Ahead of his special Louisville-inspired performance at Brooklyn Steel in New York next week, Jack Harlow has announced the impending launch of a new collection further commemorating the show.
Debuting Friday, the collection was designed in collaboration with Louisville-based artist Bri Bowers and spans five pieces: a white pullover hoodie, a long-sleeve rugby shirt, a crossbody bag, a Louisville t-shirt, and a Louisville poster. Featured on the latter two pieces are Bowers-crafted illustrations of hometown landmarks like the Churchill Downs Racetrack (previously seen in a Harlow and Drake video), Morris’ Deli, and Ear X-Tacy Records.
The collection will be available for eligible cardholders to purchase in person at the Brooklyn Steel show (billed as Amex Presents: Louisville by Jack Harlow) on Oct. 12, as well as online during the performance for an additional 24-hour period.
The Harlow show, tickets for which will go on sale on Sunday, falls in the middle of the previously announced American Express Member Week festivities. Eligible cardholders will be able to get tickets ($10) for the performance starting at 11 a.m. ET on Oct. 9. Proceeds from the price of each entry, per a press release, will be matched with another $10 and put toward a Louisville chapter of the Red Cross.
For those not making it out to the show in person, the official livestream is going down on Amazon Music’s Twitch channel here.
After the Brooklyn Steel performance, Harlow will be back on the road for additional stops on his Come Home the Kids Miss You global tour. But first, fans were given footage from Harlow’s co-hosting stint alongside Jimmy Fallon on Thursday night’s Tonight Show. Among the highlights were Harlow joining Fallon for a Hashtags segment and a round of Random Object Shootout featuring Dwyane Wade.
See more below.
The Come Home the Kids Miss You single “First Class” was recently highlighted by Complex as one of the best songs of the summer. Catch the full rundown here featuring other ubiquitous tracks from Beyonce, Pharrell, Yeat, and more.