
Wasting no time, he busts the door open with the swaggering “G.O.D. And The Broken Ribs.” Like any great White tune, The muscly, rollicking crowd-pleaser comes complete with fuzzed-out guitar, in-your-face attitude and Detroit native’s singular falsetto.
Next up, “Derecho Demonico” slows things down a beat and embraces the former White Stripes frontman’s more playful, sing-song-y side.
“There’s Nobody There” makes excellent use of stereo as the lively guitar jubilantly bounces between both headphones while White wails. Simple, elegant yet totally singular.
The undisputed highlight here has to be the fist-pumping, head-banging, toe-tapping “Raising The Grain.” This one stopped me dead in my tracks. Pure attitude, groovy licks and somehow epic. Making a “Jack White Greatest Hits” album would be a tall order but we’d be inclined to argue for this bop’s inclusion. It’s that good.
White keeps the party going with the grungy anthem “You’ll Never Fix Me” that wouldn’t sound out of place on a Nirvana record. No need to fix that.
Around the halfway mark, the triumphant “Nobody Knows” rips, slinky blues jam “Dollar Bill” mystifies and bass-y banger “I Can’t Believe What I’m Hearing” harkens back to ’50s doo-wop and ’60s Motown. Who knew that metal, blues and rock and roll were so versatile?
In the final stretch, the invigorating “Thick As Thieves” soars. There’s a touch of magic here mixed in with White’s signature DIY garage sound. How does each song sound better than the last? That’s simple. There’s no one better.
Drums get a real work out on the brawny “All Alone Again,” a funny yang to “Thick As Thieves’” ode to friendship. White takes his time here to get going, not belting until a minute in but it’s worth the wait. He goes sweetly vulnerable here — rather than ferocious — like he rarely does.
We’d argue the frantic “She’s In A Frenzy” lives up to the track’s name. It’s a little all over the place but finds a hand-clapping groove 30 seconds in that’ll catch you right up. Crunchy, hair-raising stuff.
Looking for a “Seven Nation Army” style anthem? “Making Contact” could be your answer. An easy drumbeat meets impassioned vocals meets easily digestible lyrics about, well, “making contact.”
To close things out, the trippy “Neighbors Blues” goes all “In A Gadda Da Vida” Iron Butterfly on us as White makes his six string crow like an organ. Although not as awe-inspiring as previous tracks, there’s a mournful quality here about how “neighbors have nothing to say” that can’t be ignored (plus, the looped feedback is a neat touch). Of course, there’s an absolutely bananas guitar solo, too. But you already knew that. This is Jack White after all.
Need to hear for yourself? You can find the essential “Frozen Charlotte” here.
Huge 2026 tours
Can’t wait to rock out at a show with bluesmen and metalheads live this year?
Honestly, same.
Here are just six (!) acts we can’t wait to see IRL these next few months.
• Buddy Guy
• RUSH
• Eric Clapton
• AC/DC
• Iron Maiden
Also, be sure to check out Metallica’s Las Vegas Sphere residency that gets underway in October. It’ll surely be the musical event of the year.
This article was written by Matt Levy, New York Post live events reporter. Levy stays up-to-date on all the latest tour announcements from your favorite musical artists and comedians, as well as Broadway openings, sporting events and more live shows – and finds great ticket prices online. Since he started his tenure at the Post in 2022, Levy has reviewed a Bruce Springsteen concert and interviewed Melissa Villaseñor of SNL fame, to name a few. Please note that deals can expire, and all prices are subject to change.