All-American Rejects Aim for ‘Pure Connection’ by Playing Free Shows Amid Industry Ticket Price Woes

If you’ve attempted to score tickets for almost anything in recent memory, you’re well aware of the astronomical levels of fuckery present in what should be a simple, reasonable transaction. For the average American, it would seem that catching a date on one of the hottest tours of the year might mean taking a financial hit that simply can’t be justified. This is most prevalent in the arena and stadium space, where spending hundreds of dollars for so-so views of your favorite artist is the rule, not the exception.

Enter the All-American Rejects, who have taken a refreshingly direct-to-the-people approach with their recent string of shows. As you may have seen on social media, or even in person, the Oklahoma-born band—with frontman Tyson Ritter and lead guitarist Nick Wheeler at the helm—have been playing free house shows in recent weeks. While the group, whose first album since 2012’s Kids in the Street is expected at the top of 2026, will later this year be on the bill for a run of Jonas Brothers arena shows, it was important to Ritter and company to cultivate a “pure connection” with fans by taking it back to their van days.

“The idea came, it was born out of just a real pure intentional moment of like ‘Let’s go have fun and get back to the way we started when we started touring with this band in a van,’” Ritter said during a recent CNN interview, as seen below. “It was thrust from the lips of our new manager, Megan, who’s a 29-year-old genius who said ‘I wanna put you guys at house parties again.’”

The shows have proven to be a rousing success, with footage from recent stops in Nashville and elsewhere showing that AAR’s hunch about getting back to the basics of a stripped-down rock show were well-founded. As Ritter put it in his conversation with CNN’s Boris Sanchez and Brianna Keilar, he and the band are able to feel “this pure connection to the spirit of what rock ’n’ roll and that whole non-denominational gathering of a love for music can create” at these pop-up house shows.

Compared with the “ivory tower” approach of traditional venues for an artist of their size, per Ritter, the band’s run of house shows marks “a way to embrace that spirit again.”

In April, AAR marked their formal return with the release of new single “Sandbox,” the video for which saw them teaming with Joseph Kahn for a blood-soaked tale of batshit puppetry.

For a deeper dive into the band’s inner workings, look no further than Wheeler’s recent appearance on Troy Cartwright’s Nashville-focused Ten Year Town podcast. See more below.