To me, Guns N’ Roses will always be the band I had to smuggle into the house like contraband. Back when cassettes rattled around our backpacks and the world felt a little wider for it, I kept Appetite for Destruction and both Use Your Illusion tapes tucked under algebra books, waiting for the moment my parents’ bedroom door clicked shut so I could slip on my headphones and disappear. That ritual didn’t last long — my mom eventually found the stash — but the awe those songs carried stayed with me. Out in the little satellite towns that ring this state, there was something thrilling about a band that scared the grown-ups and electrified the kids.
Nearly four decades after “Welcome to the Jungle” first hit the airwaves, that spark hasn’t dimmed. Sure, they’ve weathered lineup bar fights, long silences, and the strange odyssey that was “Chinese Democracy.” But when a band delivers a debut as seismic as Appetite, folks tend to grant them lifetime clemency. And Guns N’ Roses — stubborn, swaggering, unpredictable — have managed something few rock acts ever do. They remain not only relevant, but beloved, still drawing crowds that learned to air-guitar long before they learned to drive.
Part of it comes down to the players themselves. Slash and Duff McKagan didn’t just survive the era — they carried its flame into Velvet Revolver with the late Scott Weiland, proving that their chemistry wasn’t a fluke. And Axl Rose, with that unmistakable wail and serpentine sway, is still the voice people summon when they belt “Paradise City” alone in front of the bathroom mirror.
Now Texas is on their map once again. After a globe-spanning 2025 run that crossed Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and Latin America, the band has announced a fresh stretch of dates for spring and summer 2026. They’ll hit Globe Life Field in Arlington on September 9, then roll down I-35 to the Alamodome on September 16. The itinerary also includes a return to the Rose Bowl in Los Angeles — their first in more than thirty years — a homecoming of its own kind.
Fans who want first dibs on North American tickets can dive into the Nightrain Fan Club Presale, running Dec. 2 through Dec. 3. The general on-sale follows on Dec. 5. No codes, no scavenger hunts — just sign up through Ticketmaster and keep an eye on the clock. And if you’re the type who prefers a backstage peek or a cushier seat, the North American dates also include VIP packages that bundle premium tickets, pre-show lounge access, merch, and other bells and whistles.
The band is marking the week with fresh music as well. On December 2, Guns N’ Roses will release two new songs — “Nothin” and “Atlas” — their first since 2023. The tracks join “The General” and “Perhaps,” broadening the modern edges of a catalogue still dominated by the riffs and snarls that made them legends. The news follows the arrival of their deluxe Live Era ‘87–’93 box set, a remastered time capsule of the band in peak ferocity.
With festival dates already announced in Mexico, Brazil, and the UK, plus a European leg stretching from Poland to France, the full 31-date tour promises another year of the old thunder rumbling across continents. For tickets and city-by-city details, fans can head to gunsnroses.com and start planning the pilgrimage.
This time, you won’t need to hide your GN’R love — be proud to wear it out loud, sing the songs, and make sure to enlighten mom on every detail after the show. Click here for the full tour schedule.
November 24, 2025
4:06 PM