Alan Jackson last concert on TV will arrive through multiple Nashville livestreams when he plays his final concert at Nissan Stadium on Saturday, June 27. The sold-out show turns a one-night farewell into a citywide event for fans who missed tickets.
Nissan Stadium on June 27
Jackson called the show his “Last Big Show,” and the set list will sit inside a concert titled Last Call: One More for the Road — The Finale. Luke Bryan, Keith Urban, Carrie Underwood and Eric Church are listed as special guests, which pushes the night beyond a standard retirement date and into a full-scale country sendoff.
Jackson said, “We just felt like we had to end it all where it all started, and that’s in Nashville, Tennessee – Music City – where country music lives. I gotta do the last one there.” That choice matters for anyone watching the rollout: the final stop is fixed, the venue is full, and the rest of the audience has been pushed into public viewing spaces instead of arena seats.
Broadway, Belmont University
Jackson and his team will host a livestreaming event on Broadway in downtown Nashville, with a screen and stage in the middle of the street showing the concert live. James Carothers and Cory Farley will perform before the broadcast begins; the Keepin’ It Country gates open at 4 p.m., stage performances start at 5 p.m., and the concert streams at 6 p.m.
Belmont University said in May that it would also livestream the concert at The Fisher Center for the Performing Arts. Doors open at 6:30 p.m., and Chaz Corzine, the executive director of The Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, said, “Alan Jackson is one of the most beloved figures in country music history, and his final performance is a once-in-a-generation moment.”
Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum will host another livestream at The CMA Theater at 8:30 p.m. and said it will only show Jackson’s performance. That setup splits the audience by purpose: Broadway adds pre-show music and a street-party atmosphere, Belmont gives fans an indoor viewing option, and the museum keeps the feed focused on the concert itself.
NBC will later air a primetime special titled Alan Jackson: The Last Show and stream it the following day on Peacock. The special will highlight songs from his three-decade career and his impact on country music, using the Nissan Stadium concert as the centerpiece for viewers who want the televised version after the live farewell ends.






