Looking for Morgan Wallen tickets in Clemson? Secure your place for the country concert at Memorial Stadium on June 26, 2026, with the Still The Problem Tour energy, hits like Last Night and Whiskey Glasses, plus Brooks & Dunn, Gavin Adcock and Jason Scott & The High Heat
Morgan Wallen brings the "Still The Problem Tour 2026" to Clemson
Morgan Wallen arrives at Memorial Stadium in Clemson on June 26, 2026, at 5:30 PM, as part of the stadium tour "Still The Problem Tour 2026". The concert is part of a two-day program at the well-known Death Valley venue, but the ticket for this event is valid for one day, so Friday is a separate concert evening with its own rhythm, opening acts and audience arrival.
For the evening of June 26, Brooks & Dunn, Gavin Adcock and Jason Scott & The High Heat have been announced. This gives the concert a broader country framework: Wallen arrives as one of the most commercial performers of contemporary country pop, Brooks & Dunn bring the weight of a veteran duo whose sound shaped American country radio, while Gavin Adcock and Jason Scott & The High Heat strengthen the evening with a newer, more guitar-driven and livelier approach to the genre. Tickets for this event are in demand.
Wallen's concert in Clemson is not conceived as an intimate indoor evening, but as a full stadium encounter with the audience. His sound handles such a format well: the choruses are broad, the rhythm often pulls toward country rock, and the ballads rely on a recognizable, raspy vocal that carries songs about breakups, alcohol, family, stubbornness and life outside large urban centers equally well. The audience coming for the songs "Last Night", "Whiskey Glasses", "You Proof", "Thought You Should Know", "Sand in My Boots" or "More Than My Hometown" can expect an evening in which mass singing from the stands merges with production adapted to a large open-air stadium.
The current phase of the career and the album "I'm The Problem"
The tour is titled "Still The Problem", and its context is Wallen's fourth studio album "I'm The Problem", released in May 2025. It is a 37-song release, which explains well why the current concerts can move between new songs, stadium singles and earlier favorites. The album debuted at the top of the Billboard 200 chart, and Wallen's own biography also states that the release spent 13 nonconsecutive weeks at number one on that chart.
For a visitor thinking about the concert, it is important to understand that Wallen is no longer just a country name with several radio hits. His audience today crosses the boundaries of the genre. Country fans follow him because of the guitars, narratives and Southern vocal accent, while the broader pop audience recognizes songs that have spread through streaming platforms and social networks. "Last Night" spent 16 weeks at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart, and in 2025 the RIAA listed Wallen as the most-certified country artist in its records, with a total of 265.5 million certified units.
That does not mean the concert is intended only for those who know every lyric. On the contrary, Wallen's format is especially attractive to audiences who like concerts where choruses are quickly recognized and songs oscillate between big rhythms and more confessional moments. Longtime fans will follow the nuances between the albums "Dangerous: The Double Album", "One Thing At A Time" and "I'm The Problem"; occasional listeners will get an overview of one of the most visible country careers of the past few years.
What the audience can expect from the concert evening
The exact song-by-song setlist for Clemson has not been announced, so it is best to speak in terms of frameworks, not a certain order. Wallen's stadium performances generally rely on a combination of major hits, newer songs and moments in which the audience takes over the chorus. In such an environment, songs like "Whiskey Glasses" and "Last Night" work as communal singing, while more emotional material has more room when the rhythm of the concert settles down.
Memorial Stadium as an open-air stadium changes the way the experience is felt. The sound spreads toward the stands, and the audience is not only in front of the stage, but surrounds the performer from multiple angles. According to locally published information, for these concerts a stage is planned on the 50-yard line, in a format that further emphasizes the stadium as the center of the event. This can bring a better sense of inclusion for stands that would be farther away from the main stage in a classic stadium setup.
Visitors who like country concerts with a lot of energy will benefit especially, but so will those who want to experience American stadium culture outside a sports context. Death Valley is a venue accustomed to mass reactions, the rhythm of the stands and a strong visual identity. When that atmosphere shifts from a football day to a concert evening, the result is not a quiet background for music, but an audience that becomes part of the performance. It is worth securing tickets on time.
Memorial Stadium and the feeling of Death Valley
Memorial Stadium is located at 1 Avenue of Champions in Clemson, in the state of South Carolina. The stadium is home to the Clemson Tigers football program, but its size and open construction make it suitable for concerts that require a massive space. Clemson Athletics describes the stadium as a venue for more than 80,000 spectators, and the history of the space goes back to 1942, when Death Valley was completed with 20,000 seats.
For the concert experience, the open air, high stands and video infrastructure are especially important. Renovations presented in 2022 included a new large video board, known as the "DaboTron", and eight main lighting towers with modernized light control. Although football architecture is not the same thing as concert acoustics, a stadium of this profile gives the audience a sense of scale: songs are not only listened to from up close, but experienced through waves of reactions from the stands.
Basic facts for visitors
- The concert takes place on Friday, June 26, 2026, with the program beginning at 5:30 PM.
- Gates open to the public at 4:30 PM, according to information for the concert day.
- For the evening of June 26, Morgan Wallen, Brooks & Dunn, Gavin Adcock and Jason Scott & The High Heat have been announced.
- Memorial Stadium is an open-air stadium in Clemson, at 1 Avenue of Champions.
- Campus parking lots for the concert day have been announced from 10:00 AM, with special zones for accessible arrival and organized rideshare points.
Arrival, parking and entry to the stadium
Clemson is a university town in Upstate South Carolina, in an area associated with the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains and Lake Hartwell. For travelers coming from outside the city, this means that the day of the concert is worth planning as an all-day arrival, not only as an evening outing. Locally published traffic information mentions closures in the downtown area in the days immediately before the concerts, while on the concert days themselves heavy pressure is expected on the campus, garages and access roads.
The most practical advice is to arrive earlier, save mobile tickets before entering the crowd and not count on a quick exit immediately after the end. Large stadium concerts in a university town create a different dynamic from concerts in city arenas: parking lots, walking routes, rideshare points and local restaurants operate under increased pressure. Visitors who want to start the evening more calmly can plan to arrive in Clemson earlier during the day, walk through downtown or leave enough time for the security check at the entrance.
For visitors who need accessible infrastructure, gates 1, 5 and 13 are listed, along with ADA parking with entry from Hwy 93 onto Calhoun Drive and cart transportation to the assigned gate or ticket office. This is important to check before departure because the stadium has multiple zones, and the choice of entrance can significantly affect the route of movement.
Rules for bags, equipment and payment
Clemson Athletics lists rules that should be taken seriously because this is a stadium with a large security flow. Clear bags made of plastic, vinyl or PVC material up to 12 x 6 x 12 inches, a one-gallon freezer bag or a small clutch bag up to 4.5 x 6.5 inches are allowed. Medically necessary items go through inspection, while professional cameras, video equipment, GoPro cameras, selfie sticks and similar devices are not allowed for special events at Memorial Stadium.
The stadium has no ATMs, and concession locations accept debit and credit cards. Concessions open when the gates open, at 4:30 PM. For the audience, this means simple preparation: fewer things, enough battery on the phone, a ready ticket, a payment card and a plan for returning after the concert. Such details do not sound glamorous, but they often determine whether a stadium evening will begin calmly or in a rush.
Clemson as a concert destination
Clemson is not a metropolis where the stadium disappears among skyscrapers, but a university town where the campus is an important part of the place's identity. For visitors coming for the first time, this can be an advantage: the route toward the stadium leads through a town that lives from the rhythm of the university, sports, restaurants and weekend visits. The proximity of Lake Hartwell and the view toward the Blue Ridge Mountains give the trip a broader framework, especially for those combining the concert with a shorter stay in South Carolina.
That is exactly why this concert has a different character from performances in a classic city arena. The audience comes because of Wallen, but also because of the stadium scene that is strongly connected to Clemson. Death Valley is a space that already has a reputation for loud stands, a shared rhythm and recognizable orange energy. When such a space is filled with a country audience, the expectation is not only that the performer will sing the repertoire, but that the entire stadium will turn into a choir.
Ticket sales for this event are ongoing. For fans who have followed Wallen since the early singles, Clemson is an opportunity to hear how his career has been rearranged into a stadium format. For the broader audience, it is an entry into the current moment of country music in which the genre is no longer closed within one country, one radio format or one generation of listeners.
Sources:
- Clemson Athletics - information about the concert on June 26 and 27, 2026, opening acts, gates, bag rules, concessions and accessible arrival.
- Clemson Athletics, Memorial Stadium - stadium history, description of Death Valley, renovations and information about capacity of more than 80,000 spectators.
- WSNW 94.1 The Lake - local traffic and logistical information for the two-day concert, including the opening of parking lots, gates and the start of the program.
- Morgan Wallen - biographical information about the current tour, the album "I'm The Problem", Billboard results and career description.
- RIAA and Holler - information about RIAA certifications, the album "I'm The Problem", number of songs and the commercial reach of the release.
- Clemson University and Visit Clemson - context of the town, Upstate South Carolina, Blue Ridge Mountains, Lake Hartwell and downtown Clemson.