Last Call: One More for the Road - The Finale brought more than 50,000 fans to Nissan Stadium on June 27, 2026, closing the book on a 35-year touring career that helped define modern country music.
Jackson performed before a sold-out crowd at Nashville's Nissan Stadium in what was officially billed as his final concert performance.
The night's biggest moment came when George Strait joined Jackson onstage, and the two country legends performed their 2002 collaboration "Designated Drinker" together, trading verses before harmonizing on the chorus.
After the song, Strait handed Jackson a cup and said, "So good to be here with the legend Mr. Alan Jackson." Jackson then replied, "Let's do that other song we used to do," leading into their 1999 track "Murder on Music Row."
The song - a protest anthem defending traditional country - felt as relevant in 2026 as it did the day it was written.
Live performances from Luke Bryan, Eric Church, Luke Combs, Miranda Lambert, Carrie Underwood, Lainey Wilson, Riley Green, Cody Johnson, Jon Pardi, Thomas Rhett, Lee Ann Womack, Little Big Town, and Jake Owen filled the evening before Jackson himself took the stage around 8:30 p.m. CT.
Not every moment was without drama. Before Jackson took the stage, Grand Ole Opry announcer Kelly Sutton introduced one more video tribute - and when Taylor Swift's face appeared on the stadium screens, boos from sections of the crowd drowned out the beginning of her message.
Cheers from other audience members counteracted the reaction, and Swift's message closed with words of appreciation for Jackson's support of fellow artists and writers over the years.
Video tributes were also sent in by Kenny Chesney, Keith Urban, Zac Brown, and others who could not attend in person.
The entire concert is being filmed for a primetime NBC special titled Alan Jackson: The Last Show, with a premiere date to be announced later this year. The special will also stream on Peacock the following day.
For a man who has spent decades singing about faith, family, and staying true to himself - from "Remember When" to his beloved Precious Memories gospel albums - the evening was more than a farewell concert.
It was a testimony. Jackson has credited his faith and family at every turn of his career, and on Saturday night, Music City reflected that back to him one last time.
For every ticket sold, $1 was donated to the CMT Research Foundation, matched by $2 from a generous donor, funding research for Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease - the condition that led Jackson to step away from touring.
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