Scheduled to perform at the Westland Mall Drive-in on May 14, dubstep DJ and producer Subtronics performance has been cancelled due to scheduling issues.
No plans for rescheduling have been made, according to Prime Social Group staff. Instead, all ticket buyers for the drive-in concert will be automatically refunded, PSG spokeswoman Sheila Rossiter said.
Following a live music series at the Westland Mall Drive-in last fall, Prime Social Group announced in April that the venue would reopen on weekends for national and local acts, ranging from EDM to country, to perform throughout the spring and summer.
And although the first performance has been called off, the Big Gigantic is still set to perform on June 11, Rossiter said. For tickets, visit https://www.westlanddrivein.com/.
Grand Rapids’ Largest Music Festival Set For Post-Pandemic Return
Breakaway Music Festival announced their line-up for the 2021 version of the event, making it the largest gathering set for post-pandemic life in Grand Rapids.
This year s event, returning to Belknap Park, will be headlined by ILLENIUM & QUINN XCII on August 27th & 28th, Tickets for the two day, multi-genre festival start at $99.99 for both nights and are available on their website at breakawayfestival.com. Travel packages are also available starting at $282 per person that includes two nights at the Embassy Suites Grand Rapids Downtown Hotel.
The festival made it s Grand Rapids debut in 2017 at Belknap Park and has featured artists such as Travis Scott, Zedd, Khalid, Wiz Khalifa and more in the years since. The 2020 edition of the event was cancelled due to the pandemic. And although official attendance numbers have not been released by Prime Social Group, the 2019 event was touted as the largest outdoor music fe
By: Ryan Borba
Kings Of Leonraised more than $600,000 for Crew Nation with an NFT-laden album drop in March.For the last couple years, the still-burgeoning world of cryptocurrency seemed like something out of science fiction, at least to most run-of-the-mill, regular-money-using people.
Even its name, with the prefix “crypto,” suggested a dark-web underworld where people traded things of nebulous worth for nebulous currency for nebulous reasons. While some mainstream outlets and businesses started accepting Bitcoin for transactions, and even just recently some major online brokerages started tracking cryptocurrency on their own exchange-traded funds, the crypto craze has mostly seemed to be as a new asset class for people hoping to make a quick buck.
By: Ryan Borba
Kings Of Leonraised more than $600,000 for Crew Nation with an NFT-laden album drop in March.For the last couple years, the still-burgeoning world of cryptocurrency seemed like something out of science fiction, at least to most run-of-the-mill, regular-money-using people.
Even its name, with the prefix “crypto,” suggested a dark-web underworld where people traded things of nebulous worth for nebulous currency for nebulous reasons. While some mainstream outlets and businesses started accepting Bitcoin for transactions, and even just recently some major online brokerages started tracking cryptocurrency on their own exchange-traded funds, the crypto craze has mostly seemed to be as a new asset class for people hoping to make a quick buck.