Postavke privatnosti

Buy tickets for concert UB40 - 07.05.2026., Riverfront Live, Cincinnati, United States of America Buy tickets for concert UB40 - 07.05.2026., Riverfront Live, Cincinnati, United States of America

CONCERT

UB40

Riverfront Live, Cincinnati, US
07. May 2026. 20:00h
2026
07
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

UB40 Featuring Ali Campbell tickets for the Big Love Tour reggae concert at Riverfront Live Cincinnati

Looking for tickets for UB40 Featuring Ali Campbell in Cincinnati? Riverfront Live hosts a Big Love Tour reggae night with the voice tied to "Red Red Wine", "Kingston Town" and "Can't Help Falling in Love", plus Junior Marvin & The Legendary Wailers

UB40 in Cincinnati - a reggae evening with a voice the audience immediately recognizes

UB40 arrives at Riverfront Live in Cincinnati on Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 8:00 PM, and the event announcement especially highlights the format UB40 Featuring Ali Campbell. That is not a small detail for an audience coming for the songs that marked radio programming, summer compilations and generations of listeners: Campbell is the voice many associate with the band's biggest hits, from "Red Red Wine" to "Kingston Town" and "Can't Help Falling in Love". The concert has been announced as an all ages event, which gives it a broader frame than a typical club evening - an audience from multiple generations is expected, from those who followed UB40 in the eighties and nineties to younger listeners who discovered their songs through streaming, family playlists and film or radio classics.

Tickets for this event are in demand. UB40 is not a concert that relies only on nostalgia, but on a very specific sound: British reggae-pop with a warm bass line, soft horns, a relaxed rhythm and choruses that quickly move from the stage into the audience. At Riverfront Live, a venue that combines indoor and outdoor concert configurations, that kind of repertoire works especially well because it does not require the distance of a large arena. Here the emphasis is on closeness to the performer, a clear rhythm and the feeling of singing together.

Why this performance matters to UB40 fans

UB40 was formed in Birmingham in 1978 and grew into one of the United Kingdom's best-known reggae-pop exports. Their story was not a copy of Jamaican roots reggae, but a British version of that language: urban, multicultural, melodic and pop enough to move from specialized clubs to major charts. Precisely that combination explains why songs such as "Food for Thought", "One in Ten", "Red Red Wine", "I Got You Babe", "Kingston Town" and "Higher Ground" still have recognition beyond the circle of reggae audiences.For visitors in Cincinnati, it is especially important that the event announcement lists UB40 Featuring Ali Campbell. Campbell is the original voice of many of the best-known recordings, and his live performance naturally attracts those who want to hear the songs in the vocal color in which they remember them. That does not mean every song that will appear in the repertoire can be known in advance - set lists change from city to city - but the previous character of this lineup's performances clearly points to a concert built around major reggae-pop favorites, rhythmic covers and songs that the audience often sings together with the band.

Big Love Tour and the current phase of the career

The touring context of this concert is connected with the Big Love Tour 2026, a series of performances with which UB40 Featuring Ali Campbell is visiting several North American cities. According to tour announcements, this is a phase in which Campbell's role as the original voice of UB40 and the continuity of the band that has performed with him since 2008 are emphasized. This is important information for audiences who do not follow all the changes within different UB40 lineups: the Cincinnati concert is not presented as an anonymous reggae evening, but as a performance by an artist whose voice is deeply connected with the global success of the UB40 name.

The wider context of the UB40 name in recent years also includes the album "UB45", released in 2024 as UB40's 21st studio release. The album is connected with the 45th anniversary and brings a combination of new songs and re-recorded classics, among them titles that have been part of the band's identity for decades. For a concertgoer, that is a useful signal: the catalogue is not a museum object, but material that is still being worked on, rearranged and returned to the stage through different phases of the career.

Songs that shaped the audience's expectations

UB40 is one of those bands where the audience often comes with a very clear emotional expectation. "Red Red Wine" carries a light, almost swaying groove that brought reggae closer to the pop audience. "Kingston Town" has a softer, nostalgic melody and often feels like a collective chorus for the entire hall. "Can't Help Falling in Love" shows how the band knew how to turn a familiar song into its own reggae-pop signature. "I Got You Babe", recorded with Chrissie Hynde, remains one of the most memorable examples of their ability to draw a familiar pop form into their own rhythm.

At the concert, therefore, one can expect an evening in which dance sections, lighter singalong moments and recognizable horn arrangements will mix. What should not be expected is a strict recreation of one album or a program fixed in advance, because a complete set list has not been published for this date. It is better to think of the concert as a cross-section of a career: enough familiar songs for the broader audience, enough reggae pulse for genre fans and enough space for the band to breathe live.


  • For longtime fans: the main attraction is Campbell's voice and a song catalogue that stretches from early politically conscious reggae to major pop successes.

  • For the broader audience: UB40 is an accessible entry into reggae because the songs have clear choruses, warm arrangements and a rhythm that does not require prior knowledge of the genre.

  • For lovers of concerts in smaller venues: Riverfront Live offers closer contact with the stage than a large arena, which gives this kind of repertoire additional immediacy.

Junior Marvin & The Legendary Wailers as a confirmed part of the evening

Riverfront Live's announcement for May 7 also lists Junior Marvin & The Legendary Wailers. That gives the evening additional reggae weight. Junior Marvin is known for his connection with the musical legacy of The Wailers, and his name in the program creates a clear line toward classic reggae sound, guitar phrases and songs that shaped the global image of the genre. For visitors, that means the concert is not only an evening of British reggae-pop, but a broader encounter with reggae tradition in which both Caribbean roots and British pop adaptation are recognizable.

It is important, however, to remain precise: no additional guests, special effects or detailed performance schedule have been announced for this event. What has been confirmed is strong enough in itself - UB40 Featuring Ali Campbell and Junior Marvin & The Legendary Wailers in the same venue, in a city with a lively concert audience and a good position for visitors from the wider region of Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana.

Riverfront Live - a venue that emphasizes closeness to the band

Riverfront Live is located at 4343 Kellogg Avenue in Cincinnati, east of downtown, along the US 52 traffic route. The venue presents itself as a concert and nightlife destination with an emphasis on production, and for rentals it lists an indoor capacity of up to 1200 guests and an outdoor space of up to 3500 guests. These are important numbers for understanding the experience: Riverfront Live is not a small bar stage, but it is also not a huge arena where the performer turns into a silhouette on a distant screen.For a reggae concert, that size makes sense. The bass must have enough space to develop, the horns need clarity, and the vocal needs to remain close to the audience. If the concert takes place in a configuration that uses the larger space, the audience can expect a more open, festival-like feeling. If the emphasis is on the indoor section, the experience will be more compact, with greater rhythmic pressure and denser club energy. In both cases, Riverfront Live's advantage is that it is designed around concerts, not as an incidental hall repurposed for music.

Places are disappearing quickly. With performers who attract multiple generations, the best concert positions are often taken early, especially if the audience wants to be closer to the stage or is coming in a larger group. It is worth planning arrival without rushing, because a reggae evening starts better when one enters the venue calmly, with enough time for orientation, coat check, a drink and finding a place.

Arrival, parking and practical information

Riverfront Live states in its visitor information that it has more than 1000 parking spaces on the property, which is a significant advantage for those coming to Cincinnati by car. The location is about 6 miles east of downtown, and access is described via US 52 from the direction of the center or via the Kellogg Avenue exit from I-275 for visitors coming from the wider surroundings. That makes the venue practical for an audience that does not plan to spend the whole evening in the downtown zone.

  • Address: 4343 Kellogg Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45226.

  • Start time: 8:00 PM.

  • Age designation: all ages according to the venue announcement.

  • Parking: more than 1000 spaces on the Riverfront Live property.

  • Venue capacity: up to 1200 guests in the indoor configuration and up to 3500 guests in the outdoor configuration for rentals.



For those traveling from outside Cincinnati, the simplest plan is to arrive earlier and leave enough margin for traffic around the east side of the city. Cincinnati is a city on the Ohio River, with a downtown connected to the riverfront, sports facilities, restaurants and neighborhoods suitable for going out before the concert. Riverfront Live is not in the very heart of downtown, so it is good to decide in advance whether the evening will be organized around going directly to the concert or around an earlier stay in the city.

What kind of experience to expect in the audience

The audience at UB40 concerts is usually broader than a typical genre audience. Reggae purists will recognize the rhythmic base, lovers of the eighties and nineties will come for the radio hits, and part of the audience simply wants an evening in which it can sing without aggressive concert dramaturgy. UB40 is a rare example of a band whose songs can work both as a relaxed summer background and as the central moment of an evening in front of a full audience.The atmosphere should therefore be warmer than frenetic. That does not mean calm - the bass and rhythm carry a dance impulse - but UB40 does not build tension on speed or volume, but on the repetition of the groove, familiar choruses and a sense of togetherness. In such an environment the audience often reacts already to the first bars of the best-known songs, and the best moments arise when the band does not have to push the audience toward the chorus, but the audience takes it over itself.

It is worth securing tickets in time. This concert has several layers of appeal: the return of the recognizable voice to the UB40 repertoire, the additional reggae frame through Junior Marvin & The Legendary Wailers and a venue that does not create a great distance between the stage and the audience. For visitors who want an evening of familiar songs without cold arena distance, Riverfront Live is a logical choice.

Cincinnati as a concert stop

Cincinnati has a good position for concert visitors from three states. The city sits on the border of Ohio and Kentucky, with Indiana not far to the west, so a concert at Riverfront Live can attract an audience that comes not only from the city but also from the wider regional zone. For an international reggae-pop catalogue such as UB40's, that is important: the band has broad enough recognition that it does not depend exclusively on the local scene, but attracts listeners who are ready to come from surrounding cities.In practical terms, Cincinnati offers enough content for visitors who want to turn the concert into a shorter trip. Downtown, the Ohio River waterfront, restaurants and breweries can be a good introduction to the evening, while Riverfront Live remains the focus for the music itself. Since the concert is on a Thursday, planning transportation and the return is especially important for those who work or travel the next morning.

Who this is the best concert choice for

This is a concert for an audience that loves melody as much as rhythm. If someone comes for hard roots reggae, here they will be interested in the broader context and the performance by Junior Marvin & The Legendary Wailers. If someone comes for pop hits, UB40 Featuring Ali Campbell offers songs that have lived outside genre boundaries for decades. If someone comes for a night out with friends, the advantage is that the repertoire is not hermetic: after only a few songs it is clear why UB40 became a globally recognizable name.

The best way to approach this evening is without the need to turn the concert into a lesson in the history of reggae. The history is there, but the rhythm carries it. The songs are familiar, but they are not just a souvenir from the past. Riverfront Live gives enough closeness to hear the nuance of the vocal and enough space for the audience to respond with the body. Precisely in that balance - between nostalgia, dance and a live band - lies the main appeal of this performance.Ticket sales for this event are underway. For visitors who want to hear "Red Red Wine", "Kingston Town" and other songs in a concert setting, May 7 in Cincinnati brings an evening that relies on a recognizable voice, reggae tradition and a space large enough for collective singing, but close enough that the concert does not get lost in the crowd.

Sources:

- Riverfront Live - event calendar, confirmation of the date, time, all ages designation, address and announced program UB40 Featuring Ali Campbell and Junior Marvin & The Legendary Wailers.- Riverfront Live FAQ and location information - used data on the address, arrival from downtown and from I-275, and information about more than 1000 parking spaces on the property.

- Riverfront Live Rentals - used data on indoor capacity of up to 1200 guests, outdoor space of up to 3500 guests and the venue's production capabilities.

- UB40 Global - used data on the band's history, formation in Birmingham, global sales and the context of the album "UB45".- SRO PR - used data on the Big Love Tour 2026 and the touring context of UB40 Featuring Ali Campbell.

Everything you need to know about tickets for concert UB40

+ Where to find tickets for concert UB40?

+ How to choose the best seat to enjoy the UB40 concert?

+ When is the best time to buy tickets for the UB40 concert?

+ Can tickets for concert UB40 be delivered electronically?

+ Are tickets for concert UB40 purchased through partners safe?

+ Are there tickets for concert UB40 in family sections?

+ What to do if tickets for concert UB40 are sold out?

+ Can I buy tickets for concert UB40 at the last minute?

+ What information do I need to buy tickets for the UB40 concert?

+ How to find tickets for specific sections at the UB40 concert?

5 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

Find accommodation nearby


You may be interested

Friday 03.07. 2026 17:00
Bedford Park, 180 Foster Hill Rd
Wednesday 15.07. 2026 21:30
Jardines de Viveros, C/ del Gral. Elio, s/n, La SaĂŻdia
Friday 24.07. 2026 19:00
Chepstow Racecourse, St Lawrence Rd
Friday 31.07. 2026 21:00
Gran Canaria Arena, C. Fondos de Segura
Saturday 01.08. 2026 18:30
Palmetum, Av. la ConstituciĂłn
Sunday 09.08. 2026 20:00
RiverEdge Park, 360 N Broadway
Friday 18.09. 2026 19:00
HISTORY Ottawa, 47 Rideau St
Saturday 19.09. 2026 20:00
MTELUS, 59 Rue Sainte-Catherine E
Sunday 20.09. 2026 20:00
Molson Canadian Centre, 21 Casino Dr
Tuesday 22.09. 2026 19:00
Historic Theater, Portsmouth
Wednesday 23.09. 2026 20:00
The Wilbur Theatre, 246 Tremont St
Friday 25.09. 2026 20:00
Town Hall New York, 123 W 43rd St
Sunday 27.09. 2026 19:00
Keswick Theatre, 291 N Keswick Ave
Wednesday 30.09. 2026 20:00
The Music Center at Strathmore, 5301 Tuckerman Ln
Friday 02.10. 2026 20:00
The Colosseum at Caesars Windsor, 377 Riverside Dr E
Saturday 03.10. 2026 20:01
OLG Stage At Niagara Fallsview Casino Resort, 6380 Fallsview Blvd
Sunday 04.10. 2026 18:00
Foellinger Theatre, 3411 Sherman Blvd
Wednesday 07.10. 2026 20:00
The Pabst Theater, 144 E Wells St
Thursday 08.10. 2026 20:00
Auditorium Theatre, 50 East Ida B. Wells Drive
Tuesday 13.10. 2026 19:00
Midway Music Hall, 6107 104 Street NW
Page: 2 / 3Total: 60

Culture & events desk

The editorial team for arts, music and events brings together journalists and volunteers who have spent years living alongside stages, clubs, festivals and all those spaces where art and audience meet. Our writing comes from long-standing journalistic experience and genuine involvement in cultural life: from endless evenings in concert halls, from conversations with musicians before and after performances, from improvised press corners at festivals, from premieres that end with long discussions in theatre corridors, but also from small, intimate events that attract only a handful of curious people yet remain engraved in their memory for a lifetime.

In our newsroom write people who know what a stage looks like when the lights go out, how the audience breathes while waiting for the first note, and what happens behind the curtain while instruments or microphones are still being adjusted. Many of us have spent years standing on stage ourselves, participating in programme organisation, volunteering at festivals or helping artist friends present their projects. This experience from both sides of the stage gives us the ability to view events not merely as items in a calendar, but as living encounters between creators and audiences.

Our stories do not stop at who performed and how many people attended. We are interested in the processes that precede every appearance before the public: how the idea for a concert or festival is born, what it takes for a comedy to reach its audience, how much time is spent preparing an exhibition or a multimedia project. In our texts we try to convey the atmosphere of the space, the energy of the performers and the mood of the audience, as well as the context in which all this happens – why a certain performance is important, how it fits into the broader music or art scene, and what remains after the venue empties.

The editorial team for arts, music and events builds its credibility on persistence and long-term work. Behind us are decades of writing, editing, talking with artists and observing how scenes change, how some styles come to the forefront while others retreat into the background. This experience helps us distinguish fleeting hype from events that truly push boundaries and leave a mark. When we give something space, we strive to explain why we believe it deserves attention, and when we are critical, we explain our reasons, aware of the effort behind every project.

Our task is simple and demanding at the same time: to be reliable witnesses of cultural and entertainment life, to write honestly toward the audience and honestly toward performers. We do not deal in generic praise; we aim to precisely describe what we see and hear, knowing that every text may be someone’s first encounter with a certain band, festival, comedian or artist. The editorial team for arts, music and events therefore exists as a place where all these encounters are recorded, interpreted and passed on – humanly, clearly and with respect for the very reason it exists at all: the live, real event in front of a real audience.

COPYRIGHT NOTICE
This article is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or approved by any sports, cultural, entertainment, music, or other organization, association, federation, or institution mentioned in the content.
Names of events, organizations, competitions, festivals, concerts, and similar entities are used solely for accurate public information purposes, in accordance with Articles 3 and 5 of the Media Act of the Republic of Croatia, and Article 5 of Directive 2001/29/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council.
The content is informational in nature and does not imply any official affiliation with the mentioned organizations or events.
NOTE FOR OUR READERS
Karlobag.eu provides news, analyses and information on global events and topics of interest to readers worldwide. All published information is for informational purposes only.
We emphasize that we are not experts in scientific, medical, financial or legal fields. Therefore, before making any decisions based on the information from our portal, we recommend that you consult with qualified experts.
Karlobag.eu may contain links to external third-party sites, including affiliate links and sponsored content. If you purchase a product or service through these links, we may earn a commission. We have no control over the content or policies of these sites and assume no responsibility for their accuracy, availability or any transactions conducted through them.
If we publish information about events or ticket sales, please note that we do not sell tickets either directly or via intermediaries. Our portal solely informs readers about events and purchasing opportunities through external sales platforms. We connect readers with partners offering ticket sales services, but do not guarantee their availability, prices or purchase conditions. All ticket information is obtained from third parties and may be subject to change without prior notice. We recommend that you thoroughly check the sales conditions with the selected partner before any purchase, as the Karlobag.eu portal does not assume responsibility for transactions or ticket sale conditions.
All information on our portal is subject to change without prior notice. By using this portal, you agree to read the content at your own risk.