Madison Beer – The Life Support Tour
Maggie Lindemann, Audriix

Event Info
Brooklyn Bowl Nashville
925 3rd Avenue North
Nashville, Tennessee 37201
Because of the rise in cases due to the delta variant, a special COVID protocol is required for everyone that will be in attendance for this show at Brooklyn Bowl Nashville. You, and anyone accompanying you in your party, are required to provide ONE of the following:
Proof of your vaccination record (vaccination card or picture of your card with a matching ID card), demonstrating you were fully vaccinated at least two weeks in advance of the day of show. OR proof of a negative COVID test, administered within 72 hours of the day of show, with matching ID card.
We recommend uploading your vaccination card or negative COVID test information to the Bindle app — available for free on the Apple App Store or Google Play Store. This is a secure and private app that will allow you to quickly display your information, ensuring timely entry into the venue. For more information, visit joinbindle.com.
For information on free testing sites, please visit this link here: https://www.asafenashville.org/test-mask-resources/.
Brooklyn Bowl encourages mask wearing and encourages you to get vaccinated if you aren’t already!
By purchasing a ticket you are acknowledging you will be required to show proof of vaccination or negative test result. There will be no refunds for tickets purchased, due to specific venue covid-19 protocol. If you receive a positive test before the show, please reach out to nashvilleboxoffice@brooklynbowl.com and we will help facilitate a full refund.
If you have any questions or concerns, please reach out to us at nashvilleinfo@brooklynbowl.com.
To ensure you don't miss any of the show, please plan to arrive closer to doors to go through security and present your vaccination card or negative test. This process takes some time so please make sure you have your ID and Vaccination Card/Negative Results out and handy when going through security to expedite the process for all patrons.
All support acts are subject to change without notice.
This event is general admission standing room only
Artist Info
Madison Beer
Maggie Lindemann
Maggie Lindemann isn’t afraid to break — she’s afraid to feel nothing. And on i feel everything, her most emotionally charged and sonically ambitious record to date, she leans all the way in.
Releasing October 17, 2025, i feel everything is a sixteen-track plunge into obsession, grief, rage, shame, detachment, and survival. It doesn’t flinch or filter. It doesn’t chase perfection. It just bleeds. Across the album, Maggie captures what it means to feel too much — and what happens when you finally stop apologizing for it.
It begins in stillness. On mourning, she sits with the ache of emotional abandonment: “i’m mourning someone who is not gone.” From there, the emotions escalate. split and spine cut through the numbness with clarity and confrontation — songs about walking on glass, biting your tongue, and then refusing to anymore. On split, she snaps: “i’ve been under attack / i don’t wanna fight back” — a song that captures what it feels like to live in a constant emotional landmine. spine trades subtlety for sarcasm, with Maggie delivering the hook like a slap: “that boy, he needs to grow a spine.” And fang plays like a fever dream — seductive and venomous, a track about love that consumes and depletes: “sink your teeth into me / my blood is what you’re abusing.”
The tension isn’t just lyrical — it’s structural. Each track crashes into the next with the weight of someone processing in real time.
i feel everything holds nothing back. The title track is a whispered scream — “do you see what you’ve done to me?” — while fate is its emotional comedown: resigned, exhausted, and painfully self-aware. 2022, featuring Julia Wolf, is one of the album’s most disorienting standouts — a breakup song turned identity crisis that captures the disconnection between who you are and how you’re seen. let me burn, Maggie’s haunting collaboration with The Warning, confronts emotional manipulation head-on, while it’s still you, featuring Max Fry, offers a moment of breath and reflection before everything spirals again.
This isn’t heartbreak for the sake of heartbreak — it’s songwriting as survival. i feel everything isn’t neat or tidy. It’s bruised, wired, and honest in a way Maggie hasn’t shown before.
The release marks a defining point in her career. With over a billion streams, a cult-like global fanbase, and a sold-out world tour already behind her, Maggie is doubling down — not just as a performer, but as a builder. She owns her masters. She runs her label, swixxzaudio, in partnership with Virgin Music and Universal Music Group. It’s a structure designed for longevity, giving Maggie complete creative and financial ownership of her career — much like the pioneering models adopted by artists like Taylor Swift.
Her fashion line, SWIXXZ, which has already achieved multiple seven-figure years, will launch a new era alongside the album — merging music, identity, and visual culture into a cohesive world her fans can step into. A new world tour is also coming later this year.
This isn’t a pivot. It’s not a rebrand. It’s the natural evolution of someone who’s no longer interested in hiding the chaos — or softening the blow.
i feel everything is what happens when you let yourself unravel. And somehow come back sharper.
Audriix
When it comes to pursuing her passion for music, Audriix is nothing less than a force of nature. Growing up in northern California, the singer/songwriter begged for violin lessons at age two and soon moved on to also mastering piano, viola, and singing (eventually adding guitar and drums as well). Having started writing songs at age six, she later self-produced her first batch of material in the midst of earning three degrees from Stanford University.
After releasing her debut EP Colors in 2015, Audriix released her full-length debut Status Change in 2019. According to Wonderland Magazine, “Nothing and no-one will stop rising pop starlet Audriix in her tracks”. Her 2020 song (Deep Breaths) “is brimming with attitude and unapologetic swagger, seeking to bring about female empowerment by drawing from the artists own personal experiences in life” and continued the theme of empowerment, examining the culture of emotion suppression and silencing, while her 2021 single ‘Waste a Goodbye’ foreshadowed an inevitable end to the future she planned. “None of my songs portray the woman as the victim,” she says. “It’s all about being strong and standing up for yourself. I hope that listeners come away feeling empowered to do whatever they set their minds to.”
Audriix is now setting fire to her marital plans in her latest single ‘Taking Back My Life’—a self-love anthem meant for anyone who wants to move forward from their past relationship and reclaim the parts of themselves they lost.