Sun Burst

Jane’s Addiction North American Tour

with special guests Love and Rockets

Live Nation Presale (5/29): SOUNDCHECK

MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre

4802 US-301 Tampa, FL 33610 Get Directions

813-740-2446 Event Website | Email

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Jane’s Addition North American Tour

Los Angeles quartet Jane’s Addiction were one of the most influential and iconic alternative rock bands of the late ’80s and early ’90s. Hotly pursued when they first debuted in the mid-’80s, they released a pair of landmark albums before dissolving in 1991. Subsequent reunions yielded additional efforts while they maintained their cult status into the 2000s. Flamboyant frontman Perry Farrell, formerly of the band Psi Com, had an undeniable charisma and an interest in provocative art (he designed the band’s album covers), and Jane’s Addiction played a hybrid of rock music: metal with strains of punk, folk, and jazz.

The quartet, comprised of Farrell, bassist Eric Avery, drummer Stephen Perkins, and guitarist Dave Navarro, had already released its debut album as well, in the form of a live recording from the Roxy in Hollywood. Finally, Warner Bros. won the bidding war and released Nothing’s Shocking in 1988. The band’s abrasive sound and aggressive attitude (typified by the nude sculpture on the cover) led to some resistance, but Jane’s Addiction began to break through to an audience — the album spent 35 weeks on the charts.

About Love and Rockets

Love and Rockets comprised guitarist/vocalist Daniel Ash, bassist/vocalist David J, and drummer Kevin Haskins, all former members of the pioneering goth band Bauhaus. However, the group didn’t sound very similar to its first incarnation. Instead, Love and Rockets emphasized the strains of psychedelia and glam rock that appeared underneath Bauhaus’ gloomy drone, adding elements of pop songcraft, folk, and R&B, as well as cryptic, self-important lyrics.

For most of the late ’80s, the group had a devoted cult following, resulting in a surprise Top Ten hit single, “So Alive,” in 1989. During the early ’90s, the group’s audience steadily declined, although they still retained a number of loyal fans.