Disturbed: “The Sickness 25th Anniversary Tour” w/ special guests Daughtry & Nothing More

April 14, 2025, at the Lenovo Center in Raleigh, NC, delivered the kind of scorched-earth rock show that fans dream about but rarely experience. Disturbed’s “The Sickness 25th Anniversary Tour” lit the fuse with no intention of letting up. They performed The Sickness front to back, letting every chug, scream, and industrial-laced breakdown rip across the arena like a call to arms. David Draiman stalked the stage with a preacher’s fury, flanked by guitarist Dan Donegan carving through the mix like a chainsaw, Mike Wengren’s drums shaking the floor, and bassist John Moyer moving like a man possessed. They followed the full-album set with a barrage of heavy hitters from their catalog: Believe, Ten Thousand Fists, Indestructible, Asylum, Immortalized, Evolution, and Divisive. Pyro blasted skyward and flame columns chased every riff—an inferno that matched the intensity of the music note for note. This was the sound of a band owning its legacy, not looking back but doubling down.

San Antonio’s Nothing More opened the night with a set so raw it felt like it could peel paint. Jonny Hawkins screamed, wailed, and climbed every inch of the stage with primal force, supported by Mark Vollelunga (guitar), Daniel Oliver (bass), and Ben Anderson (drums). They pulled from across their catalog—The Few Not Fleeting, Nothing More, The Stories We Tell Ourselves, Spirits, and their 2024 release Carnal. Then the place erupted when Chris Daughtry stepped onstage mid-set to sing a surprise duet with Hawkins. That energy carried into Daughtry’s own performance, where his North Carolina roots met national acclaim, blazing through his own deep discography: Daughtry, Leave This Town, Break the Spell, Baptized, Cage to Rattle, and Dearly Beloved. The guy came to work, backed by a band that hit as hard as any act on the bill.

The tour spans 34 dates, kicking off February 25 in Nampa, Idaho, and wrapping up May 17 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. Fans can hit the official websites—disturbed1.com, daughtryofficial.com, and nothingmore.net—for tour dates, exclusive merch, and limited-edition items. All three bands had pop-up shops spilling over with vinyl, signed prints, shirts, and collectibles you won’t find at your local mall. The crowd in Raleigh brought the noise too—ecstatic, unhinged, and locked in with every chorus and scream. This tour hits like a steel boot to the chest—loud, relentless, and unforgettable.

Disturbed

Daughtry

Nothing More