Alex Warren and Luke Combs Duet on ‘Ordinary’ at Bridgestone Arena Encore

alex warren reunited with Luke Combs on May 25, 2026, at Bridgestone Arena for an encore duet of “Ordinary,” a moment Warren shared on his Instagram Story.

By
Brandon Hayes
Editor
Arts writer and cultural critic covering theatre, fine art, and the independent music scene. Regular contributor to The Atlantic and Rolling Stone.
14 Views
3 Min Read
0 Comments
Alex Warren and Luke Combs Duet on ‘Ordinary’ at Bridgestone Arena Encore

ended the first North American stop of his tour with an unexpected reunion: on Monday night, May 25, 2026, joined him onstage at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville during the encore to sing Warren’s hit “Ordinary.”

Searches for alex warren spiked because Warren posted the moment immediately afterward, thanking Combs on his Instagram Story and turning what would have been a routine arena encore into a widely shared crossover moment between two country stars.

“Ordinary” is no small thing to hand off: the song, the sixth track on Warren’s debut album You’ll Be Alright, Kid, first entered the Hot 100 in February 2025, reached No. 1 the following June and stayed there for 10 weeks. Combs is a heavyweight in his own right—he has more than 20 No. 1 hits between the Hot Country Songs and Country Airplay charts and his cover of “Fast Car” climbed to No. 2 on the Hot 100—so his arrival on Warren’s stage instantly amplified the Nashville date into a feel-good highlight of the year.

The duet came in the encore of Warren’s stop and followed a thread the two artists had already stitched together on social media: Combs had sung a solo version of “Ordinary” at a February show in Athens, Georgia and wrote afterward that he hadn’t had Warren with him and hoped he had done the song justice. Warren later thanked Combs on Instagram, writing that the night’s moment was “HUGE thank you to Luke Combs for letting me sing your song:).” The Nashville performance also included two unreleased Warren songs, “Passenger” and “Same Stars,” signaling that the set mixed career hits with as-yet-unheard material.

The exchange carried an awkward little flourish that quickly became the story’s line of friction. After Combs performed “Ordinary” in Athens, Warren replied to Combs’s post with an all-caps joke: “ITS YOUR SONG NOW LUKE.” The comment read as a friendly surrender — an artist acknowledging the boost a superstar cover can give a rising single — and then, in Nashville, the two men sang the song together, the handoff made literal onstage rather than just on social feeds.

For Warren, the surprise guest transformed a first North American tour date into a headline moment; for Combs, it was another high-profile nod to a contemporary writer-performer. But the duet appears to be a one-off for now: no additional joint appearances on Warren’s tour or other follow-ups have been confirmed. That unanswered next step—whether Combs will pop up again as Warren’s tour moves on or whether the two will take “Ordinary” to another stage together—remains the single immediate question fans and promoters will be watching.

Share
Editor

Arts writer and cultural critic covering theatre, fine art, and the independent music scene. Regular contributor to The Atlantic and Rolling Stone.