Faces by Mac Miller. Digital album and vinyl out October 15. Pre-order available now. (Free afternoon concert at 1:30pm by the Charles River, presented by WBCN) August 6, 1974 Riverside Theatre, Milwaukee, WI 08/09/74 Seattle Center Coliseum, Seattle, WA Dr. John/Brownsville Station/ZZ Top. Mac Miller Tickets. Mac Miller pre-sale and premium tickets (which include an exclusive screen printed tour poster with purchase) will go on sale beginning July 24 at 10AM local time in respective markets through Mac Miller’s official website. Tickets will go on sale to the general public starting July 27 at 10AM local time via Live Nation. Online Ticket Availability Dates. These are the dates that tickets will be available starting at 9 AM. These are not performance dates. September 13 – El Grito At Miller Featuring Casvada de Flores, September 15 Performance. September 15 – DACAMERA Presents Pedrito Martinez Group, September 17 Performance. September 16 – Houston Jazz. By drawingcircles. Miss you everyday💔. One of the greatest musicians of all time. You saved my life so many times. Love you and your music so much. You will never be forgotten Mac.
Tour:GO:OD AM TourTour statisticsAdd setlist
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Encore:
- Play Video
- Play Video
- Play Video
Edits and Comments
4activities(last edit by discojedi97, 28 Oct 2019, 00:31 Etc/UTC)
Show edits and commentsMac Miller
More from this Artist
Dec 17, 2015
Dec 17, 2015
Mac Miller Free Boston Concerts
Share or embed this setlist
Use this setlist for your event review and get all updates automatically!
HTML Code
Last.fm Event Review
Mac Miller
More from this Artist
The Reason I Rhyme: Morray
Katherine Duffey, Social and Communites Manager
September 9, 2011
This year, the Boston Urban Music Festival held their annual free concert on August 6th, 2011. The free concert is traditionally geared towards the young adult audience- last year the headliner was Wiz Khalifa. Khalifa ended up being chased from the stage by fans because of a lack of crowd control, so this year, the Festival decided to use a less known artist- Mac Miller. Miller is Khalifa’s fellow Pittsburgh native who shares the same Rostrum Records label. However, it doesn’t seem like this solved the problem. No, Miller wasn’t chased from the stage, but he threatened to leave it at least three times…
Mac Miller Concert Lineup
The concert was scheduled to be from 5:00-8:00 p.m., but fans started lining up at Boston’s City Hall Plaza as early as one o’ clock. The concert was free- so there were about 30,000 people in attendance. Bodies were packed together, and the most crowd members could see of Mac was a small glimpse here and there, unless you were one of the lucky few who found unobstructed views. The crowd was restless, and the hot and humid summer air combined with the body heat of everyone around you made you feel like you were suffocating. The opening acts had a tough job trying to please such a restless, rowdy audience, but beat boxer Phunk Phenomenon and MC Flem, who performed a Bruins remix version of Khalifa’s “Black and Yellow” successfully entertained the crowd. Next, Moe Pope, a hip hop artist from Boston, performed. Unfortunately, the crowd had gotten so rowdy that Moe Pope was forced to stop in the middle of his act. Crowd members were throwing bottles at each other and at the stage, and multiple fights broke out. People attempted to crowd surf, and most ended up on the pavement. No authority stepped in- but concert-goers were warned not to do it again.
Then, the final opener, a young female vocalist called Goapele, performed. Not a person in the crowd could hear her over the booing. She was basically ignored as the crowd hollered and chanted for the headliner, Mac Miller. Bottles, most of them filled, continued to be thrown in the air, to the point where people were breaking out the umbrellas on the clear summer night. The crowd was too big to control- and only about five police officers could be seen at one time, unable to really do anything about the riot-like situation.
When Mac Miller finally came onstage, it was about 7:00 pm. The crowd had long awaited the moment, but it wasn’t all that satisfying listening to Miller’s biggest hit “Donald Trump” when you’re covered in orange soda that someone tossed on you, standing in a crowd of 30,000 rowdy, disrespectful, and intoxicated teenagers.