14 January 15–21, 2026 miaminewtimes.com | browardpalmbeach.com NEW TIMES | MUSIC | CAFE | CULTURE | NIGHT+DAY | NEWS | LETTERS | CONTENTS | Florence and the Machine at Kaseya Center (April 29) Last year, baroque-pop outfit Florence and the Machine returned with its sixth album, Everybody Scream. It received critical acclaim, demonstrating that nearly two decades later, the band still has plenty of creative output left. Florence Welch and her band are now hitting the road to support the record with the Everybody Scream Tour, which stops at the Kaseya Center on April 29 with Irish singer CMAT as the opener. It will be the band’s first show in South Florida since its 2022 concert during the Dance Fever Tour. In 2024, Welch also popped up during Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour in Miami to perform their collaboration “Florida!!!” 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 29, at the Kaseya Center, 601 Biscayne Blvd., Miami; kaseyacenter.com. Tickets cost $50.90 to $299.40 via ticketmaster.com. Ethel Cain at the Fillmore Miami (May 9) If you’re chronically online, you might know Ethel Cain from her very public feud with Lana Del Rey, which kept fans of either singer in a tizzy for months. All you really need to know is that, regardless of everything, Cain is a superb musician who has delivered two back- to-back high-caliber albums, 2022’s Preacher’s Daughter and 2025’s Willoughby Tucker, I’ll Always Love You. (There was also the highly experimental project Perverts released in early 2025.) The proudly trans musician blends shoegaze, folk, indie pop, Americana, and dark ambient, delivering a sound that’s uniquely her own. 8 p.m. Saturday, May 9, at the Fillmore Miami Beach, 1700 Washington Ave., Miami Beach; fillmore-miami.com. Tickets cost $71 via ticketmaster.com. Rosalía at Kaseya Center (June 4 and 6) If Rosalía has proven anything with her latest album Lux, it is that she refuses to be cor- nered. If Motomami felt like the Spanish singer was leaning more into urbano and pop, Lux feels like a complete rejection of that. With the assistance of the London Symphony Orchestra, Rosalía has crafted an album that seamlessly integrates orchestral music into the present day. Yes, Lux can at times be a challenging listen, especially if you expect more by-the-numbers songs, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t bangers. “Reliquia” might be one of the singer-songwriter’s best songs to date, while “Dios Es un Stalker” feels a bit like older Rosalía. If you saw Rosalía’s perfor- mance at III Points in 2022, you’ll know that she can command a stage. Who knows what she’ll have up her sleeve during the Lux Tour? 8:30 p.m. Thursday, June 4, and Saturday, June 6, at the Kaseya Center, 601 Biscayne Blvd., Miami; kaseyacenter.com. Tickets cost $93.75 to $244.70 via ticketmaster.com. Ariana Grande at Amerant Bank Arena (June 30, July 2, and July 3) For Arianators, the release of Wicked and Wicked: For Good might have been the most challenging of times. That’s because, despite releasing her seventh album, 2024’s Eternal Sunshine, Ariana Grande was too busy to prop- erly promote it due to her commitments to the musical movie. Many fans attributed the al- bum’s poor commercial performance and its few Grammy nominations to Grande’s lack of promotion. Well, with the films in the rearview mirror, the Boca Raton native is finally giving it a proper tour, which is stopping at the Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise for a three-night stint. Yes, finally, you’ll be able to hear Grande belt out tunes from the album, like “Yes, And?” and “The Boy Is Mine.” Here’s hoping she made the long wait worth it. 8 p.m. Tuesday, June 30; Thursday, July 2; and Friday, July 3, at the Amerant Bank Arena, 1 Panther Pkwy., Sunrise; amerantbankarena.com. Sold out. [email protected] Florence and the Machine. Photo by Autumn de Wilde Can’t Hardly Wait from p13