Five For Fighting with String Quartet, Support from Lace and Lee

Five For Fighting with String Quartet, Support from Lace and Lee in Tucson on 21 October 2025
Five For Fighting with String Quartet, Support from Lace and Lee in Tucson on 21 October 2025
Tuesday, October 21, 2025, 1930 - 2130
In the two decades since his first major single, "Superman (It's Not Easy)," hit the stratosphere, the artist has both evolved and come back 'round full circle. Creativity, if nothing else, is paradoxical.

To date, Five For Fighting, has released six studio LPs, including the platinum certified America Town and The Battle for Everything; and the top-10 charting Two Lights, along with an EP and live albums. Ondrasik has penned major hits, including the chart-topping "100 Years," "The Riddle," "Chances," "World," and "Easy Tonight," which have earned over one billion streams and place him as a top-10 Hot Adult Contemporary artist for the 2000s. The reflective "100 Years" has joined "Superman (It's Not Easy)" as part of the American Songbook and continues to stand the test of time at weddings, birthdays, graduations, memorials, and many a home video. Five For Fighting's music has also been featured in more than 350 films, television shows, and commercials, including the Oscar-winning The Blind Side, Hawaii Five-O, The Sopranos and the CBS drama, Code Black.

Referencing Fight For Fighting's success in the 2000s, AllMusic called Ondrasik "one of the decade's leading balladeers." But perhaps his biggest achievement is performing "Superman (It's Not Easy)," at the 2001 Concert for New York, a benefit show at Madison Square Garden that honored first responders and the fallen about a month after the tragic September 11th attacks. Ondrasik performed alongside other big-name artists like Paul McCartney, The Who, Elton John, Billy Joel, and dozens more.

Says Ondrasik, "It was a surreal experience. I was honored and blessed to pay tribute to the heroes who ran into those buildings at ground zero, and hopefully, through a song, provide a little solace to family members who'd lost loved ones."

Now, though, what once was a dream is a reality. Buoyed by his unique falsetto voice and his prowess on the piano-a skill bestowed to him by his piano teacher mother-Ondrasik has made a solid reputation for himself in the world of songwriting and performance, selling upwards of three million albums over his career. Not only does he tour with his popular string quartet and play solo and rock band gigs, but he is also a high demand keynote speaker in which he combines themes of creativity and innovation with his business acumen. Along with his father, he has managed the family business throughout his musical career. As Ondrasik happily puts it, his company, Precision Wire Products, "makes the best shopping cart in the world!"

He's presented at TEDx, The Salk Institute, American Cancer Society, and dozens more. Perhaps being the son of an astrophysicist dad and having a degree in mathematics from UCLA has something to do with it.

"Math was the Plan-B to get a real job when the music thing imploded," says Ondrasik, with a chuckle.

But that doesn't mean he wasn't always a student at heart. As he wrote songs in his late teens and early 20s, the Los Angeles-born Ondrasik studied his favorite rock vocalists. Finding out that singers like Freddie Mercury and Steve Perry studied classical voice, he did too, even seeking out some of those icons' former teachers. No stone unturned.

In September of 2021, Ondrasik released the powerful, "Blood on My Hands," a protest song that takes a non-political, moral stance against the 2021 United States chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan. While he's well-versed in politics, he isn't of a bickering mindset. For Ondrasik, it's about the conversation. "Blood on My Hands," the track, accompanying acoustic version, and docu-music video, "Blood on My Hands (White House Version)," has had millions of streams to date (despite little-to-no radio play). Like other protest songs of the past- "Ohio" by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young or "The Times They Are a-Changin'" by Bob Dylan-Ondrasik aimed to point out a problem. While it's critical of President Biden's administration, he says that if a Republican were President, the song would remain the same, only the names would change.

Thanks to the song, years later, Ondrasik is still working with evacuation groups that strive to help the American citizens left behind in Afghanistan by the U.S. government, as well as the Afghan people who remain there largely under the threat of terrorism. It's a difficult, and at times a polarizing subject, but it's one Ondrasik is not shying away from. Not because of any politics or partisan pats on the back, but simply because he knows it's the right thing to do.

Ondrasik notes, "There has been a tradition of musicians speaking truth to power. In the current tribal culture, our freedom of expression has never been more critical."

Prices:
Admission: USD 20.00,
Admission: USD 60.00

Artists: Five For Fighting, Lace and Lee

Category: Live Music | Concert
Starting Price Per Person
$ 20.00 USD
Other Information
Where
Fox Tucson Theatre
17 West Congress Street
Tucson Arizona 85701
United States
( Theatre - Cinema Hall )

                 
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Event ID: 253359

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