Alan Jackson closed out his performing career on June 27, 2025, with a sold-out farewell concert at Nashville’s Nissan Stadium — and the country music world showed up to send him off in style.
The show, billed as “The Finale,” marked the official end of a recording and touring legacy that began with Jackson’s debut single in 1989. Over more than three decades, he sold in excess of 75 million records worldwide and accumulated two Grammy Awards, 16 CMA Awards, and 17 ACM Awards. His decision to step away from performing follows his 2021 announcement that he had been diagnosed with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, an incurable degenerative condition affecting the peripheral nerves. Jackson had already wrapped his multi-year “Last Call” farewell tour with a stop in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on May 17, 2025, before this Nashville finale was announced. Tickets sold out almost immediately after going on sale in October 2025.
An All-Star Tribute Takes Center Stage
Several of country music’s biggest names performed individually throughout the evening, each tackling some of Jackson’s most celebrated material. The undeniable centerpiece of the night, however, was a massed all-star performance of “Pop a Top,” the lead single Jackson released in 1999 from his album Under the Influence. Miranda Lambert and Carrie Underwood anchored the group at center stage, joined by Thomas Rhett, Cody Johnson, Riley Green, and others.
Artists Reflect on What the Night Meant
For many performers, the evening carried a weight that went well beyond a standard guest appearance. Carrie Underwood framed it as a deeply personal full-circle moment, noting on Instagram that the very first concert she ever attended was an Alan Jackson show in 1994. Posting a photo of herself smiling beside a poster of Jackson’s iconic “Chattahoochee” water skiing scene, she wrote: “This little girl posing in front of his poster could have never imagined she’d one day be standing on stage at his farewell concert, celebrating this legendary artist whose music has been such a big part of her life.”
Lainey Wilson took to Instagram with a carousel of photos, describing moments from the night as the kind you “call home about.”
Thomas Rhett called it “arguably the coolest thing I’ve ever gotten to be a part of,” while Luke Combs, who received a signed set list from Jackson on the night, wrote that the experience was surreal. “The impact he’s had on me, so many others, and country music as a whole can’t be overstated,” Combs said, adding that he shook Jackson’s hand and was able to thank him in person — a moment he described as one he would never forget.
With “The Finale” now behind him, Jackson leaves a catalog that has shaped multiple generations of country artists — and, judging by the reactions from those on that Nissan Stadium stage, his influence on the genre is far from over.





























