Buy your R&B Tickets at TicketsNow.com.    
Click here to view our Site Map
Detroit, MI | Change Location
Home > Concert Tickets > R&B Tickets > New Edition Tickets  
New Edition tickets at TicketsNow

New Edition Tickets

New Edition can be crowned one of the original boy bands with their good looks, charm and catchy tunes. Songs like “Candy Girl” and “Cool It Now” are the same tunes that keep pulling audiences back to see the group perform LIVE in concert time and again. Purchase your New Edition tickets now!
Detroit Area Shows

Other Shows


I'M STILL IN LOVE WITH YOU!!!!
By Pooh from Los Angeles, CA on 7/9/2007
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

OMG!! I have always loved New Edition. I saw their show at the Gibson Theatre in Los Angeles 7/7/07. Their singing and dancing were on point, my friends and family were sick of me talking about it days after the show. The worst thing about this show is that it had to end.

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.
I Didn't see what I paid for!
By DeLor from Hillside, NJ on 7/2/2007
Pros:
Great Sound
Cons:
One idol no show
Best For:
Completely Unfamiliar

We had great seats [...] but the lead singer of the group did not show up. I was truly disappointed after paying a lot of money for nothing. This show should have been cancelled.

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.
Felt like I was back in high school
By Gadget the Bodybreaker from Arlington, VA on 6/18/2007
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Die-Hards Only

I really felt like I was in high school again. They were great! Actually it seems they were even better.

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.
Are still the most talented group ever!
By MS. LENA from Kings Mountain, NC on 3/19/2007
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Sound, Just wasnt long enough, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone, That loves real music

They are still the best at what they do! Noone except Michael Jackson could come close! Can't wait to see them again, would love to meet them in person!

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.

How Buying & Selling Concert Tickets, Theater Tickets & Sporting Events Tickets works at TicketsNow
TicketsNow Guarantee: Authentic Tickets Or Your Money Back! - TicketsNow
Click here for TicketsNow Terms and Conditions.
Insider Email Alerts
Sign up for TicketsNow emails, get 10% off your first order.
Hot Events

New Edition Concert Tickets

Before the Backstreet Boys, 'N Sync and even New Kids on the Block, there was New Edition. One of the first modern bands, the Boston-based group was one of the most popular acts of the 1980s. Although it has been more than 34 years since they formed, New Edition tickets are still a popular item.

Originally formed in 1978 by Bobby Brown, Michael Bivins and Ricky Bell, New Edition got off to a fast start. Their debut album, 1983's Candy Girl, was one of the most popular of that year and its featured title track was hit in both the US and the UK, vaulting to the top of the R&B charts. Though it was only their first album, it was a sign of good things to come.

New Edition's self-titled sophomore album was even more popular than their debut. Thanks to the popular singles, "Cool it Now," "Mr. Telephone Man" and "Lost in Love," New Edition was able to solidify its place among the best acts in pop music. Although the lineup has changed several times throughout the year, New Edition's place in music history has not waned. Don’t miss your opportunity to check out the group that started the boy band trend; grab your New Edition concert tickets today!

New Edition Biography

New Edition's early, Jackson 5-inspired material made them the forerunners of two generations of teen pop (most of which was geared to white audiences). As they matured and progressed, they laid much of the groundwork for the fusion of hip-hop and R&B known as new jack swing. In fact, after New Edition drifted apart, all of its members had at least some significant success outside the group as part of the new jack movement, which helped ensure that their original incarnation would be remembered for much more than the bubblegum urban soul that made their name.

New Edition was formed in the Roxbury section of Boston, MA, by Ricky Bell, Michael Bivins, and Bobby Brown, who began singing together in 1978 while still in elementary school, hoping to perform for pocket cash. They eventually recruited friend Ralph Tresvant as a fourth member, and after winning a talent show in 1980, also added Ronnie DeVoe. More talent show victories followed, including a prestigious gig at the local ~Strand Theater, where they performed the Jackson 5's The Love You Save. They were discovered by writer/producer/impresario Maurice Starr, who signed the group to his small Streetwise label in hopes of launching a Jackson 5 phenomenon for the '80s. Candy Girl, a song Starr co-wrote for the group, was released as their first single in 1983, when the members ranged in age from 13 to 15. Despite a lack of major-label interest in the group, Candy Girl was a smash, topping the R&B charts. Their debut album, also titled Candy Girl, spawned two more R&B hits in Popcorn Love and Is This the End, and MCA offered the group a deal. Starr, however, wanted the group to remain with Streetwise New Edition summarily fired him as their manager and signed with MCA. Starr attempted to sue the group for their name, unsuccessfully claiming that New Edition actually referred to a whole new style of pop music he'd created. Starr, of course, would go on to strike it rich with a similar concept, assembling a quintet of white teenagers he dubbed New Kids on the Block.

New Edition, meanwhile, released their eponymous MCA debut in 1984 and scored their biggest pop hit with the Top Five smash Cool It Now, which ended with a short rap section. The Ray Parker, Jr.-penned Mr. Telephone Man soon became their third R&B chart-topper, and the group had reached full-fledged teen idol status. Yet they were growing up fast, as demonstrated on their next album, 1985's All for Love. Not only were their voices changing, but their material was becoming more adult, with harder-edged funk and more mature romantic ballads. Later that year, they also released a holiday album, Christmas All Over the World, and struck an endorsement deal with Coke. However, rumors of Brown's growing dissatisfaction proved true and he left for a solo career in 1986. Temporarily down to a quartet, the rest of the group recorded the covers album Under the Blue Moon, a set of vintage doo wop and R&B numbers from the '50s and '60s it produced a hit revival of the Penguins' Earth Angel.

Brown's replacement came in the form of Johnny Gill, a deep-voiced friend of the group who'd been recording as a solo artist without much luck. Gill made his debut on the 1989 album Heart Break, which found New Edition working with star producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. The move paid immediate dividends, as they scored several R&B hits from the album, including the number one Can You Stand the Rain. Meanwhile, Brown had become a superstar with his second album, the new jack swing landmark Don't Be Cruel. Feeling vindicated by Heart Break, New Edition split up to work on other projects. Gill returned to his solo career, with considerably more success this time around, and Tresvant also went solo. The remainder of the group teamed as Bell Biv DeVoe and wound up having greater success than anyone save Brown their debut album, Poison, was another new jack style-setter and Bivins' interest in developing new talent gave Boyz II Men their big break.

By the mid-'90s, new jack swing was giving way to new fusions of hip-hop and soul that were alternately more organic or aggressive. Although their status as innovators was secure, many of the New Edition splinter acts had a hard time keeping up and maintaining their career momentum. Thus, given their individually positive reputations, it made sense for the group to announce its triumphant reunion, with all six members participating in what was essentially an R&B supergroup. The public loved the idea when the comeback album Home Again was finally released in 1996, it debuted at number one, and the first single, Hit Me Off, was a smash, hitting number one on the R&B charts. The follow-up, I'm Still in Love With You, was another big hit, and the group embarked on a blockbuster tour that, while popular, found relationships between some of the members fraying. After the tour, New Edition returned to their various prior projects, with the prospect of any future reunions looking dim. Those prospects increased significantly when it was learned that P. Diddy had signed the group to his Bad Boy label for the release of another comeback, 2004's One Love. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi