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Event 

Title:
Alan Jackson with Terri Clark and Hey Romeo
When:
Fri, Sep 26
Where:
Enmax Center - Lethbridge
Category:
Country

Description

Time: 7 p.m.

Tickets:$102

 

Alan Jackson  http://www.alanjackson.com/

 

They say that timing’s everything in bluegrass music. If that’s so, Alan Jackson’s is just right. “I probably started thinking about the bluegrass album sometime in the mid-‘90s,” the iconic country singer and songwriter explains. “But O Brother, Where Art Thou? came along, a couple of other country artists were doing some bluegrass stuff, and I didn’t want to seem like I was jumping on the bandwagon. Then, when Alison Krauss and I started working together, we ended up going in a different direction—it was a very cool album, and I’m proud of it. I think things happen when they’re supposed to, though, and when I finally got to it this winter, it just seemed like the right time in my life, in my head—in everything.” You won’t hear any argument about that from those who have already heard The Bluegrass Album (ACR/EMI Nashville), which hits streets on September 24th. While Jackson disclaims any experience as a bluegrass musician, he’s been listening to it his whole life — beginning with the first time he saw The Dillards’ on The Andy Griffith Show and Flatt & Scruggs on The Beverly Hillbillies...through Saturday nights spent at the side of Daddy Gene, watching pickers on Hee Haw...to a well-worn vinyl album recorded in the late-’70s by a local group called the Bullsboro Bluegrass Band from Jackson’s hometown of Newnan, Georgia. And these days, he says, bluegrass has become preferred listening. “As country music’s gotten away from its rootsy sound in the last few years, I find myself listening to more bluegrass. It’s some of the last real music that’s out there. And I know that there’s more contemporary style bluegrass that people are playing—it even has drums on it and so forth—but I like the more traditional style myself.” Jackson knew that, while he’d be writing most of the The Bluegrass Album’s songs himself—“Some of the chord progressions and melodies had a little more of what I feel is authentic bluegrass than what I typically write,” he says, “but it’s not that different from what I normally do”—he’d need some help in turning the idea of a bluegrass album into reality. Fortunately, he had no farther to look than his own band and guitarist Scott Coney. “He can play about anything, but he’s really a bluegrass nut before he’s a country picker,” Jackson says with a smile. “So I asked him about it, and I have to give him the credit for lining these guys up—they’re all very talented and award-winning bluegrass players and singers in their own world. I could tell, just meeting them in the studio, they really love the music. And I think it shows in the sound there.

They really care about it.” Together with Adam Wright, who shares production credits with long-time Jackson producer Keith Stegall, Coney assembled a group of musicians ideally suited for the project. Long years of familiarity with one another—banjo man Sammy Shelor (recipient of the second Steve Martin Award for Excellence in Bluegrass and Banjo) and singers Ronnie Bowman (winner of multiple International Bluegrass Music Association Male Vocalist of the Year awards) and Don Rigsby, for instance, all spent years working together in one of the most acclaimed and influential bands of the past several decades, the Lonesome River Band—made it easy for them to come together in the studio for a natural, organic recording process that involved everyone playing and singing together in a circle, rather than building tracks one instrument and one voice at a time in isolation booths. Dobro player Rob Ickes and mandolinist Adam Steffey, too, have multiple IBMA awards for their instrumental work. Tim Crouch (fiddle) and Tim Dishman (bass)—both players whom Coney had become familiar with years ago in the Arkansas-Missouri bluegrass scene—are well- respected by bluegrass aficionados across the country. No wonder Jackson gives a shout-out to each and every one in the closing “Blue Moon Of Kentucky,” or that he hints at touring with them in support of the release—they’re that good. The result is a collection that flows as easily as a mountain stream, from peppy up- tempo numbers with plenty of hot picking to more contemplative songs that reveal Jackson’s affinity for not just the most obvious elements of the bluegrass sound, but its more subtle aspects, too. And like the classics that make up the bluegrass canon, Jackson’s songs encompass bedrock themes of country life—broken hearts and faithful love, hard work and hard times, mountain living, restless souls and the promise of reunion beyond the grave.

A listener not deeply familiar with that canon would be hard put to tell Jackson’s eight originals from the smaller number of classics and “outside” songs scattered through the project, whether The Dillards’ memorable “There Is A Time,” Adam Wright’s old-timey “Ain’t Got Trouble Now” or Monroe’s signature “Blue Moon Of Kentucky.” Indeed, Jackson reflects Monroe’s original 1946 arrangement by keeping the song in waltz time throughout. Jackson wasn’t afraid to include a bit of artful yet sincere, been-there-done-that commentary that links the rural life embodied in bluegrass to trends in today’s country music and reminds us just how deep his real country roots run.

“I guess a lot of young people write about being on a dirt road and all,” he observes about the album’s “Blacktop.” “I grew up on a dirt road, with a dirt driveway, so I just thought I’d reflect on some of my thoughts about living on one. When you go through all the mud and the dirt and the dust and the rocks and all that goes with it...let me tell you, we were glad to see that asphalt put on there.” In the end, Jackson says he wanted to make an album that didn’t disappoint the bluegrass world. “I didn’t want them to think I was just another country act wanting to make a bluegrass album. I wanted it to be as true as I knew how to make it—to be something I could be proud of.” And where the rubber meets the road—with the soulful, genuine, dyed-in-the-wool music of The Bluegrass Album—he’s done exactly that.


Terri Clark
www.terriclark.com

Hailing from Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada, Terri got her start playing for tips at Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge, a honky-tonk bar across the alley from Nashville’s historic Ryman Auditorium. She signed with Mercury Records and emerged as a distinctive voice on the country music landscape – driving, passionate, spirited – and every bit her own woman.

The 8-time CCMA Entertainer of the Year has also taken home the CCMA Female Vocalist of the Year award five times.  She has made her mark on radio with more than twenty singles, including six Number Ones in Canada and the USA – hits such as such as “Better Things To Do,” “Poor Poor Pitiful Me,” “Girls Lie Too,” and “I Just Wanna Be Mad.”

Terri has sold over five million albums and achieved Gold, Platinum, Double Platinum, and Triple Platinum status as certified by the CRIA and RIAA. She also has the honor of being the only Canadian female artist to be a member of the Grand Ole Opry.

Terri is a dynamic, no-holds-barred live performer and one of the rare female country artists capable of throwing down some impressive guitar work. Terri has toured with such superstars as Brad Paisley, Toby Keith, Brooks & Dunn, Reba McEntire, and George Strait. In addition, she continues to headline sold-out tours throughout Canada.

Recently Terri ventured into an exciting new chapter of her career as radio co-host of “America’s Morning Show” with Blair Garner. They can currently be heard across the country on Cumulus Radio NASH-FM stations. She is well on her way to establishing her position as an all-around entertainer in the country music industry.

 

Hey Romeo http://www.heyromeo.com
http://twitter.com/heyromeo

Since forming in 2002 and cutting their teeth in the highly competitive Alberta country music scene, Hey Romeo have grown from a hard-touring regional success to a national sensation in waiting; earning a reputation, not only as one of Canada's hardest working country acts, but as one of the hardest working bands in the country, period. Ten years on, they remain as tight on stage as off, a family who share as deep a connection personally as they do musically.

Over time, Hey Romeo have shared the stage with artists including Sugarland, Darius Rucker, Gord Bamford and Johnny Reid and have become regular fixtures on stage at Las Vegas' annual National Finals Rodeo.

In 2008, their self-titled debut garnered them a Canadian Country Music Award for Top New Talent of the Year - Group or Duo. The follow up, 2010's That's What I Am, yielded five singles and a 2011 CCMA for Group or Duo of the Year. Demonstrating the drive and determination that's been a hallmark of their career from day one, following the 2011 CCMA's, Hey Romeo immediately went back into the studio to record their third album, Twist of Fate (Royalty Records), which landed the band the 2012 CCMA Award for Group of the Year yet again.

Characterized by tight harmonies, the signature interplay between Rob Shapiro's keyboards, Darren Gusnowsky's guitar and Stacie Roper's powerhouse vocals, Twist of Fate is a relentlessly energetic blend of modern and traditional country, vintage folk and rock and roll that fans will find themselves singing along to halfway through the first chorus of the first track.
Band Interests
We love writing, singing, playing and recording our music! Go figure...its a wonderful time to be in Hey Romeo, we hope you can join us on our ride!!!
Artists We Also Like
The Roadhammers, Gord Bamford, Aaron Prichett, Johnny Reid, Emerson Drive, The Higgins and many more

 

Venue

Map
Venue:
Enmax Center   -   Website
Street:
2510 Scenic Dr S
ZIP:
T1K 1N2
City:
Lethbridge
State:
AB
Country:
Country: ca

Description

(403) 320-4040

The City of Lethbridge ENMAX Centre was built as a lasting legacy of the 1975 Canada Winter Games.

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