Keith Urban Finally Captures What Fans Have Felt for Years

For years, Keith Urban’s music has lived its biggest life onstage.

That is where the songs stretch out, the guitars scream, and the crowd turns every chorus into something shared. After decades of sold out arenas and festival nights, that live energy has finally been captured in one place. High And A (Live) is not just another release. 

This is Keith Urban’s first full length live album, recorded during the High And Alive World Tour after nearly three years away from the road. Just a band locked in, an audience all in, and moments that feel bigger than the songs themselves.

You hear it when the crowd lifts “Blue Ain’t Your Color” into something massive. You feel it in the roar of “Somebody Like You.” You catch it when “Wasted Time” suddenly slides into a flash of Johnny Cash and the whole place explodes. 

The album moves through his career like a victory lap, mixing No. 1 hits with newer songs from High. A voice cracking just enough to remind you this is real. Then the lights come back up, the lasers cut through the air, and the night surges forward again.

What makes High And A (Live) matter is not the setlist. It is the feeling of being alive in the moment. 

Keith Urban – Messed Up As Me (Live from the HIGH AND ALIVE WORLD TOUR) [Official Audio]

The final song on High And A (Live) is not one of Keith Urban’s own hits, and that choice says everything. When he launches into “You Get What You Give,” the show stops being a concert and turns into a shared release. Guitars stretch out. The band locks in. The crowd sings every word like it belongs to them. 

Keith Urban – You Get What You Give (Live from the HIGH AND ALIVE WORLD TOUR)

“One Too Many” arrives as proof of how far Keith Urban has pushed the live experience. What began as a studio hit becomes something larger here, stretched out, heavier, and charged with emotion. P!nk appears through towering screens, her voice cutting through the arena as if she is standing right beside the band. The technology disappears, and what remains is connection.

Keith Urban, P!nk – One Too Many (Live from the HIGH AND ALIVE WORLD TOUR) [Official Audio]