Jennifer Lopez won’t be getting loud anytime soon.
Jenny from the block, 54, has canceled several shows across seven cities for her forthcoming “This Is Me…Now: The Tour” concert.
This is Lopez’s first tour in five years, and the dates axed were from Aug. 22 to Aug. 30.
The Bronx native will no longer perform in Nashville, Tennessee; New Orleans; Raleigh, North Carolina; Atlanta, Houston, Cleveland and Tampa, Florida, according to Ticketmaster’s website.
Funds will be processed to the original method of payment used at time of purchase.
The Post has reached out to Lopez’s rep for comment.
No cause for the cancellation has been noted.
Fans were upset at the news and took to the comments section of the Ticketmaster page to express their disappointment.
“The concert in Raleigh was cancelled. and for several days now we have been waiting for at least some comments, but no one is giving them,” a person wrote. “This is disrespectful towards the audience! I can’t even buy a new ticket in another state now, because I don’t know which cities will cancel!”
Another person wondered: “The show in ATL was canceled. Why was this show canceled with no explanation?”
The “Wedding Planner” actress announced the tour last month, just as her new album “This Is Me…Now” was released.
The record is a sequel to her 2002 album “This Is Me…Then” and details her rekindled love with now-husband Ben Affleck.
An accompanying musical film that she self-funded and wrote with Affleck, 51, Dave Meyers and Chris Shafer titled “This Is Me… Now: A Love Story,” dropped Feb. 16 via Amazon Prime.
A plethora of A-listers made cameo appearances, including the “Argo” director, Jane Fonda, Fat Joe, Kim Petras, Keke Palmer, Post Malone, Sofía Vergara, Jenifer Lewis, Jay Shetty, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Derek Hough and Trevor Noah.
Lopez’s ninth studio album is her first since 2014’s “A.K.A.”
The “On the 6” crooner’s comeback record flopped on the charts and debuted on the Billboard 200 at No. 38.
The mother of two even spent $20 million of her own money for the Prime Video romance drama, telling the Hollywood Reporter: “We didn’t have endless funds from a studio. This was a very independent project that I was self-financing. We went in over budget. It was a challenging project in that way. It’s like there could have never been enough money for the project.”