Yungblud sells out Radio City Music Hall with 6,000 fans

Yungblud sold out Radio City Music Hall on June 10, 2026, extending his New York City draw after a 2,700-capacity Brooklyn Paramount sellout.

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Yungblud sells out Radio City Music Hall with 6,000 fans

Yungblud sold out the nearly 6,000-capacity Radio City Music Hall on June 10, 2026, turning a New York City theater date into a fuller-scale market test. Dominic Harrison played for a 6,000-seat hall, started at 8:15 p.m., and stayed onstage for a little more than 90 minutes.

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Radio City Music Hall in New York City

He opened with "Hello Heaven, Hello," came out to a recording of Black Sabbath’s "War Pigs," and closed with "Zombie." In between, he moved through a set that included a cover of Black Sabbath’s "Changes," which he dedicated to Ozzy Osbourne, while wearing silver trousers and a silver vest before later dropping the vest.

The show also gave the crowd more than a standard performance. Harrison charged into the audience via the center aisle, briefly wore a New York Knicks jersey at the back of the room, and asked fans to scream, raise their hands, and stand on their chairs. Ushers then had to move through the aisles to reverse that request, a small but telling sign that the room was being run as a live-event spectacle, not a seated recital.

B.R.A.T. clothing line stop

Earlier in the day, Harrison spent about 20 minutes at a pop-up clothing store selling his B.R.A.T. clothing line, meeting fans, exchanging hugs and handshakes, posing for photographs, and signing autographs. That extra stop makes the night look less like a one-off booking and more like a citywide sales push built around direct contact, with the stage show acting as the bigger draw.

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Brooklyn Paramount to Radio City

Nine months earlier, a Yungblud concert sold out the 2,700-capacity Brooklyn Paramount in New York City. Filling the nearly 6,000-capacity Radio City Music Hall after that earlier sellout shows a sharp jump in local demand, and the gap between those room sizes tells the story more cleanly than any hype cycle could.

He has also said in recent interviews that he still struggles with ADHD challenges, including hyperactivity, mood swings, and severe sleeplessness, and the set’s pace fit that frame. The practical read is simple: Yungblud is now selling out larger rooms in New York City, and the next threshold is whether that demand holds when the dates get even bigger.

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Entertainment journalist specialising in digital media, influencer culture, and the business of fame. Host of a top-rated entertainment podcast.