Sting in a format that brings songs back to the skeleton of rhythm, bass and voice
Sting is coming to Hard Rock Live at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood complex with a concert on the "STING 3.0" tour, scheduled for May 6, 2026 at 8:00 PM. Although the event is often listed in sales under the broader Davie area, the venue itself is located at 1 Seminole Way, Hollywood, Florida, in South Florida, close enough to Fort Lauderdale and Miami for the concert to attract both local audiences and visitors planning a musical trip.
This is not a big-band format with many stage layers, but a deliberately compact lineup. "STING 3.0" rests on a trio: Sting sings and plays bass, joined by his longtime guitar collaborator Dominic Miller, while Chris Maas, a musician also known for his work with Mumford & Sons and Maggie Rogers, is on drums. That is exactly why the concert has a different tension from a standard career overview: the songs return to rhythm, bass line, guitar and voice, without hiding behind excess production.
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A career that connects The Police, solo classics and a new phase
Sting is one of the rare pop-rock figures whose catalogue moves equally naturally through radio hits, reggae-punk beginnings, jazz harmonies, sophisticated pop and darker, minimalist ballads. As frontman and songwriter in The Police, he marked the transition from the late seventies into the eighties with songs such as "Roxanne", "Message in a Bottle", "Walking on the Moon" and "Every Breath You Take". In his solo career, he opened a wider space for songs such as "Englishman in New York", "Fields of Gold", "If I Ever Lose My Faith in You", "Shape of My Heart" and "Desert Rose".
For the audience, the most important thing is that this concert does not depend only on nostalgia. The current phase of his career is tied to "STING 3.0", a lineup that reads older songs through a firmer, more direct trio sound. In 2024, Sting released the song "I Wrote Your Name (Upon My Heart)", his first new song after the 2021 album "The Bridge", featuring Dominic Miller, Chris Maas and Martin Kierszenbaum. That song explains the direction well: the rhythm is emphasized, the bass is in the foreground, and the voice is rougher and closer to blues-rock tension than to the set-to-music elegance by which part of the audience remembers him.
What "STING 3.0" means live
The tour name is not just a marketing label. The three-piece lineup changes the way familiar songs are experienced in the venue. The bass is no longer only the support of the harmony, but the central line that carries the song. The guitar of Dominic Miller, a musician whose sound has been connected with Sting's solo work for decades, gets more room for color and dynamics. Chris Maas's drums keep the performances closer to rock-club energy than to a polished festival overview.
Such a format particularly suits songs that have a strong rhythmic identity. "Roxanne" can live from the tension between verse and chorus, "Message in a Bottle" from the guitar motif, "Every Breath You Take" from the cool precision of bass and guitar, and "Fields of Gold" from how quietly the hall can listen. That does not mean that every individual song has been confirmed in advance for the evening in Hollywood, but that the current tour rests on reshaping a familiar catalogue into a more concentrated concert form.
Who this concert is especially attractive for
The audience for Sting is neither one generation nor one genre circle. At Hard Rock Live, those who discovered him through The Police will probably meet those who remember the solo albums from the nineties, listeners who connect him with jazz-pop elegance and younger visitors who know individual songs from films, series, radio and streaming lists.
- For longtime fans: an opportunity to hear familiar songs in a more stripped-down, three-piece arrangement.
- For the wider audience: the catalogue is recognizable enough that the concert does not require deep knowledge of the discography.
- For lovers of bass and rhythm: Sting's live performance is especially interesting because he sings while playing the lines that carry the song.
- For visitors who like less distant indoor performances: Hard Rock Live has a capacity of about 7,000 seats, which is large, but not stadium-like impersonal.
Hard Rock Live: a venue where proximity to the stage matters
Hard Rock Live at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood complex opened in its new edition as a venue with a capacity of about 7,000 visitors. The space is designed for major tours, television programs, award ceremonies and sporting events, but the key concert advantage is the combination of modern technical equipment, an acoustically designed space and good sightlines toward the stage. For a concert like Sting's, that matters: in a three-piece arrangement, the audience has to hear the details, not just the volume.
In practice, this means that the evening will not depend on a massive stage construction, but on how precisely the venue transmits the relationship between voice, bass, guitar and drums. Sting's songs often have a lot of space between the notes. In a large arena, that space can be lost, while a mid-sized hall gives a better chance to feel the difference between a quieter verse, a tense transition and a chorus the audience recognizes after the first bars.
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Location, arrival and practical notes
The complex is located at 1 Seminole Way, Hollywood, FL 33314. For visitors arriving by car, the most important thing is to plan an earlier arrival because the concert is taking place in a large hotel-entertainment complex with restaurants, a casino and other facilities, so movement through the area can slow down in the hours before the start. On event days, the Hard Rock Live box office is open from noon until 30 minutes after the event begins, and Will Call opens 1 hour before the event.
The venue and the ticket office, as well as food and beverage services, operate without cash, with card and digital payments. This is useful to know before entering, especially for visitors from abroad who rely on cash. It is also advisable to check the current rules for bringing in bags, devices and other items shortly before arrival, because venue rules can change from event to event.
- Address: 1 Seminole Way, Hollywood, FL 33314.
- Venue: Hard Rock Live, Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood.
- Capacity: about 7,000 visitors.
- Concert start: 8:00 PM.
- Box office on event days: from noon until 30 minutes after the event begins.
- Will Call: opens 1 hour before the event.
- Payment in the venue: cashless for tickets, food and drinks.
Hollywood, Davie and South Florida as a concert base
For travelers from outside Florida, it is useful to understand the geography of the event. Hard Rock Live is in Hollywood, in a complex located in the inland part of the broader area between Fort Lauderdale, Davie and Miami. This makes it a practical choice for visitors coming from several directions: from Fort Lauderdale toward the south, from Miami toward the north, or from the western suburbs toward the coast.
Hollywood is known for its coastal area and promenade, but a concert evening at Hard Rock Live is more connected with an indoor resort complex than with a classic city night out. That can be an advantage for those who want dinner, a drink or a shorter stay in the same complex before the concert. On the other hand, visitors who want to see the city should plan separate time for the beach and coastal area, because the concert location is not directly on the shore.
The atmosphere brought by Sting's catalogue
Sting's concerts have a rare advantage: in the same hour, the audience can move from a nervous rock-reggae pulse to an almost chamber-like ballad. In the three-piece format, that range becomes even more pronounced because there is not much sonic cover. When a song begins quietly, the audience hears the singer and instruments in the foreground. When the rhythm opens up, the energy comes from the playing, not from additional layers.
That is why this concert is also interesting for those who have already seen Sting in larger productions. "STING 3.0" does not merely try to repeat an old formula, but to reduce the band to the most resilient elements of the songs. It is a riskier, but also livelier approach: the familiar choruses remain, but the space between them can sound different than on the studio recordings.
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Songs the audience recognizes and the context of the current tour
It is not necessary to guess the exact set list for Hard Rock Live to understand why the concert is attractive. Sting's catalogue has several layers: early The Police material with recognizable tension between punk, reggae and pop; solo songs that marked the more adult, sophisticated sound of the eighties and nineties; and newer works that show he is still interested in rhythm, bass and genre blending.
Official tour announcements emphasize that the current lineup performs the best-known songs and more rarely performed parts of his discography through a firm three-piece arrangement. That is good news for audiences who do not want only a series of expected hits, but also the feeling that the songs are truly being played in the moment, with the possibility of changes in dynamics, emphasis and the duration of individual transitions.
Why the date at Hard Rock Live is interesting
The concert on May 6, 2026 has additional context because it is a new date for a performance that had been planned for November 8, 2025. The venue organizer stated that the concert was moved to the new date and that previously purchased tickets will be valid for the new date. For visitors planning a trip, this is important information: reservations, transportation and entry documents should be carefully coordinated, especially if coming from outside the USA.
The date itself places the concert in the spring part of South Florida's concert season, before the most intense summer heat and in a period when visits are often combined with a shorter vacation. For the local audience from the broader Miami-Fort Lauderdale area, it is a workweek date with an 8:00 PM start, so arriving earlier makes sense because of traffic, parking and entry into a large complex.
How to prepare for the evening
The best preparation for this concert is not memorizing a list of songs, but listening to different phases of Sting's career. Whoever starts only from The Police will get the energy and sharpness of the early songs. Whoever listens to the solo classics will hear how important melody and atmosphere are to him. Whoever includes "I Wrote Your Name (Upon My Heart)" will better understand why the current tour emphasizes rhythm, bass and compact playing.
Practically speaking, visitors should check arrival time, venue rules and payment method before setting out. Since this is a complex with multiple facilities, it is a good idea to leave extra time for moving from the parking lot or arrival point to the entrance of the venue. The concert starts at 8:00 PM, and crowds most often form immediately before the start.
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A musical evening for listening, not only for recognizing choruses
Sting's live advantage is not only the number of familiar songs. His music often demands concentration: the bass does not only follow the rhythm, but leads the melodic thought; the voice does not always build the chorus with a grand gesture, but often with tension; the guitar does not have to be loud to be recognizable. At Hard Rock Live, such an approach can work well because the venue is not conceived as a huge stadium, but as a space where a major performer can be heard with more detail.
For a visitor going to a Sting concert for the first time, the evening is an opportunity to understand how much his career differs from a simple collection of hits. For a longtime fan, the value lies in the fact that "STING 3.0" returns familiar material to a working, concert form: three musicians, several decades of songs and a venue where nuances can come to the fore.
Sources:
- Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood - Sting event page: used for the date, time, Hard Rock Live location, information about the concert rescheduling, the lineup with Dominic Miller and Chris Maas, and the description of the "STING 3.0" tour.
- Hard Rock Live Venue Information - used for data on the capacity of about 7,000 visitors, acoustics, sightlines toward the stage, cashless operations, box office hours and Will Call information.
- Sting.com - announcements and news about the "STING 3.0" tour: used for data on the current three-piece concert lineup, the concept of rearranging familiar songs and deep cuts from the catalogue, and the context of the tour.
- Sting.com - announcement of the song "I Wrote Your Name (Upon My Heart)": used for data on the 2024 single, the collaborators on the recording, the song's connection with the "STING 3.0" format and the fact that it is Sting's first new song after the 2021 album "The Bridge".