top of page

Live Review: Our Lady Peace @ Buckhead Theatre, Atlanta - March 16th 2026

  • 21 hours ago
  • 3 min read
A person plays guitar and sings into a microphone on stage, lit by a spotlight. The dark background enhances the dramatic mood.
Our Lady Peace @ Buckhead Theatre © Chris Collett

Originally opened in 1930, Buckhead Theatre has gone through a few identities over the years, including its time as The Roxy Theatre up until 2010. Today, it sits in that perfect middle ground. Big enough to feel like an event, but still intimate enough that every reaction in the room feeds right back into the stage.


That connection got tested before the night even started.


The Verve Pipe were scheduled to open, but their lead singer Brian Vander Ark was stranded in Orlando due to weather-related flight cancellations. With Atlanta flipping from 77 and sunny to freezing temperatures and snow in less than 24 hours, it made sense, but it still left a lot of fans with a sad face. The band shared that this was the first time in 35 years they’ve had to cancel a show, and told the crowd they plan to return later this year to make it up.


Band performs on stage at Buckhead Theatre. Crowd watches under colorful lights. Energetic concert atmosphere fills the ornate venue.
Our Lady Peace @ Buckhead Theatre © Chris Collett

With that, Our Lady Peace took the stage as the only act of the night.

The reaction was immediate. Loud, locked in, and fully engaged. This was a crowd that came in already connected to these songs, and from the first notes, that energy stayed consistent.


Frontman Raine Maida kept things loose and personal throughout the night, mixing in quick moments with the crowd and letting them take over when it mattered. Around him, Duncan Coutts, Steve Mazur, and Jason Pierce were completely in sync, moving through the set with the kind of confidence that only comes from years of playing together. Nothing felt forced, and nothing felt overdone. They let the songs carry themselves, and the room followed.


Our Lady Peace - Locked In The Trunk Of A Car (Tragically Hip Cover, OLP30 Live)

While the night was rooted in the classics, the band is not just coasting on the past. They are currently in the middle of their OLP30 era, celebrating 30 years as a band with new releases throughout 2025 and a continuing tour into 2026. That balance between honoring their history while still putting out new material gave the set a little more weight. It did not feel like a nostalgia act. It felt like a band still actively writing their story.


By the time they closed with “Starseed,” the entire room was still with them. No drop in energy, no checking out. Just a crowd that stayed connected from start to finish.


Green text on black: "Our Lady Peace 30th Anniversary" with "The Verve Pipe" and tour dates. Energetic and celebratory mood.
Our Lady Peace 2026 30th Anniversary Tour

Setlist:

Superman’s Dead

Innocent

One Man Army

Is Anybody Home?

Sound the Alarm

Naveed

Life

Not Enough

Everyone’s a Junkie

In Repair

Temporary Healing

Hail, Hail (Pearl Jam cover)

4am

Somewhere Out There

Clumsy

Encore:

Away From the Sun (3 Doors Down cover)

If You Believe

Automatic Flowers

Starseed


For a night that could have easily felt off balance from the start, it never did. If anything, it sharpened the focus. There were no distractions, no split attention, just one band and a room that was fully with them from the first song to the last. That kind of consistency is not easy to pull off, but it never felt like they were chasing it. It just happened.


That is what separates a band that has lasted this long. Not just the songs, but the ability to walk into a situation that shifts and still deliver exactly what the moment calls for. Our Lady Peace did not overcomplicate it. They showed up, played the songs people came to hear, and left with the room exactly where they found it, fully connected.


🔗 Our Lady Peace Official Links



Our Lady Peace


Latest

Live Updates

Shaky Knees Music Festival, returning September 18-20 to Atlanta’s crown jewel, Piedmont Park. The stacked lineup will bring over 50 performances across four stages.

When We Were Young Festival Taking 2026 Off, Promises 2027 Return

The EAGLES have announced “The Long Goodbye, Act III” with three stadium dates

Metallica will debut its Life Burns Faster residency at Sphere in Las Vegas

bottom of page