Alan Jackson Final Concert Special Films Nashville Farewell at Nissan Stadium
Alan Jackson final concert special will be filmed June 27 at Nashville's Nissan Stadium, capturing his last stage appearance before a sold-out crowd. The NBC presentation turns a single farewell concert into a television event, with a next-day Peacock stream giving the show a wider life after the stadium lights go down.
Nissan Stadium Farewell
Last Call: One More for the Road – The Finale is the title attached to the concert, and the bill is built around Jackson's catalog of hits spanning more than three decades. That catalog comes from a career that includes three CMA Entertainer of the Year honors, a place in the Country Music Hall of Fame, and membership in the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
The June 27 show sold out during presales last year, which leaves the special with a built-in audience interest before a frame reaches television. Jackson's standing in the format is equally clear: Billboard ranked him among the Top 10 country artists of all time, and ASCAP gave him its Heritage Award as the most-performed country songwriter-artist of its first 100 years.
Carrie Underwood and Luke Combs
Carrie Underwood, Luke Combs, Miranda Lambert, Eric Church and Keith Urban are all tied to the farewell concert, giving the Nashville date a lineup that reaches across current and recent country stardom. NBC has not yet said which guest stars will appear in the televised version, so the live bill and the broadcast cut are not yet identical.
That split matters for viewers who will watch later this year on NBC or the next day on Peacock, because the televised special may not mirror every onstage pairing from Nissan Stadium. The broadcast title, Alan Jackson: The Last Show, points to a curated presentation rather than a full concert dump, which is the kind of edit that can change which performances become the night’s selling point.
2021 and 2023
In 2021, Jackson revealed that he had been diagnosed with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, and the news gave his reduced touring a clearer context. By 2023, he was still talking about new work, saying on his daughter Mattie's podcast: "The creative part jumps out every now and then and I’m always scribbling down ideas and thinking about melodies and I feel like there’ll be some more music to come,"
This farewell should be read as a closing chapter on the road, not a full stop on the catalog. For a country artist with more than 30 years in the Grand Ole Opry and a songbook that already anchors the format, the larger move is simple: the stadium goodbye becomes the television event, and the television event extends his reach beyond the people who made it into presales.