Rolling Stones Bring A Bigger Bang Tour to Sunrise
The Rolling Stones bring their A Bigger Bang Tour to the BankAtlantic Center on this Sunday night in March, filling the Sunrise arena with the classic-rock energy that has defined the band's career for more than four decades.
The Rolling Stones bring their A Bigger Bang Tour to the BankAtlantic Center on this Sunday night in March, filling the Sunrise arena with the classic-rock energy that has defined the band's career for more than four decades. For Broward County fans, the concert represents a rare opportunity to see rock's most enduring act in a local venue, turning what might otherwise be a distant stadium spectacle into an accessible arena experience.
The A Bigger Bang Tour arrives as the Stones' first major North American trek in years, and its stop in Sunrise places western Broward alongside cities like New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago on the itinerary. That geographic placement reinforces the BankAtlantic Center's standing as a venue capable of attracting legacy acts with global reputations and production demands that test any building's logistical limits. For the arena staff, hosting the Stones represents a technical challenge and a prestige booking rolled into one.
Inside the BankAtlantic Center, the stage design reflects the tour's ambitious scale, with video screens, lighting rigs, and audio systems calibrated to deliver stadium-sized impact in an arena setting. The Stones' famously elaborate productions have evolved across decades, and the A Bigger Bang show incorporates lessons learned from previous tours while introducing fresh visual elements that keep the experience feeling contemporary rather than nostalgic. For concertgoers, the result is a show that honors the band's history without being trapped by it.
The setlist balances Stones classics with selections from the recent A Bigger Bang album, creating a bridge between the band's foundational 1960s and 1970s material and its ongoing creative output. Songs like "Start Me Up," "Satisfaction," and "Brown Sugar" receive the expected crowd response, but newer tracks demonstrate that Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and company remain committed to writing and recording rather than simply revisiting past glories. That balance matters to fans who want both familiarity and forward momentum from their concert experiences.
For Piper High students and other Broward residents, a Rolling Stones concert in Sunrise carries generational significance. Many attendees arrive with parents or even grandparents who saw the band in earlier eras, creating family traditions that span multiple Stones tours and venue changes. The shared experience turns a standard concert into a cross-generational memory, with different age groups connecting through music that has soundtracked everything from high school dances to wedding receptions across the decades.
The BankAtlantic Center's ability to host the Stones tour speaks to broader changes in western Broward's entertainment landscape. When the arena first opened as the Office Depot Center, it primarily served as a sports facility with occasional concerts. By 2006, its calendar includes regular bookings from major touring acts across multiple genres, reflecting both population growth in the region and improved transportation access via the Sawgrass Expressway and Florida Turnpike. The Stones date represents a milestone in that evolution.
When the final encore ends tonight, the A Bigger Bang Tour will have delivered more than just another rock concert. It will have demonstrated how a band approaching its fifth decade can still command arena-sized attention, how a venue in western Broward can compete with traditional concert markets, and how music that first found an audience in the 1960s can still feel vital in the 2000s. For everyone in the BankAtlantic Center, it is proof that some things really do get better with age — and that those aging pleasures can be found right here in Sunrise.