Mother's Day Music Festival With Maze Featuring Frankie Beverly on Saturday, May 11, at 7 p.m.
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R&B and soul legends Maze ft. Frankie Beverly, KEM, and more deliver hit after hit at this annual Mother’s Day show
- Seating: section 207, 219, or 222
- Click here to view the seating chart.
The after party takes place at the Ocean Ballroom located inside the Bally’s Hotel on the 6th floor, and lasts from 11 p.m.–4 a.m. The after party features live DJs, a food court, and a fashion show.
How G-Pass Works: Within an hour of purchase, your G-Pass will be in your account. You may redeem your G-Pass via the mobile app when you enter the venue. You may also print it out in advance. Use the G-Pass to enter the venue directly; you won’t need to redeem at will call. Discount reflects the merchant’s current ticket prices - price may differ on day of event.
Mother’s Day Music Festival
- Maze featuring Frankie Beverly: They started as Raw Soul in 1970, and they still live up to that name. Today Maze tours the world with three decades of funk-tinged slow jams and number one hits such as “Back in Stride,” “Can’t Get Over You,” the butter-smooth “Happy Feelin’s,” and the radiantly groovy “Before I Let Go.”
- Kem: With a sound that’s pure Motown mixed with slinky jazz and neo-soul, Kem scored a Grammy nomination for “Why Would You Stay” and the Billboard Music Award for the slow jam, “I Can’t Stop Loving You.”
- Al B. Sure!: Handpicked by Quincy Jones as the winner of the Sony Innovators Talent Search in 1987, Al. B. Sure! went on to pioneer new jack swing and top the Billboard R&B chart with the smooth jam “Nite and Day.”
- Christopher Williams: R&B singer who delivered a succession of new jack swing era hits performs the R&B No. 1 “I’m Dreamin’” and more from his career
Need To Know Info
About Mother's Day Music Festival With Maze Featuring Frankie Beverly
Under a 137-foot-high, barrel-vault ceiling, Boardwalk Hall's floor has played host to historic Garden State moments for more than eight decades. The longest clear-span space in the world when it opened in 1929, the venue has seen the nation's first indoor football game, the first indoor helicopter flight, and performances by such luminaries as the Beatles, Frank Sinatra, and Louis Armstrong. A $90 million renovation completed in 2001 ushered the space into the new millennium, updating the lighting, improving the acoustics, and roping off a section of seats for time-traveling audience members.