Metric Live at Jubilee Auditorium Calgary 2026: All the Feelings Tour

    Metric Live at Jubilee Auditorium Calgary 2026: All the Feelings Tour

    Staff
    April 26, 2026
    12 min read

    Metric, Broken Social Scene and Stars bring the All the Feelings Tour to Calgary's Jubilee Auditorium on June 28, 2026. Tickets from $121, doors at 7 PM. Don't miss it!

    Metric, Broken Social Scene, and Stars Are Coming to Calgary for One of the Most Exciting Canadian Indie Nights of 2026

    Some concert announcements make you stop scrolling. This is one of them. On Sunday, June 28, 2026, three of Canada's most beloved and enduring indie rock acts will share the stage at the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium in Calgary for the All the Feelings Tour. Metric, Broken Social Scene, and Stars are co-headlining a single evening in one of Calgary's most storied venues, bringing together two decades of music that has shaped Canadian indie rock, produced Juno and Grammy recognition, and filled rooms across the world since the early 2000s. For Calgary's music community, June 28 is a night that does not come along very often.

    The Tour That Canadian Indie Rock Has Been Waiting For

    The All the Feelings Tour was announced on February 2, 2026, and the response from fans across Canada and internationally was immediate and overwhelming. The 18-date tour, promoted by Live Nation, launched in Austin, Texas on June 8, 2026, moving through Dallas, Denver, Salt Lake City, Phoenix, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, New York's Brooklyn Paramount, Nashville's Ryman Auditorium, and Washington D.C. before crossing into Canada for the western leg. The Calgary date at the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium on June 28 is followed by the Edmonton date at the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium on June 29, before the tour wraps with a homecoming show at RBC Amphitheatre in Toronto on August 7.

    In March 2026, an additional 14 dates were added to the routing, including European shows in Glasgow, London, and Manchester in September, a decision that speaks to the international demand for this specific combination of artists. The fact that Calgary gets its own dedicated date, not a shared Alberta show but a stand-alone night at the Jubilee, confirms that the city's indie music audience has earned this kind of treatment.

    The tour announcement came alongside a major piece of news for Metric fans specifically: the band simultaneously revealed their tenth studio album, Romanticize the Dive, due for release on April 24, 2026, alongside the lead single "Victim of Luck". By June 28, the album will have been out for two months and Calgary's audience will know every word of the new material. That timing makes the Calgary show particularly special: the debut of the new album on tour at the precise moment when it is still fresh but already deeply familiar to its listeners.

    Who Is Metric? Two Decades of Defining Canadian Indie Rock

    Metric is Emily Haines, James Shaw, Joshua Winstead, and Joules Scott-Key, a band that formed in Toronto in the late 1990s and spent the following two and a half decades becoming one of the most consistently excellent indie rock acts Canada has ever produced. Their catalog spans ten studio albums across 25-plus years and includes some of the most immediately recognizable songs in Canadian music: "Monster Hospital," "Gold Guns Girls," "Help I'm Alive," "Breathing Underwater," "Black Sheep," "Youth Without Youth," "Gimme Sympathy," "Stadium Love," "Art of Doubt," and dozens more.

    Frontwoman Emily Haines brings a stage presence that is genuinely difficult to describe without resorting to superlatives. Her voice, ranging from a whispered intimacy to a full-throated cry, and her physical presence on stage are completely commanding in any venue from a 500-capacity club to an outdoor amphitheatre. Guitarist and multi-instrumentalist James Shaw is one of the most inventive and technically skilled players in Canadian rock, and the rhythmic foundation that Winstead and Scott-Key provide gives the band a live sound that is simultaneously polished and visceral.

    Their most recent previous album, Formentera II in 2022, received strong reviews and marked the band's continued evolution without abandoning the synth-driven indie rock architecture that made them beloved in the first place. Romanticize the Dive, their tenth record, arrives as the latest chapter in a catalog that has never once felt like it was running out of ideas.

    Metric's connection to Calgary specifically runs through years of touring. The Jubilee has hosted the band before, and the audience in Calgary has always been vocal, passionate, and deeply engaged with the full catalog rather than just the obvious singles. June 28 will be no different.

    Who Is Broken Social Scene? Canada's Greatest Musical Collective

    Broken Social Scene is not simply a band. It is one of the most remarkable creative collectives in the history of popular music, founded in Toronto in 1999 by Kevin Drew and Brendan Canning. What started as a two-person basement recording project evolved into a sprawling, rotating collective that at various points has included as few as six and as many as nineteen musicians on a single stage, drawing members from across Toronto's indie scene.

    The collective's membership history reads like a roster of Canadian indie music's finest: Leslie Feist, who went on to become one of Canada's most celebrated solo artists; Emily Haines of Metric; Amy Millan, Evan Cranley, and Torquil Campbell of Stars; Jason Collett; and countless others who passed through the BSS orbit and carried its collective spirit into their own projects.

    Their 2002 album You Forgot It in People is one of the most universally acclaimed Canadian records ever made, winning the Alternative Album of the Year Juno Award in 2003 and landing on year-end best-of lists across the international music press. Songs like "Anthems for a Seventeen-Year-Old Girl," "Almost Crimes," "Lover's Spit," and "Cause = Time" remain cornerstones of Canadian indie rock whose emotional resonance has not diminished in more than two decades.

    A Broken Social Scene live performance is, by design, different every night. The revolving-door membership philosophy means that any given BSS show is shaped by who is in the room, what they ate for dinner, the weather, the city, and the specific energy between the musicians and the audience. In Calgary on June 28, the emotional weight of a band that has been together for 27 years, sharing a stage with their closest collaborators, will make for something that feels genuinely irreplaceable.

    Who Is Stars? The Third Piece of a Perfect Canadian Indie Puzzle

    Stars is Torquil Campbell, Amy Millan, Evan Cranley, Chris Seligman, and Pat McGee, a band that has been making emotionally sophisticated indie pop and rock since the late 1990s. Their 2004 album Set Yourself on Fire is considered one of the defining Canadian indie records of the decade, and songs like "Ageless Beauty," "Your Ex-Lover Is Dead," "Elevator Love Letter," and "Take Me to the Riot" remain powerful in live settings decades after their initial release.

    The dual vocal dynamic between Torquil Campbell and Amy Millan, trading verses and choruses in a musical conversation that is equal parts argument and tenderness, is one of the most distinctive sounds in Canadian music. Stars has always made music about love, loss, politics, and mortality with a directness that is unafraid of sentiment, and those themes resonate differently as the band ages into their own catalog.

    In celebration of the All the Feelings Tour, Stars recently released The Set Yourself on Fire (Live), a vinyl live recording from their 20th anniversary North American tour in 2024 and 2025, a reminder of how powerfully that material translates to a live room. The Calgary date on June 28 will give the band a chance to bring that anniversary energy to western Canada.

    The Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium: Calgary's Most Beloved Concert Hall

    The Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium, affectionately known as the Jube to generations of Calgarians, sits at 1415 14 Avenue NW in the northwest residential area of Calgary. Opened in 1955 and renovated to modernize its systems while preserving its architectural character, the Jubilee is one of the most distinctive and beloved performance venues in western Canada.

    The venue holds 2,538 seats across its main floor, first balcony, and second balcony sections, with a layout that provides excellent sightlines from virtually every section in the house. The acoustics are particularly well-suited to the dynamic range of indie rock, which moves between delicate instrumentation and full-band climaxes in a way that benefits from a properly shaped room. For a show like the All the Feelings Tour, where three bands with distinct sonic identities each need space to be heard clearly, the Jube's architecture works beautifully.

    The venue sits in the Briar Hill neighbourhood of northwest Calgary, just north of the University of Calgary campus and adjacent to the SAIT Polytechnic grounds. The surrounding area is one of Calgary's most established inner-city communities, with the Kensington Village retail and restaurant strip on 10th Street NW just a short drive or walk to the south, and the North Hill Shopping Centre nearby for pre-show practical needs.

    Ticket Prices: What You Will Pay on June 28

    Current secondary market pricing gives a clear picture of where tickets are trading ahead of the show:

    • Second Balcony (best value): From approximately $121 to $168 per ticket including fees
    • First Balcony: From approximately $164 to $330 per ticket
    • Main Floor Centre: From approximately $307 per ticket, described as a Top 1% Value option
    • Secondary market starting price overall: From $100 CAD on SeatGeek.ca

    Only approximately 192 tickets remain as of recent listing data, making this one of Calgary's lower-inventory shows of the summer. For a 2,538-capacity venue with this calibre of lineup, the remaining seats across the second balcony represent the most accessible entry point for fans who still need to secure their spot.

    Official tickets are available through Live Nation and Ticketmaster Canada. Checking for any remaining official face-value inventory at Live Nation first before turning to secondary market platforms is always the recommended approach.

    The show is confirmed as all-ages.

    Getting to the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium on June 28

    The Jubilee at 1415 14 Avenue NW is accessible from across Calgary by multiple routes:

    By Calgary Transit:

    The most convenient transit approach is the CTrain Blue Line to the Lions Park station, which sits approximately a 10 to 15-minute walk from the venue. From the University of Calgary station on the Red Line, the 19 Bow Trail bus provides a connection to the northwest inner-city area. Checking Calgary Transit's trip planner for your specific departure point will confirm the most direct connection.

    By car:

    The Jubilee sits just off 14 Avenue NW in the Briar Hill area, accessible from Crowchild Trail northbound via the 16 Avenue NW interchange, then east on 14 Avenue NW. Street parking in the surrounding residential neighbourhood is available, though it fills on busy show nights. Arriving 45 to 60 minutes before the 7:00 PM doors time is advisable for parking convenience.

    Pre-show dining options near the Jubilee:

    The Kensington Village neighbourhood on 10th Street NW, just south and east of the Jubilee, is one of Calgary's most beloved independent dining destinations. Restaurants including Wurst, Bonterra, Vendome Cafe, Ox and Angela, and numerous others within a few blocks make Kensington an excellent choice for dinner before the show. The 20-minute walk from Kensington to the Jubilee along 12 Avenue NW is a pleasant summer evening stroll.

    What to Expect From the All the Feelings Tour in Calgary

    Three headline bands. One evening. One of Calgary's finest venues. With 192 remaining tickets at time of writing, June 28 at the Jubilee is moving toward a sell-out, and the bands sharing the stage that night have a combined catalog that spans approximately 60 studio albums across their collective careers.

    The All the Feelings Tour is described by the bands themselves as a reunion celebration of the music, memories, and moments that have connected these three acts and their audiences for decades. Jimmy Shaw of Metric noted that the three bands are all long-time friends who share members and have been part of the same creative community since the early 2000s, and that the tour feels like a dream come true. That genuine closeness between the artists will be felt on the Calgary stage in a way that a conventional headliner-support setup could never replicate.

    Expect Metric to draw heavily from Romanticize the Dive alongside the hits, Broken Social Scene to be everything that phrase suggests, and Stars to remind Calgary why Set Yourself on Fire still sounds as urgent as it did 20-plus years ago. Whatever the setlists turn out to be, the collective emotional weight of three bands at this career stage performing for each other as much as for the audience is going to make for something genuinely special in the Jube on a June Sunday night.


    Get your tickets now through Live Nation at livenation.com or Ticketmaster Canada before the remaining 192 seats are gone.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When is Metric playing at the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium in Calgary?

    Metric, Broken Social Scene, and Stars perform at the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium in Calgary on Sunday, June 28, 2026. Doors open at 7:00 PM MT.

    What is the All the Feelings Tour?

    The All the Feelings Tour is an 18-date (expanded to 32 dates) co-headlining North American and European tour featuring Metric, Broken Social Scene, and Stars performing together. It was announced February 2, 2026, and is promoted by Live Nation.

    Where is the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium?

    The Jubilee is located at 1415 14 Avenue NW, Calgary, AB T2N 1M4, in the Briar Hill neighbourhood of northwest Calgary, near the University of Calgary and SAIT campuses.

    How many seats does the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium have?

    The Jubilee has a total capacity of 2,538 seats across the main floor, first balcony, and second balcony.

    How much are tickets for Metric in Calgary on June 28?

    Secondary market tickets start from approximately $100 to $121 CAD for second balcony sections. Main floor and first balcony sections are priced higher. Official tickets are available through Live Nation and Ticketmaster Canada.

    Is the Calgary show all-ages?

    Yes. The June 28 show at the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium is confirmed as an all-ages event.

    What album is Metric touring in support of in 2026?

    Metric is touring in support of Romanticize the Dive, their tenth studio album, released April 24, 2026 via Thirty Tigers. The lead single is "Victim of Luck".

    Are there any other Alberta dates on the All the Feelings Tour?

    Yes. The Edmonton date takes place the following night, Monday, June 29, 2026, at the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium in Edmonton.

    Verified Information at a Glance

    Event: All the Feelings Tour with Metric, Broken Social Scene, and Stars

    Event Category: Multi-Headliner Indie Rock Concert Tour

    Date: Sunday, June 28, 2026

    Doors Open: 7:00 PM MT

    Venue: Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium

    Venue Address: 1415 14 Avenue NW, Calgary, AB T2N 1M4

    Venue Capacity: 2,538 seats

    Artists: Metric, Broken Social Scene, Stars

    Age Policy: All-ages

    Metric's New Album: Romanticize the Dive, released April 24, 2026

    Secondary Market Tickets From: Approximately $100 to $121 CAD (second balcony)

    Official Tickets: Live Nation (livenation.com) and Ticketmaster Canada

    Remaining Tickets: Approximately 192 as of recent data

    Promoted By: Live Nation

    Next Alberta Date: Edmonton, Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium, June 29, 2026

    Published on April 26, 2026