Hinder

Hinder

Treasure Island Amphitheater, 5734 Sturgeon Lake Road, 55089 Welch Kort

lau. 27.06.2026 14:00

Get ready to turn up the volume at the inaugural Rockin' The Island, a brand-new two-day rock festival taking place Saturday, June 27 featuring Theory of a Deadman, Skillet, Hinder, Buckcherry and Royale Lynn at the Treasure Island Amphitheater. This high-energy weekend will bring together some of the biggest names in rock music for an unforgettable experience on the banks of the Mississippi River! SATURDAY SINGLE DAY TICKET ONLY. Good for one person for Saturday only. Camping sold separately. Ticket insurance available during checkout. This event is outdoors and is rain or shine. Festival is welcome to ages 5+. Ages 5-17 must be accompanied by a ticketed parent or adult 18 or older. ALL TICKET SALES ARE FINAL, NON-REFUNDABLE AND ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR EXCHANGE OR UPGRADE. FESTIVAL LINEUP SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. *Limited accessible seating available.

Flytjendur

  • Hinder

    Hinder’s story begins in 2001, when Cody Hanson (drums), Joe “Blower” Garvey (lead guitar), and Mike Rodden (bass) met and activated their musical chemistry. The 2005 hit “Lips of an Angel” from the band’s debut album Extreme Behavior, since certified 3x Platinum, topped the charts and remains a radio mainstay. Powerful lead vocalist Marshal Dutton joined them in 2015. Throughout their discography, Hinder has embodied an ethos of defiance and tenacity through gutsy lyrics, rousing melodies, and soaring choruses. Each album in their musical journey has reflected a progression, from the grittier early days of Take It to the Limit to the more introspective and exploratory energy of their most recent album, 2017’s The Reign.

    Hinder emerges from the storm more focused and resilient than ever. With a renewed sense of purpose and drive, and still never afraid to take risks, Hinder is poised to continue forging its legacy as one of rock’s most enduring and dynamic bands. The band members’ resilience and adaptability have kept them at the forefront of the modern rock scene.

  • Skillet
    Skillet

    After nearly three decades, eleven albums, and thousands of shows worldwide, Skillet play louder, fight harder, and sound more rebellious than ever. As of 2024, the band have received two time GRAMMY® Award nominations, picked up a Billboard Music Award, and landed three albums in the Top 5 of the Billboard 200. Selling over 22 million units worldwide, they have notched multi platinum, platinum, or gold RIAA certifications for a total of 12 singles and four full length albums. Not to mention, they have regularly attracted 10 million monthly listeners on Spotify, boasting “one of the most streamed rock songs of all time” with the 5x platinum “Monster.” Their presence has impressively surged throughout popular culture with syncs by

    WWE, Marvel, ESPN, and NFL in addition to coverage form USA Today, The New York Times, and more. As a live force of nature, they have touched down on four continents and in 26 countries, packing arenas everywhere from the Middle East to Russia. Not to mention, Skillet expanded their world with the graphic novel series EDEN. The first installment stood out as Z2 Comics’ best selling book of all time. Now, the global hard rock quartet John Cooper [lead vocals, bass], Korey Cooper [guitar, keys], Jen Ledger [drums, vocals], and Seth Morrison [lead guitar] deliver an insurgent, infectious, and inimitable body of work with their twelfth full length offering and first ever independent album, Revolution, led by the single “Unpopular.”

  • Stone Temple Pilots
    Stone Temple Pilots

    The Tiny Music... Songs from the Vatican Gift Shop 25th Anniversary Super Deluxe Remaster is available now: https://rhino.lnk.to/TinyMusic

  • Theory of a Deadman
    Theory of a Deadman

    Songs make statements at just the right time. Born at the intersection of insurgency and inspiration, music props up a sounding board for the people to be heard. Theory Of A Deadman amplify this voice on their seventh full-length offering, Say Nothing [Atlantic Records]. The award-winning multiplatinum Los Angeles-based Canadian band—Tyler Connolly [lead vocals, guitar], Dave Brenner [guitar, backing vocals], Dean Back [bass], and Joey Dandeneau [drums]—flip the pulse of the world into scorching songcraft, integrating experimental vision, rock ‘n’ roll attitude, and clever pop ambition.

    In the midst of this storm, Connolly and Co. speak up like never before.

    “This album allowed me to say all of the things that were on my mind earlier, but I was too afraid to say,” the frontman admits. “Our previous material was pretty much all relationship-driven. Everything was about me being unhappy. This one was about what’s going on in the world, the state of American politics, and everything else. It was a completely different way of writing for us. I remember Dave asked me, ‘Hey dude, did you watch a lot of CNN or what?’,” he laughs.

    A whirlwind two years awakened this feeling in the group. After nearly two decades together, Theory landed their biggest career hit in the form of “Rx (Medicate)” from 2017’s Wake Up Call. Not only did it receive a platinum plaque, generate 250 million-plus streams, and become their third number one on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, but it also received a nomination in the category of “Rock Song of the Year” at the iHeartRadio Music Awards.

    The musicians quietly reached this high watermark by remaining consistently prolific. To date, their discography encompasses several platinum and gold singles, a platinum album, two Top 10 album debuts on the Billboard Top 200, and eight Top Tens on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks Chart. In addition to selling out shows worldwide, they’ve toured with everyone from Alter Bridge and Bush to Stone Sour and Big Wreck and more.

    In 2018, Connolly turned his attention towards the next chapter. It started at a Los Angeles dinner with Wake Up Call producer Martin Terefe [Jason Mraz, Yungblud].

    “I went out to dinner before Halloween with Martin, began discussing the record, went home, and had a panic attack,” recalls Connolly. “After ‘Rx (Medicate)’, there was a lot to figure out. It was really fantastic, but I don’t think we had a lot of time to live in it and digest it. There was pressure. I was like, ‘Okay, I have to get to work’. One day when I woke up, I knew what I needed to communicate. I was motivated to talk about things I want to talk about and not just write about girls. It’s not where I was 15 years ago, but here I am now.”

    “What makes this record important is the content,” Brenner elaborates. “Tyler approaches some really tough topics like domestic violence and racism. We never did that in the past. ‘Rx (Medicate)’ opened the door though. This is almost a continuation. There are real discussions happening in the tracks backed by heavy stuff to make you think.”

    Once again, the group hopped a plane to London and worked out of Terefe’s Kensaltown studio. Staying in an Airbnb for six weeks, they pushed themselves creatively like never before, incorporating new sounds and sonics.

    Theory introduce Say Nothing with the single “History Of Violence.” Finger-picked guitar by Brenner brushes up against the singer’s searing snapshot of a woman afflicted by abuse at the hands of her husband. Between sweeping strings and airy solos, Connolly sings, “She need a sedative to get her straight, ya know she need a cigarette, she got the shakes, put them sunglasses on her, hide her face, such a waste…maybe the way out is a .38.”

    “It’s a story about a woman who gets beat by her significant other, shoots him, kills him, and goes to jail,” he explains. “Even though she’s in jail, it’s still a better place to be than being imprisoned in real life by this man. It’s very similar to stories we hear in the news all the time, unfortunately.”

    A pilgrimage to Abbey Road Studios left its fingerprints on “Ted Bundy.” Swaggering piano and boisterous horns resound beneath a Sgt. Peppers-gone-Silence-of-the-Lambs story - a first-person account about a terribly troubled man who can’t properly love; not even the most beautiful woman can fill that void and change him.

    “We did a private tour of Abbey Road, and I got to play on The Beatles piano,” recalls Connolly. “We went up to the room where they played ‘A Day in the Life’. When we got back to our studio, we were so inspired. We put tuba on ‘Ted Bundy’. After six albums, we don’t want to be complacent or stale. We try different things. I wrote the chorus first for this then decided to write it about the infamous killer. I think I was watching the documentary and got inspired to write about Ted Bundy falling in love.”

    Elsewhere, a gospel choir kicks off “Quicksand,” adding yet another dimension to the aural palette. Meanwhile, the orchestration on “Black Hole In Your Heart” moves in lockstep with an arena-ready beat punctuated by creaky guitar, nodding to Silverchair’s Diorama.

    “All around, we really pushed ourselves in terms of the sound,” adds Brenner. “It’s like we finally fit the square peg in the round hole here!”

    In many ways, “Strangers” encapsulates a pervasive feeling and strikes a chord with its powerful and provocative prose.

    “It’s about what’s going on in America with politics,” says Connolly. “You have to pick a side. It’s interesting how people stick to their party and forget the country. We’re all like strangers now. It’s gotten too nasty.”

    However, Theory’s music might be something everyone can ultimately agree on.

    “I look at the record as a microcosm of our current era,” Brenner concludes. “It’s a reminder to look inward at what’s happening and what we’re becoming. I hope everyone dives into the words. At the same time, music is still an escape. Maybe we can give the world a little solace and encourage everyone to treat each other better.”

    “We just want to write what speaks to us,” Connolly leaves off. “The best thing is when people sing lyrics back to you, or if a song gets somebody through a tough time. There’s something we all might be able to dig here.”

    www.theoryofficial.com

  • Buckcherry
    Buckcherry

    New album 'Vol 10' out NOW! GET IT HERE: http://roundhill.ffm.to/buckcherry-vol10

  • Hoobastank
    Hoobastank

    The Reason 15th Anniversary - Out Now on all digital streaming services and vinyl for the first time ever!

  • Black Stone Cherry
    Black Stone Cherry

    Black Stone Cherry is a four piece American hard rock group from Edmonton, Kentucky, US. Their music can be brooding and heavy, but it also places emphasis on their southern heritage incorporating hints of rockabilly and folk-country.

  • Crossfade
    Crossfade

    Crossfade is a post grunge band originating in Columbia, South Carolina. The group came together in 1999 with the merging of singer/guitarist Ed Sloan with bassist/backup singer Mitch James and drummer Brian Geiger as the power trio The Nothing and then the name was changed to Crossfade in 2002. The group added singer and DJ Tony Byroads from Buffalo, New York. The resulting quartet renamed itself Sugardaddy Superstar. It first gained recognition beyond its region when it attracted the interest of the Los Angeles A&R company Taxi. This ultimately led to the signing of a record deal with the Earshot division of Columbia Records. They released their first album on April 13, 2004. The group is now a three-piece band as of spring 2005 due to the departure of the DJ/backing vocalist Tony Byroads. He wanted to spend time with his new bride. Crossfade's latest album, Falling Away, was released on August 29, 2006 on Columbia Records.