Charlie Puth in West Valley City: a pop concert for an audience that loves choruses, production and musical details
Charlie Puth arrives at Maverik Center in West Valley City on Saturday, May 9, 2026, starting at 7:30 p.m., as part of the "Whatever's Clever! World Tour". The concert is part of the U.S. leg of the tour that accompanies the album of the same name from 2026, and for the audience in Utah this means an evening in which his big radio hits, a new pop phase and the musical precision that has made Puth stand out among contemporary pop artists all meet. Ticket sales for this event are ongoing.
Puth is most recognizable to a wide audience for the songs "See You Again", "Attention", "We Don't Talk Anymore", "One Call Away" and "Light Switch", but his concert identity is not just a series of familiar choruses. He is a performer who often builds his show around piano, vocal layers, rhythmically clean pop arrangements and small production details that the audience knows from his posts and studio recordings. That is why this concert is especially attractive to visitors who want to hear the hits, but also to those who like to see how a pop song works live.
A new phase of the career and the album "Whatever's Clever!"
The context of this performance is important because Puth comes to West Valley City after the release of the album "Whatever's Clever!", issued on March 27, 2026. The album is his fourth studio record and brings a shift toward a warmer, more playful and musically broader pop sound. Reviews especially highlighted the move away from a pure radio formula toward arrangements that rely on jazz, yacht rock, orchestral colors, choirs and guest appearances by musicians from different generations.
The album mentions collaborations and musical contributions from names such as Kenny G, Coco Jones, Michael McDonald, Kenny Loggins and Jeff Goldblum, which describes well the direction in which Puth is now moving. Instead of simply repeating a proven pop recipe, he combines melodies that quickly enter the ear with production that sounds like a studio playground: saxophone, soft keyboards, harmonies, changes of harmony and rhythm sections that recall sophisticated pop of the eighties. This does not mean that he has abandoned what made him popular, but that Puth's familiar sense for a chorus now comes in a richer package.
For an audience that has followed him since "Nine Track Mind" and "Voicenotes", this concert may be interesting precisely because of the contrast. The old hits have a simple concert power: the audience knows the words, the choruses are clear, and the emotional peaks are quickly recognized. Newer songs from the album "Whatever's Clever!" give the evening a different color - more piano, more musical transitions and more space for Puth's tendency to break a song apart, change it and put it back together again in front of the audience.
What the audience can expect from the performance
One should not expect the evening to be only a nostalgic listening session of the greatest hits. The tour carries the name of the new album, so it is clear that material from this phase will play an important role. Still, Puth's concerts naturally count on the songs that brought him to a global audience, especially those in which his recognizable combination of falsetto, piano and clean pop rhythm is most easily carried into the arena.
At the beginning of the tour, U.S. reports emphasized the blend of technical precision and relaxed communication with the audience. This is an important detail for visitors: Puth is not the type of performer who relies only on a distant stage image. His performance works best when the audience feels the closeness of the musician - through the piano, short addresses, vocal transitions and moments in which the song does not feel like mere reproduction of the studio version.
It is possible to expect several layers of the concert experience:
- pop hits with big singalongs, especially songs that the audience recognizes after the first bars;
- newer songs from the "Whatever's Clever!" period, with warmer and more sophisticated arrangements;
- an emphasis on voice, piano and musical details, which is Puth's trademark;
- an audience of different generations - from fans who have followed him since the first singles to listeners who discovered him through social media and newer releases.
This concert will suit best an audience that loves contemporary pop, but is not looking only for the loudest possible show. Puth's material has enough rhythm for an energetic arena, but its strength is often in melodic clarity and detail. "Attention" can sound sharp and danceable, "We Don't Talk Anymore" carries a recognizable melancholy, and "See You Again" remains a song that usually changes the tone of the evening in an arena because it is tied to the collective memory of the audience. Tickets for this event are in demand.
Maverik Center: an arena that can preserve a sense of closeness
Maverik Center is located at 3200 South Decker Lake Drive in West Valley City, directly next to the wider Salt Lake City area. The venue opened in 1997 and is known as a multipurpose arena for concerts, sports events and major guest appearances. For the concert experience, it is especially important that the space can operate in different configurations: the smaller theater setup accommodates about 3,700 spectators, while the main arena can host up to about 12,000 people.
That flexibility suits an artist like Charlie Puth well. His songs need enough space for the choruses to gain breadth, but also enough clarity so that the piano, vocal and rhythmic details do not disappear in a large arena. Maverik Center presents itself as a space that combines arena energy with a more intimate hall feeling, which is useful for this concert: the audience can expect a strong collective sound, but not necessarily the distant impression that the largest stadium spaces sometimes have.
The arena also has an important sporting and Olympic history. It was connected with the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in the Salt Lake City area, and today it is used for a wide range of events, from hockey and basketball to major tours. For travelers coming for the first time, this means that it is a venue used to larger audience arrivals, entrance control and traffic organization around events.
Arrival, public transport and parking
For visitors arriving by car, Maverik Center lists several parking zones around the arena. Parking lots A, B and C are located on the arena grounds, while parking lot D is near the nearby intersection of 3100 South and Decker Lake Drive. Parking is available on a first-come, first-served basis, so for a concert evening it is worth setting off earlier, especially if you are coming from the direction of Salt Lake City or from highway approaches.
Good news for those who do not want to drive is the proximity of public transport. The UTA TRAX Green Line runs to Decker Lake Station, which is immediately next to Maverik Center. This is a practical option for visitors coming from the wider urban area, who want to avoid searching for a parking space or plan to spend the evening without rushing after the concert.
The most useful practical points for planning arrival:
- the event starts at 7:30 p.m.;
- the venue doors for this concert open at 6:00 p.m.;
- the venue address is 3200 South Decker Lake Drive, West Valley City;
- the TRAX Green Line stops at Decker Lake Station, immediately next to Maverik Center;
- parking is organized around the venue and available on a first-come, first-served basis.
Since the concert takes place on a Saturday evening, arriving earlier has a double benefit: it is easier to handle parking or public transport, and entry into the arena goes more calmly. Visitors traveling from other parts of Utah should account for evening traffic toward the Salt Lake City urban area and leave enough time to reach their seats before the program begins.
West Valley City as a concert stop
West Valley City is one of the largest urban areas in Utah and is practically connected with Salt Lake City. For travelers this means that the concert should not be seen only as an arrival in a suburb, but as part of the wider city concert scene. The proximity of Salt Lake City makes accommodation, arrival by plane and movement by public transport easier, while the venue's location itself allows faster access than would often be the case in the very center of a larger city.
For Puth's tour, the performance in West Valley City comes at an interesting moment on the route. A few days before that the tour passes through the U.S. Northwest, and after Utah it continues toward Denver and the central part of the country. Such a position gives the concert at Maverik Center the role of a bridge between West Coast dates and the continuation of the tour toward the interior of the United States. For fans from Utah, Idaho, Wyoming and surrounding areas, this is the most logical opportunity to encounter Puth's current tour without traveling to the coast.
Places are disappearing quickly.
For whom this concert is especially interesting
Longtime fans will get the opportunity to hear how songs from earlier phases sound in the context of the new album. The wider audience, which may not follow every release, will probably recognize more songs than it expects, because Puth's catalog has been strongly present in radio and streaming space over the past decade. Lovers of pop production will have an additional reason to come: there are few performers in the mainstream who so often put the construction of the song itself in the foreground.
The concert could be especially attractive to couples, groups of friends and an audience that loves emotional pop without excessive theatricality. Puth's songs often balance between romantic tension, self-irony and melodic ease. In the arena, that can create an evening that moves from loud singing to more attentive listening, especially in moments when the piano takes the main role.
Nor should one overlook the younger audience that knows Puth through short video formats, explanations of harmonies and studio clips. His public image has for years included a musician who shows the audience how a sound is created, not just the finished product. Live, that curiosity turns into a concrete advantage: the audience has the feeling that it is not listening only to a singer, but also to an author who understands every layer of his song.
Opening acts and additional program
For the performance at Maverik Center, available announcements list Daniel Seavey and Ally Salort alongside Charlie Puth. Daniel Seavey is known to the audience as a pop performer and a member of the group Why Don't We, while Ally Salort brings a younger singer-songwriter pop approach that fits an evening intended for an audience accustomed to melodic vocals and contemporary production. Such a choice of opening program logically builds the path toward Puth's performance: from a lighter pop introduction to the main set that carries recognizable hits and new album material.
As with all concert evenings, the exact flow of the program may depend on production and organization on the day of the event. What is most important for visitors is that the doors open early enough for arrival, finding seats and entering the rhythm of the evening before the main performance. It is worth securing tickets in time.
How to prepare for the evening
The best preparation for this concert is not only listening through the greatest hits. It is worth listening to "Whatever's Clever!" before arrival as well, especially because the album brings a different color from Puth's earlier radio singles. Songs from the new phase open up better when their production logic is heard: softer groove, clear bass, piano phrases, vocal layers and an occasional retro undertone that does not act like imitation, but like Puth's attempt to expand his pop language toward older musical traditions.
For those coming because of the hits, it is enough to recall several key songs. "Attention" shows his tendency toward firm bass and a tense chorus. "We Don't Talk Anymore" carries a lighter, but very recognizable pop feeling. "See You Again" remains a song that stands out because of its emotional context and collective singing. "Light Switch" represents the newer, more playful side of his sound. In combination with the new album, that gives a concert that can satisfy both casual listeners and fans who follow every detail of his discography.
Visitors traveling from outside West Valley City should check in advance the route to the venue, the return after the concert and public transport options. TRAX is practical for part of the audience, but the timetable should be checked for the specific day and direction of return. If you are arriving by car, earlier arrival reduces the pressure around parking and entry, especially because parking lots fill on a first-come, first-served basis.
A concert experience between big pop and studio intimacy
What makes this concert stand out is not only the fact that Charlie Puth is coming with a new tour, but the way in which his current phase fits into a space like Maverik Center. It is not a club evening, but neither is it a faceless stadium format. The arena gives enough volume for shared choruses, and at the same time it can preserve a feeling of concentration when the arrangement comes down to piano and voice.
Puth's audience will probably come from several directions: fans of the early hits, listeners who love pop with R&B and funk details, an audience interested in the new album and those who follow him because of his musical analytical nature. Precisely that mixture can give the evening liveliness. Some are waiting for a familiar chorus, others are listening to the chords, still others come for the feeling of shared singing. When such a catalog enters an arena that holds up to about 12,000 people, the result can be a concert that sounds big, but remains personal enough for the nuances to be heard.
For West Valley City this is an attractive stop of the current pop tour, and for the audience an opportunity to hear an artist who in 2026 opened a new chapter of his career. It is best to arrive on time, enter without rushing and let the evening develop from the opening program toward Puth's blend of hits, new songs and musical details that have made him one of the most recognizable pop authors of his generation.
Sources:
- Maverik Center - data on the event, start time, door opening, address, venue configuration, capacity, parking and public transport access were used.
- AP News - a review of the album "Whatever's Clever!" and a description of Charlie Puth's current musical phase were used.
- Live Nation Newsroom - data on the announcement of the "Whatever's Clever! World Tour", the scope of the tour and the album accompanying the tour were used.
- Apple Music - data on the release "Whatever's Clever! (Expanded)" and the duration of the expanded edition were used.
- The Daily Aztec - a report from the beginning of the tour in San Diego was used to describe the concert impression and the relationship between technical precision and communication with the audience.