Illenium has long had a monumental relationship with Las Vegas.
In July 2021, he became the first artist to headline the city’s Allegiant Stadium with his three-set performance Trilogy. On Thursday (March 5), the producer honored that bond again, launching the first of nine “Odyssey” shows at Sphere — a production that felt part Blade Runner, part Final Fantasy, and fully engineered for the world’s most technologically advanced venue.
In a move no artist of any genre has attempted in Sphere’s nearly three years of operation, Illenium created an entire album specifically for the residency with this work, also called Odyssey, released by Republic Records on Feb. 6. Hearing these songs performed live for the first time — while they were synchronized with cinematic visuals across the venue’s massive wraparound screen — turned opening night into a groundbreaking moment in live entertainment.
“We were like, ‘We want to make a movie,’” the producer born Nick Miller recently told Billboard of the residency. “Every show I’ve seen there has done an amazing job pushing boundaries, but I do feel like there’s room to push the combination of an immersive show and a movie storyline that’s impactful, emotional and has this captivating immersion to it.”
Across a tightly orchestrated 90-minute set running from 10:45 p.m. to exactly 12:15 a.m., the producer guided nearly 20,000 fans through a 40-track journey divided into eight chapters. The story centered on the metamorphosis of Illenium’s phoenix mascot — the symbol that forms the “N” (for his given name, Nick) in his logo — representing his rise from the ashes and the emotional arc that has defined his career.
These are five of the highlights moments of a monumental show, with the show’s massive setlist also shared below.
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The Debut of an Album Built For Sphere

Image Credit: Rich Fury/Sphere Entertainment The most historic moment came before the first drop even landed. Odyssey — Illenium’s newest body of work — was created specifically for the Sphere residency, meaning opening night marked the first time fans saw and heard much of the album as the artist intended.
Roughly 15 tracks from the new 19-track record were woven organically into the setlist, blending with music form Illenium’s classic LPs including Ashes, Awake, Ascend and Fallen Embers, along with unreleased IDs. The songs were not an album run-through; instead, they were embedded in the show’s script, evolving alongside Illenium’s catalog like new chapters in a long-running story.
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A Production That Pushes Sphere Even Further

Image Credit: Rich Fury/Sphere Entertainment As Anyma’s groundbreaking Sphere residency introduced dance music to the venue’s immersive possibilities, Illenium’s Odyssey pushes its cinematic edge. Illenium commissioned Berlin-based animation studio Woodblock — the same creative team behind Anyma’s visuals — to co-write, co-direct and produce the show’s sweeping visual narrative. The result is what the creators call a “neo-space opera,” blending the emotional intensity of Illenium’s melodic bass with a film-like storyline unfolding across Sphere’s enormous media plane.
The production follows two female characters — one representing light and one darkness— as they confront themes of self-acceptance and redemption, allegorical of Illenium’s own journey of pulling himself out of the life-threatening addiction spiral of his younger years. Scenes play out like cinematic worlds rather than traditional concert visuals, with vast voids, shifting light and sweeping digital landscapes built specifically for Sphere’s immersive architecture. Anchoring it all is Illenium’s phoenix symbol, rising again and again across the screen as the story’s central myth.
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A Wild Turn With “Slave To the Rhythm” — and a Surprise “Zombie” Cover

Image Credit: Rich Fury/Sphere Entertainment One of the show’s most visually intense moments arrived during Chapter 3’s “Slave to the Rhythm,” Illenium’s new collaboration with Bring Me the Horizon, a mind-melting, genre-bending collision of metal aggression and dance euphoria. During this song, a towering demon DJ appears on screen, looming over the crowd while the drop detonates.
Illenium leaned further into that rock influence with a cover of The Cranberries’ 1994 classic “Zombie,” in Chapter 6, an interlude that fit naturally into the show’s darker middle chapters.
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The Debut of “Die Living”

Image Credit: Rich Fury/Sphere Entertainment Another standout moment arrived in Chapter 4 with the live debut of “Die Living,” a new collaboration with David Guetta featuring vocals by Dustin Lynch. Premiered during the opening night of Odyssey and positioned at no. 16 within the show’s setlist, the song acted as a powerful pivot point before the story moved deeper into the heavier bass chapters that followed.
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The Cathartic Finale

Image Credit: Rich Fury/Sphere Entertainment The show’s final moments delivered exactly the emotional payoff Illenium fans expect.
After closing Chapter 8 with Odyssey‘s “With Your Love” and the 2022 Teddy Swims collab “All That Really Matters,” he ended the night with “Good Things Fall Apart,” his 2019 anthem featuring Jon Bellion. The chorus — sung by nearly 20,000 fans — became the ultimate release after the show’s sweeping emotional arc.
It was also one of the most vulnerable moments of the night. Overcome with emotion, Illenium appeared to fight back tears, briefly unable to make eye contact with the audience.
For another eight nights in Las Vegas, Illenium, dance music’s king of the power ballad, assumes the role of symphonic conductor — guiding an arena-sized audience through a futuristic electronic opera. The residency continues March 6-7, 12-14, and April 2-4.





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