Kane Brown Loses It During His Performance Of 'Lose It'; Takes Nasty Fall On Stage
By Kelly Coffey-Behrens on April 29, 2024 at 1:45 PM EDT
Country music singer Kane Brown took a spill as he lost his balance on stage during his show in Austin, Texas.
The artist, who is on his 'In The Air' tour, was performing his hit song, 'Lose It,' when he suddenly lost his footing and fell off a platform.
Kane Brown Takes Nasty Fall On Stage During Live Performance
In a clip shared on TikTok, Brown was singing the chorus of his hit track as flames of fire burst from the floor as a special effect. The guitar solo then hits, and Brown begins spinning in a circle on one foot, dancing to the beat of the music, when he loses his balance and falls off the platform, landing on his back.
Luckily, he seemed to be okay as he sang the last line of his song while still lying on his back. The artist then got up and started walking. "Bro," he said, laughing. "You know how long I've been waiting to do that," he joked.
"Yo, please tell me someone got that on camera," he said to the crowd, and at least one TikToker did.
See The Video Of Kane Brown Falling On Stage
Brown continued to laugh before yelling, "Let's goooo!" and continuing on with his concert. "This was sick a good concert, and he played it off well," one user commented on the clip.
"I was there, and he did such a great job. The fall only made it that much more memorable," another said.
The 'Lose It' singer took to his Instagram Stories after the concert to share that he hurt his leg and arm in the fall. "Yo, Austin, that was fire," he said in a video shared on his social media.
"We've been waiting for me to fall during that, and I finally did. But I'm okay. I got a little banged up. My leg is a little sore, but we finished the show, and we all good," Brown added. "I love y'all, y'all be safe. God bless y'all."
Luke Bryan Takes Fall During Concert
This comes just a few days after another country music star, Luke Bryan, took a tumble on stage. Bryan was performing at the Coast City Country Festival in Vancouver, per The Blast's previous report, when he seemingly stepped in the wrong spot or slipped on something, sending him flying into the air.
The country artist laughed it off, even asking the crowd if anyone had recorded the incident, and then replayed it on the big screen for all to see.
Kane Brown Recalls Feeling 'Imposter Syndrome'
In a previous interview with the TODAY show, Brown revealed he felt like he had "imported syndrome" because his career skyrocketed.
"When I first started playin’ bigger places I got, like, imposter syndrome of it moving too fast," Brown told TODAY's Willie Geist. "I wasn’t the greatest on stage. I wondered what everybody thought about me."
It then hit him again when he found out he became the first-ever Black artist to headline Fenway Park in Boston. "I knew that I was supposed to be there," he continued. "When I got out there, you know, there were no nerves. There was no, 'Oh my God.' It was like, 'It’s showtime and I’m going to put on a show and let these people know that I’m so glad they’re here and that I’m so glad to be here."
Kane Brown Receives Criticism, Claiming He 'Isn't Country'
And then the criticism surfaced, with fans claiming Brown "isn't country."
"They’d be like, 'Just look at him. He’s not country. That’s not what country looks like,' yada, yada, yada," Brown said on the TODAY show. "But I feel like it’s also what made me blow up on Facebook. ‘Cause I had a lot of people that clicked my video and they would be like, 'I thought you were going to rap, excuse me.' And then I started singing. So it kind of shocked them, and they wanted to share."
However everything happens for a reason, and Brown believes that everything he has gone through has helped shape him into the man he is today.
"Everything that I went through is a part of my life that got me here. And I’m actually proud of it," the 'What Ifs' artist said. "Even though a lot of it was tough and hard and you didn’t know what was going to come out of it. But I feel like that’s who made me who I am today."