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Buy tickets for concert Bush - 09.05.2026., Ozarks Amphitheater, Camdenton, United States of America Buy tickets for concert Bush - 09.05.2026., Ozarks Amphitheater, Camdenton, United States of America

CONCERT

Bush

Ozarks Amphitheater, Camdenton, US
09. May 2026. 19:00h
2026
09
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Bush tickets for Ozarks Amphitheater concert with post-grunge hits, Mammoth and the new American rock tour

Looking for Bush tickets in Camdenton? Get ready for a concert at Ozarks Amphitheater with post-grunge favorites like "Glycerine" and "Machinehead", songs from "I Beat Loneliness", plus a guitar-driven night with Mammoth and James and the Cold Gun on the current tour

Bush in Camdenton: a post-grunge evening by the lake

Bush comes to the Ozarks Amphitheater in Camdenton with the program "The Land Of Milk and Honey Tour", a tour that brings together the recognizable weight of British post-grunge, radio-famous choruses from the nineties and newer material from the album "I Beat Loneliness". The concert is scheduled for 05/09/2026 at 19:00, on an open-air stage in the Lake of the Ozarks region, so the evening naturally leans into what Bush does best: guitars that sound wide, Gavin Rossdale's voice in the foreground and songs that rely on the tension between melancholy and stadium rock.

For the audience that remembers Bush for "Glycerine", "Comedown", "Machinehead" and "Everything Zen", this is not just a nostalgic return. The band has entered a new phase of its career with its tenth studio album "I Beat Loneliness", released in 2025, and the tour itself is named after the single "The Land Of Milk and Honey". That gives the concert a fresh context: the biggest hits and newer songs stand side by side, without the need for the evening to turn into a mere paging through the past. Tickets for this event are in demand.

Why Bush still matters to the rock audience

Bush was formed in London in 1992, but its breakthrough happened primarily in North America. The debut "Sixteen Stone" from 1994 defined their sound: dirty guitars, solid choruses, Rossdale's dark vocal and melodies that could hold their own both in alternative clubs and on major radio airwaves. At a time when the American grunge and post-grunge scenes were shaping mainstream rock, Bush offered a British answer with songs that had both weight and directness.Their recognizability did not remain tied to just one album. "Razorblade Suitcase" brought the band an even harder and murkier sound, while later releases show how Rossdale and his collaborators persistently seek a balance between more contemporary production and that old Bush pulse. Because of that, their audience is not one-dimensional: there are those who come because of the nineties, those who follow the newer catalog and those who simply want a loud, direct rock evening without too many decorations.

Songs that carry the band's concert identity

With Bush, the songs most often remembered are those that have a clear emotional cut. "Glycerine" is a stripped-down ballad in which the voice and guitar are held almost without protection. "Comedown" builds tension through a hypnotic bass and a wide chorus. "Machinehead" is a faster, stronger piece that still easily fits into an energetic concert block today. "Everything Zen" shows the band's earlier, sharper edge, with a riff that immediately opens space for communal singing.

That does not mean that a pre-known set list should be expected. The song order for this evening has not been publicly listed, so it is fairer to talk about the band's concert language than about the sequence. Previous performances from this phase of their career show that Bush combines recognizable hits with material from newer releases, and precisely such a blend is the most attractive: the audience gets songs it knows by heart, but also insight into how the band sounds after three decades of work.

"I Beat Loneliness" and the band's current phase

The album "I Beat Loneliness" is important because Bush does not try to hide the time that has passed since their breakthrough. Instead, the newer songs start from themes of loneliness, inner tension, emotional recovery and attempts to turn personal cracks into solid rock material. The single "60 Ways to Forget People" announced the album in April 2025, while "The Land Of Milk and Honey" arrived in June 2025 as the title backbone of the tour.

In that new material, the familiar Bush signature can also be heard: the songs are built around strong guitar phrases, but the production is not closed only into the sound of the nineties. Rossdale's vocal still carries a dramatic, sometimes confessional line, while the choruses aim for a shared audience moment. That is especially important for an open-air amphitheater, where songs are not experienced only as studio recordings but as a wave of sound that comes out of the stage toward the terraced auditorium.

For long-time fans, the new album gives a reason for the concert not to be only a recollection. For younger visitors or the broader rock audience, it serves as an entry into the catalog of a band that over time has retained a simple ambition: to write songs that can withstand radio, a hall and an open summer stage. It is worth securing tickets on time.

Evening line-up: Bush, Mammoth and James and the Cold Gun

At the event, Mammoth and James and the Cold Gun are listed alongside Bush. Mammoth is the project of Wolfgang Van Halen, a musician who has independently built a reputation through a firm hard rock sound, emphasized guitars and songs that rely more on compact performance than on the mere legacy of a family surname. In the concert schedule of this tour, Mammoth brings a different shade to the evening: more modern, muscular rock with a clear focus on playing precision.

James and the Cold Gun bring in a rawer, British punk-rock charge. Their role in this kind of line-up works well because the evening does not start softly: the audience is introduced to guitar terrain from the beginning, only with a different character. Bush then takes over the main space as the band with the broadest catalog and the best-known songs, so the dramaturgy of the evening can move from a quick warm-up toward heavier, emotionally recognizable choruses.

What the audience can expect live

Bush live usually rests on contrast. At one moment the band can sound dense and massive, with drums and guitars pushing the song forward; at another moment everything can drop down to Rossdale's voice and a simpler guitar. Such dynamics especially suit songs like "Glycerine", where the silence between tones has the same weight as the chorus, but also faster songs that require the audience on its feet.Recent concert reviews from 2026 highlight Gavin Rossdale's energetic performance, communication with the audience and a set that relies on recognizable songs such as "Everything Zen", "Machinehead" and "Glycerine". That does not mean that Camdenton is pre-copied from another city, but it speaks about the band's current form: Bush does not perform as an archival rock exhibit, but as a group that still wants to physically conquer the space in front of the stage.

This kind of concert is especially attractive for three types of visitors:


  • Long-time fans who listened to "Sixteen Stone" and "Razorblade Suitcase" at the time of the band's first wave of popularity.

  • An audience that loves alternative rock, post-grunge and hard rock with clear, memorable choruses.

  • Visitors who want an evening with multiple performers, where Mammoth and James and the Cold Gun provide a broader guitar frame before Bush's performance.

Ozarks Amphitheater: an open-air stage with a feeling of closeness

Ozarks Amphitheater is located in Camdenton, in the Lake of the Ozarks region, at 2629 N Business Rte 5. It is an open-air concert space that is often described as one of the important summer music locations in Missouri. Capacity is listed at around 10,000 visitors, depending on the event configuration, which places it in an interesting middle ground: large enough for serious rock production, but compact enough that the audience does not lose the feeling of closeness to the stage.

For Bush, such a space is rewarding. Their songs have a stadium sweep, but they do not depend only on size; many of them work better when the detail of the vocal can be heard and when the audience feels that the rhythm is directly in front of it. Ozarks Amphitheater does not have lawn seating in the standard layout listed for the venue, but stadium seats and organized sections are emphasized. This makes it easier for visitors to plan the evening because the experience is not left only to whoever first claimed a place on the lawn.

The open-air amphitheater in the Ozarks landscape also adds a visual frame. The concert begins at 19:00, in the part of the day when the light gradually lowers, and an outdoor rock concert gains a natural transition from evening into a nighttime mood. That is an important part of the experience, especially for a band whose songs often move between shadow and explosion. Ticket sales for this event are underway.

Arrival, parking and entry

For visitors arriving by car, Ozarks Amphitheater lists multiple entrances and parking zones. The main parking entrance is on Business Route 5, about a quarter mile from the exit off Missouri Route 5, while additional general parking can be used via Old Route 5. For arrival by taxi, shuttle or rideshare transport, the location 2418 Old Route 5, Camdenton, MO 65020 is listed.

According to the venue's information, the parking lot for events generally opens at 16:30, and the gates at 18:00, although times may depend on the individual event. Since the concert begins at 19:00, it is realistic to plan an earlier arrival, especially if heavier traffic is expected around the entrances and parking lots. This also applies to visitors coming to Camdenton for the first time: the area around Lake of the Ozarks can be busy, especially on days with larger concerts and weekend visits.

Practical points worth keeping in mind:

  • Venue: Ozarks Amphitheater, Camdenton, Missouri.

  • Venue address: 2629 N Business Rte 5, Camdenton, MO 65020.

  • Concert start: 19:00.

  • General pattern for events: parking lots usually open at 16:30, and gates at 18:00.

  • Re-entry after leaving is not provided, so personal belongings and venue rules should be checked before entering.



Camdenton and Lake of the Ozarks as a concert weekend

Camdenton is not a typical large concert city, and that is precisely part of the appeal. It is located in the Lake of the Ozarks area, a region known for water, recreation, roads through hilly landscapes and weekend visitors from wider Missouri and neighboring states. For those traveling to the concert, this means that an evening with Bush can be part of a shorter trip, and not just an arrival at the venue doors and a return home.

Such a context suits Bush's music well. Their songs are neither sterile nor over-polished; they work best when there is space, air and an audience ready to shift from pre-concert conversation into singing choruses together. In an indoor arena, that transition is often determined by the production, while in an amphitheater it is also shaped by weather conditions, dusk, sound spreading through open space and the feeling that the whole evening is part of a broader stay in the Ozarks region.Travelers should think in advance about accommodation and the return after the concert, because public transport in the surrounding area is not the main axis of arrival. Rideshare or taxi may be simpler for those who do not want to manage parking, but even then it is good to count on crowds after the program ends. For this kind of concert, the most pleasant plan is one that leaves enough time: arrival before the gates open, entry without hurry and settling in before the evening reaches the main performance.

Who this concert is the best choice for

Bush's concert in Camdenton will most strongly suit an audience that loves rock with a clear emotional center. This is not an evening for those looking only for light background music. Bush is a band whose songs demand attention: either through a riff, or through a chorus, or through Rossdale's interpretation, which often sounds as if it is addressing the front rows directly.

Long-time fans will get the chance to hear the band in a phase in which their history is not hidden, but is not used as the only argument. The broader audience can expect enough familiar songs to easily join the concert, while lovers of more contemporary hard rock will have an additional reason to come through Mammoth's performance. James and the Cold Gun round out the evening with energy that reminds us that guitar concerts begin best without an excessive introduction.That is the most interesting value of this date: Bush comes to Camdenton in the middle of a tour tied to their newest album, but also to a catalog of songs that have already become part of American rock memory. Ozarks Amphitheater gives them a space that is not faceless, but has topography, open sky and an audience that can come from different directions of the region. Places are disappearing quickly.

How to prepare for the evening

Since this is an outdoor concert, preparation is not only a matter of a ticket. It is worth checking the weather forecast on the day of travel, choosing clothing for the evening temperature and arriving early enough so that parking and security screening do not eat up the first part of the program. If you are coming for the whole line-up, do not plan to enter only immediately before Bush; Mammoth and James and the Cold Gun are part of the concert picture of this tour, and not just a background addition.

For the best experience, it is useful to listen again before the concert to the two sides of Bush: the early catalog with "Sixteen Stone" and the newer songs from "I Beat Loneliness". Then it can be heard more clearly how much the band has retained its own identity, but also how today's Bush sounds different from the version that was entering the mainstream in the mid-nineties. In Camdenton, that difference will be felt best live, through the alternation of familiar choruses, newer guitar textures and the open space of Ozarks Amphitheater.Sources:

- BUSH Official Website - tour dates, the name "The Land Of Milk and Honey Tour" and the confirmed performance at Ozarks Amphitheater with Mammoth and James and the Cold Gun were used.

- Ozarks Amphitheater - information about the event, concert time, venue, seating, parking, general opening of parking lots and gates and entry rules was used.- earMUSIC - information about the album "I Beat Loneliness", the single "60 Ways to Forget People" and the context of the band's new chapter was used.

- Consequence - information about the single "The Land Of Milk and Honey" and the announcement of the album "I Beat Loneliness" was used.

- Associated Press - context about the compilation "Loaded: The Greatest Hits 1994-2023" and Bush's best-known songs was used.- San Antonio Express-News - a recent 2026 concert review was used to describe the current concert form of Bush, Mammoth and James and the Cold Gun.

- Destination Lake of the Ozarks - the regional context of Ozarks Amphitheater and the Lake of the Ozarks area was used.

Everything you need to know about tickets for concert Bush

+ Where to find tickets for concert Bush?

+ How to choose the best seat to enjoy the Bush concert?

+ When is the best time to buy tickets for the Bush concert?

+ Can tickets for concert Bush be delivered electronically?

+ Are tickets for concert Bush purchased through partners safe?

+ Are there tickets for concert Bush in family sections?

+ What to do if tickets for concert Bush are sold out?

+ Can I buy tickets for concert Bush at the last minute?

+ What information do I need to buy tickets for the Bush concert?

+ How to find tickets for specific sections at the Bush concert?

2 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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