Luke Combs Joins Alex Warren for Nashville Duet of Ordinary
Luke Combs joined alex warren onstage Monday, May 25, 2026, at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville for a duet of “Ordinary.” The surprise pairing turned Warren’s Finally Finding Family on the Road Tour stop into a live test of how far the song has traveled since it reached No. 1.
Bridgestone Arena On May 25
Warren and Combs performed “Ordinary” together at the Nashville show, then ended the moment with a bear hug. A video of the performance was posted to Instagram, where the fan response focused on the size of the surprise and the scale of the crowd reaction.
“The BEST surprise!! Bridgestone was electric for this,” one fan wrote on the video. Another added, “Best collaboration! Love this so much,” while a third said, “I may or may not have LOST IT when Luke came out. What an AMAZING show,” and a fourth wrote, “I need y’all to know I ugly sobbed through this whole song tonight. Alex put on an amazing show. Luke coming out was an amazing bonus!!!”
Ordinary After No. 1
“Ordinary” arrived on the Billboard Hot 100 in February 2025, then climbed to No. 1 in June and stayed there for 10 weeks. That run gave Warren the kind of chart record that turns a tour guest spot into a higher-value live moment, because the song is already established as the centerpiece of his debut album, You’ll Be Alright, Kid.
Warren also entered this Nashville date with a stronger awards profile than he had at the start of the song’s climb. He earned his first Grammy nomination this year for Best New Artist, won Best New Artist at the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards, and took iHeart’s Breakthrough Artist of the Year for “Ordinary.”
Combs Brings Country Weight
Combs arrives with more than 20 No. 1 hits on the Hot Country Songs and Country Airplay charts, plus a cover of Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car” that peaked at No. 2 on the Hot 100. Putting him beside Warren on “Ordinary” gave the performance a crossover frame that Nashville audiences immediately understood: a pop song built for mass sing-along, now delivered with a country headliner’s reach.
The result was not just a cameo but a credential check for Warren’s current run. When a song that already spent 10 weeks at No. 1 gets the Combs treatment in Nashville, the live show stops reading like a tour stop and starts looking like a proof-of-demand record. For anyone deciding whether to catch this leg of the tour, this was the kind of guest appearance that makes the next city feel less optional.