Steve Miller Band cancels tour, blaming extreme weather

FILE - Steve Miller of Steve Miller Band performs at Fenway Park. (Photo by Danielle Parhizkaran/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Classic rocker Steve Miller has canceled his U.S. tour.

Miller said severe weather, including extreme heat and unpredictable flooding, poses a danger to his band, its fans and crew.

The tour was set to kick off in August and run through early November, with nearly three dozen stops across the U.S. including cities in New York, Tennessee, Florida and California.

What they're saying:

"The combination of extreme heat, unpredictable flooding, tornadoes, hurricanes and massive forest fires make these risks for you our audience, the band and the crew unacceptable," Miller, 81, said in a statement posted on the band's social media accounts Wednesday. "You can blame it on the weather. ... The tour is cancelled."

Tour canceled

The backstory:

Miller's decision comes as a stretch of extreme weather in the U.S. has made headlines. 

A sweltering heat dome that baked much of the eastern half of the nation in June and deadly flash flooding in Texas are some of the recent rounds of extreme weather.

Why you should care:

Music festivals have recently encountered extreme weather, resulting in cancellations or causing concertgoers to become ill.

In June, the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival in Tennessee was canceled partway through due to heavy rainfall. Last week, hundreds of people were treated for heat-related illnesses at the Rock the Country music festival in Kentucky, according to local officials.

In 2023, tens of thousands of Burning Man event attendees were stranded after heavy rain created thick mud in the Nevada desert and roads were temporarily closed.

study published in 2020 reported climate change will increase the likelihood of extreme heat stress during the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in California.

Climate change and extreme weather

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‘Fingerprints’ of climate change marking increasingly extreme weather events, research suggests 95

Drought, intense heat waves, exceptional precipitation and record-low sea ice were extreme weather events made more likely by human-caused climate change, according to new research published Monday.

Dig deeper:

Scientists say climate change is fueling extreme weather, causing storms to unleash more rain and sending temperatures soaring to dangerous heights, making it harder to plan outdoor summer events. The atmosphere can hold higher amounts of moisture as it warms, resulting in storms dumping heavier amounts of rain compared with storms of the past.

"Everyone wants to see their favorite artist, and that’s still possible. You just have to best mitigate weather risks," said Jonathan Porter, chief meteorologist at AccuWeather, a private weather company. "For example, the doors may open an hour late in order to ensure thunderstorms have moved sufficiently away from the venue so the show can go on safely."

The Source: Information for this article was taken from The Associated Press.

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