Country music headliner Old Dominion will play at JDC

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    This summer’s John Deere Classic golf tournament will again feature the Concerts on the Course with the country music headliner band Old Dominion taking the stage following the trophy ceremony on Sunday, July 5, at TPC Deere Run in Silvis, JDC officials announced today, Thursday, Feb. 26.

    The concert is expected to start at around 6 p.m. July 5.

    Tickets for the JDC go on sale Tuesday, March 31, Go here for ticket sale information.

    This year’s JDC tournament will be held Wednesday through Sunday, July 1-5. One of the many features of the tournament is the post-play music concerts performed on the TPC’s 18th green. Last year, Dierks Bentley and the Zac Brown Band performed on the last two days of the tournament.

    This summer, the award-winning Old Dominion will perform.

    Old Dominion’s anthems and electrifying live shows have put the multi-platinum-selling band prominently at the forefront of country music. Some of OD’s hit songs include “One Man Band,” “Snapback” and “Memory Lane.”

    Fusing clever lyrics and an infectious sound, their lyrical wit and hook-heavy songwriting has certainly proved to be a winning formula for Nashville’s hottest band. Rolling Stone magazine cited Old Dominion as “one of mainstream country music’s most popular live groups.” Since breaking onto the music scene, the band has notched nine No. 1 singles at country radio, surpassed five billion on-demand streams, earned a dozen RIAA Platinum and Gold single certifications, and headlined arenas and amphitheaters around the globe. 

    Old Dominion is the reigning Academy of Country Music and Country Music Association “Group of theYear,” and most recently received yet another CMA nomination for “Group of the Year” in 2025. 

    The band has sold more than 1.6 million albums in the U.S.

    Between the ACMs and CMAs, Old Dominion has won the “Group of the Year” title more than any other act in country music history. The band performed a seven-show residency at Nashville’s legendary Ryman Auditorium this February, raising more than $1.25M for seven charities the band has been actively engaged with over their career.

    The band’s highly-anticipated, sixth studio album “Barbara” was released in August and its

    massive How Good Is That – World Tour has seen them trek across the globe with stadium and arena performances to continue through the first half of 2026.

    The John Deere Classic, which includes Birdies for Charity, is a 501(C)3 non-profit organization located in East Moline. Since its founding in 1971, the tournament has helped raise more than $189.6 million for charity.

     

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