The Mavericks Concerts Setlist

The Mavericks concerts: setlists, upcoming live shows and concerts, 2026 tour

Live Stats

Popular songs in setlists

Top 10 most played songs by The Mavericks: Setlist highlights from the Last 40 Concerts.

Setlist overview

The setlist for the next concert features live songs from the following albums:

Next Setlist

Check out and listen to the setlist of the upcoming Concert (Spotify playlist updated after every tour date):

How long is the concert?

Based on the average Setlist, The Mavericks will perform live for about 1:01.
Here is the probable setlist inspired by recent concerts (66% probability):

Song title
Listen
Popularity
Buy
  1. In Time cover Come Unto Me
  2. In Time cover Back in Your Arms Again
  3. In Time cover All Over Again
  4. En Español cover Poder vivir
  5. In Time cover As Long as There's Loving Tonight
  6. no cover Moon and Stars
  7. Brand New Day cover Rolling Along
  8. Moon & Stars cover The Name of the Game
  9. Music For All Occasions cover All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down
  10. Today cover Every Little Thing About You (Raul Malo cover)

The Mavericks Tour Map 2026

Follow The Mavericks on tour with our interactive Tour Map. Explore the places where the concerts will take and find out where you can catch The Mavericks on tour near you.
31 upcoming concerts, touring across these countries with exciting setlists and live performances: Canada, South Africa, United States, etc.

The Mavericks Biography

The Mavericks, formed in Miami in 1989 by Raul Malo and Paul Deakin, the duo probably didn't imagine they'd create one of country music's most unique sounds. The Mavericks started out playing rock clubs because country venues just wanted cover bands - it should've been a sign they weren't going to be your typical Nashville act. After the band split in the early 2000s, they reunited again in 2012. The Mavericks also won multiple awards including a Grammy and are still active, with Scotty Huff joining as touring bassist in 2024.

It all started when Raul Malo met Robert Reynolds, bonding over their love for artists like Roy Orbison and Johnny Cash. They formed the band with Paul Deakin and Ben Peeler, playing mostly in rock venues. After hustling to a deal, they dropped "From Hell to Paradise" in '92, tackling heavy topics like Cuban immigration while most country acts were singing about pickup trucks. But it was 1994's "What a Crying Shame" that really put them on the map, going platinum with help from Trisha Yearwood (who'd married their bassist) on backing vocals.

Their sound? Imagine country music taking a vacation in Havana - they mixed in Tejano accordion on "All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down" with Flaco Jiménez, threw some samba into "Trampoline," and even scored their biggest UK hit with the Latin-flavored "Dance the Night Away." Talk about breaking the Nashville mold! After releasing a greatest hits album for Mercury Records in 1999, The Mavericks broke up due to creative exhaustion and band tensions. The members pursued various solo projects before reuniting in 2003 with Eddie Perez as their new guitarist, releasing two albums.

Like any good band story, they've had their share of drama - four different lead guitarists, two breakups and reunions, and having to fire their original bassist Robert Reynolds in 2014 due to some serious personal issues. But through it all, Malo's incredible voice and their genre-bending style kept fans coming back. These days, they're running their own label (Mono Mundo), dropping Spanish albums like 2020's "En Español," and still pushing boundaries with new bassist Scotty Huff joining in 2024. Even Malo's recent cancer diagnosis couldn't dim their spirit - just another chapter in a band that's spent over 30 years proving country music can swing, sway, and salsa with the best of them.

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