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Rock Legends Cactus Unleash All-Star Reimagining Of “Bad Stuff” With Joe Lynn Turner and Steve Morse

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Cactus are firing on all cylinders. With ‘Temple Of Blues II’ arriving this Friday, April 3rd via Cleopatra Records, the drum legend Carmine Appice and his band drop “Bad Stuff” as their latest single, a piledriving reimagination of the track originally recorded on their 1972 album ‘Ot and Sweaty’. The result is a low-down, dirty blues crusher built for maximum impact.

The lineup here is absurd in the best possible way. Joe Lynn Turner, veteran of Deep Purple and Rainbow, handles vocals. Steve Morse, another Purple alumnus, brings his characteristic guitar alchemy. Tony Franklin holds down bass, Dream Theater’s Derek Sherinian commands the keys, and Cactus’s own Artie Dillon adds guitars. Turner calls it “a low-down, dirty blues track that moves and grooves with a sexy voodoo swagger,” and that description lands exactly right.

‘Temple Of Blues II’ is the long-awaited sequel to ‘Temple Of The Blues’ and expands on its predecessor’s star-studded blueprint with even more firepower. Twisted Sister’s Dee Snider, Ted Nugent, Billy Sheehan, Bumblefoot, and Pat Travers all return, joined by an entirely new wave including Melanie delivering a transformative take on Jimi Hendrix’s “Purple Haze,” Rudy Sarzo, Alex Skolnick of Testament, and others.

Seven Dixon/Wolf classics anchor the record, including “Spoonful” with Ted Nugent and Bob Daisley, “The Little Red Rooster” featuring Dee Snider, and “Back Door Man” with Eric Gales and Billy Sheehan. Appice drives every track with the power and groove that has made him one of the most influential drummers in rock history. ‘Temple Of Blues II’ is out now.

Futurebirds Chart New Territory With First Double Album ‘Far Out Country’ and a Monster Summer Tour

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Futurebirds just raised the stakes. Nearly two decades into one of indie country-rock’s most rewarding careers, the Athens, GA-born outfit announce ‘Far Out Country’, their first double album, due June 5 via Dualtone Records. Produced by GRAMMY-winner Brad Cook (Waxahatchee, MJ Lenderman), the 18-song record splits into two distinct halves, a sunlit “day” and a deeper, more interior “night,” blurring psychedelic country-rock, indie, and something that feels less like a genre than a physical place.

The band today released the Sienna Life EP featuring three tracks from ‘Far Out Country I’: “Sienna Life,” “Sleepless in the Cage,” and “Ghost Moon.” It’s an opening statement that holds real weight, three songs that confirm Futurebirds are operating at a level that demands attention.

In a bold physical-first move, the complete double album arrives on vinyl June 5, with the second half reaching streaming platforms months later. The only way to hear ‘Far Out Country’ in full from day one is on vinyl. Half the record was tracked live to tape at Sonic Ranch in the Texas borderlands; the other nine songs were built carefully in smaller studios, four produced by the band’s own Tom Myers.

Fronted by three distinct singer-songwriters, Daniel “Womz” Womack, Carter King, and Thomas “Tojo” Johnson, Futurebirds write in honest conversation across 18 songs about fatherhood, family, and navigating the tension between the road that made them and the lives waiting back home. Carter King sums it up well: “Far Out Country is a place, not a sound.”

A massive nationwide tour runs from April through November. Tickets are on sale now.

‘Far Out Country I’ Tracklist:

  1. Sienna Life
  2. Sleepless in the Cage
  3. Marco Polo I
  4. Nervous Ground
  5. Ghost Moon
  6. Fly On
  7. Gsus Take the Wheel
  8. Wishin’
  9. Featherbed

‘Far Out Country II’ Tracklist:

  1. I’m Yr Mane
  2. Sober Somewhere
  3. Pretty Eyes
  4. Far Out Country
  5. Talk About the Band
  6. Laugh in Your Sleep
  7. Marco Polo II
  8. All I Want
  9. Long Time Gone

2026 Tour Dates:

04/30: Myrtle Beach, SC @ The Boathouse

05/22: Savannah, GA @ The Park At Eastern Wharf

05/23-05/24: Isle of Palms, SC @ The Windjammer

06/05: Greensboro, NC @ The Pyrle

06/06: Richmond, VA @ The National

06/08: Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club

06/09: Ardmore, PA @ Ardmore Music Hall

06/11: Boston, MA @ Royale

06/12: Woodstock, NY @ Levon Helm Studios

06/13: New York, NY @ Irving Plaza

06/16: Cleveland, OH @ Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

06/18: Madison, WI @ High Noon Saloon

06/19: Minneapolis, MN @ Fine Line

06/20: Winnetka, IL @ Winnetka Music Festival

07/08: Kansas City, MO @ recordBar

07/10: Denver, CO @ Gothic Theatre

07/11: Beaver Creek, CO @ Vilar Performing Arts Center

07/14: Phoenix, AZ @ Crescent Ballroom

07/15: San Diego, CA @ Music Box

07/17: Los Angeles, CA @ Teragram Ballroom

07/18: San Francisco, CA @ August Hall

07/19: Camino, CA @ Delfino Farms

07/22: Seattle, WA @ Tractor Tavern

07/23: Portland, OR @ Mississippi Studios

07/24: Bend, OR @ Volcanic Theatre Courtyard

07/25: Boise, ID @ Shrine Social Club Ballroom

07/28: Teton Village, WY @ Mangy Moose

07/30: Lander, WY @ Lander Presents Summer Concert Series

07/31-08/01: Livingston, MT @ Pine Creek Lodge

09/02: Nantucket, MA @ The Muse

09/06: Portland, ME @ Ghostland

11/14: Wilmington, NC @ BAD Day Music & Arts Festival

Celtic Punk Legends The Real McKenzies Are Back And They Want To Eat Sardines With Yer Mother

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Three decades deep and The Real McKenzies have not lost a single step. The Vancouver Celtic punk lifers return with “I Wanna Eat Sardines (With Yer Mother),” the first single from their upcoming album ‘On Yer Bike’, arriving May 29 on Stomp Records. The track landed March 27 and marks the band’s first new music following the closure of Fat Wreck Chords. Listen here.

Equal parts pub anthem and cheeky Celtic mischief, the song barrels forward on roaring guitars, thunderous drums, and the unmistakable skirl of bagpipes wrapped around a chorus built to be shouted across a crowded barroom. It’s rowdy, irreverent, and proudly ridiculous in the best possible way. This is punk rock that knows exactly how fun it can be when the pints are flowing and the pipes are blazing.

‘On Yer Bike’ is a thirteen-track blast of raucous Celtic punk. It swings through tales of love, history, literature, and outright lunacy, including a Sawney Bean trilogy, three songs inspired by Scotland’s most infamous cannibal clan. Soaring bagpipes and heart-pounding rhythms anchor every track.

Founded in 1992 by frontman and Scottish punk poet laureate Paul McKenzie, the band has shared stages with NOFX, Rancid, Flogging Molly, Metallica, and the late Shane MacGowan. Their reputation was built the old-fashioned way: relentless touring, roaring crowds, and songs made to be sung at the top of your lungs. ‘On Yer Bike’ proves the fire still burns.

Modern Holiday Announce Debut Album and Share Bittersweet New Single “Goodbye Grand Street”

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Modern Holiday have arrived with something worth paying attention to. The NYC indie four-piece announced their self-titled debut album this morning alongside new single “Goodbye Grand Street,” and the combination lands with real weight. Listen here.

“Goodbye Grand Street” is a bittersweet sendoff to the Grand Street apartment where frontman Jameson Edwards lived longer than anywhere else. Late nights, rooftop parties, a music video filmed inside its walls. The song holds all of it, sitting squarely in that uncomfortable space between attachment and acceptance. It’s the kind of track that earns its emotional territory without overreaching.

The single follows “Shuttered Life,” their March debut, a quietly powerful song that balanced collective memory of 2020 with personal reflection. Two singles in, Modern Holiday are building a catalog with genuine thematic coherence.

Edwards is joined by Michael Horaz on drums, Billy Gray on bass and vocals, and Niko Siskos on guitar. Familiar faces from Bloody Your Hands, I Am The Heat, and The Vibrant Colors, they arrive here doing something grander and more introspective than their previous work suggests. The self-titled LP drops May 14th and is available for digital preorder now.

Why Boutique Music Cafes Are One of the Best Things Happening in Music Right Now

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There is a new music venue opening in Ottawa shortly, and its owner is calling it “the neighbourhood’s living room.” That phrase tells you everything you need to know about why this idea is so timely, so right, and so overdue. It is not a concert hall. It is not a bar with a stage crammed in the corner. It is a place built around the idea that music and community belong together in the same room, at human scale, without a ticket price that requires a mortgage pre-approval.

This is not a new concept. But it is having a very significant moment. Here are five reasons why boutique music cafes are one of the most important trends in music culture right now.

1. They trace their roots to one of the most beautiful musical traditions in history.

The direct ancestor of the boutique music cafe is the Japanese kissaten, or kissa, which emerged in Tokyo in the 1920s when jazz arrived in Japan and needed a home. These were cafe-bars with high-end audio systems that played classic American jazz, places where you went to unwind after work, had a coffee or beer, and just sat and listened to the music. They were temples to careful listening at a time when music was something you gave your full attention to, not a backdrop. The best of them had extraordinary sound systems, curated vinyl collections, and an atmosphere of hushed, reverent appreciation. That tradition never really disappeared. It just went underground for a few decades while the rest of us were busy staring at our phones. Now it is back, and it is spreading from Japan to North America with remarkable speed. Washington D.C. alone has seen a recent crop of music-centric spots draw inspiration from Japanese kissa, while others use their eclectic LP collections and regular DJs to set the mood. Ottawa is joining a very good lineage.

2. They are the answer to something streaming cannot give you.

We have never had more access to music than we do right now. Global paid streaming subscriptions reached 752 million in 2024, a 9.5% increase from the previous year. You can listen to virtually anything ever recorded, anywhere, at any time, on a device that fits in your pocket. And yet something is obviously missing. People are hungry for the physical, the communal, and the intentional in a way that no algorithm can satisfy. A new generation is throwing house parties, rooftop DJ sets and intimate shows in unexpected spots like art galleries and cafes, driven by a post-pandemic thirst for third spaces where guests can chill out, nerd out over the music, and reconnect with one another. The boutique music cafe meets that need precisely because it offers what Spotify cannot: a room full of other human beings, a great sound system, and the understanding that you came here to listen. That is not nothing. That is everything.

3. They are the last great defenders of the listening experience.

Here is something that gets lost in conversations about music consumption: most people stopped actually listening to music somewhere around the early 2000s. Music became ambient. It became background. It became what you put on while doing something else. The boutique music cafe pushes back against that with a simple and radical proposition. Come in, sit down, and listen. No Wi-Fi. No laptops. Just the music. The vinyl component matters here too. When music is printed on wax and playing off a needle, the quality has a warmth that downloaded tracks do not have, and the right sound system makes all the difference. These spaces are designed to make you hear things you have been missing. They are, in a very real sense, music education disguised as a good time.

4. They are extraordinary platforms for local artists.

One of the quiet crises in the music industry is that there is a shrinking middle tier of venues where emerging artists can actually develop a live following. Large festivals are great if you can get on one. Your bedroom is great for recording. But the intimate room, the place where an artist plays 40 people and leaves having made 40 actual fans, that has been disappearing for years. Boutique music cafes fill that gap beautifully. Venues are transforming into vibrant cultural hubs, with a growing interest in niche genres and local artists, embracing diverse events that foster community by supporting local talent. For a city like Ottawa, which has a music scene that consistently punches above its weight, having a dedicated space where local artists can perform in a room designed to make them sound extraordinary is genuinely significant. The “neighbourhood’s living room” framing is smart because living rooms are where you actually talk to people. Local artists thrive on that.

5. They serve a deep human need that the music industry forgot it was supposed to serve.

Sociologist Ray Oldenburg coined the term “third place” in 1989 to describe the spaces that exist between home and work, the places where community actually forms. Pubs, barbershops, libraries, coffee houses. The great ones always had music in them. One owner of a music-cafe hybrid in Venice, California described his space this way: “The whole design is based on a living room. We always envisioned it as a third space. We could have just opened our home and it would have the same effect, but doing it here is even better.” That sentiment, almost word for word, is what the Ottawa owner is describing when they call their space the neighbourhood’s living room. It is not a coincidence. It is a recognition that music has always been social, always been communal, and always been at its most powerful when it brings strangers into the same room and makes them feel like they already know each other.

The music business spent twenty years chasing scale. Bigger festivals, bigger streaming numbers, bigger everything. The boutique music cafe is the correction. It is small, intentional, and built around the belief that music deserves your full attention and that a neighbourhood deserves a place to gather around it.

Ottawa is lucky to be getting one. Go support it.

10 Songs About the Moon That Deserve a Listen Right Now

Yesterday, NASA’s Artemis II mission lifted off from Kennedy Space Center at 6:35 p.m. Eastern, carrying Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canada’s own Jeremy Hansen on the first crewed lunar flyby in more than half a century. It is the first crewed mission beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo 17 in December 1972. That is a staggering thing to sit with.

The Moon has been a muse for musicians since long before we had any real hope of getting there. It has stood in for longing, madness, mystery, romance, and the terrifying vastness of everything we don’t understand. As four human beings arc their way around it right now, it seems like exactly the right moment to revisit some of the music they’ve inspired. Here are ten songs about the Moon that hold up brilliantly.

“Fly Me to the Moon” by Frank Sinatra

Written by Bart Howard in 1954 and recorded by dozens of artists, it was Sinatra’s 1964 version with the Count Basie Orchestra that became the definitive one. It was so definitive, in fact, that Buzz Aldrin played it on a portable cassette player aboard Apollo 11, making it the first music heard on the Moon. That detail alone earns it a permanent place in this list.

“Moonage Daydream” by David Bowie

Released on The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars in 1972, the same year the last Apollo astronauts left the lunar surface, this song crackles with alien electricity and pure Bowie strangeness. It is a song about otherness and longing for the cosmos, delivered by a man who understood both better than almost anyone.

“Moon River” by Henry Mancini and Johnny Mercer, performed by Audrey Hepburn

Written for the 1961 film Breakfast at Tiffany’s, this is one of the most quietly devastating songs ever recorded. Hepburn performed it with just a guitar in a single take, and the Academy tried to cut it from the film before she reportedly threatened anyone who tried. They kept it. They were right.

“Walking on the Moon” by The Polic

Sting wrote this in a Munich hotel room after a long night out, and the woozy, floating bassline he came up with is one of the greatest grooves in the history of rock music. Released in 1979, it sits somewhere between love song and astronaut daydream, which is exactly the right place to sit.

“Pink Moon” by Nick Drake

The entire album took two hours to record in 1972. Drake arrived at the studio unannounced, laid down the vocals and guitar in almost complete silence, and left. The title track is barely two minutes long and contains more emotional weight per second than most artists manage in a full career. It remains one of the most haunting recordings ever made.

“Bark at the Moon” by Ozzy Osbourne

Because this list needed some teeth. Released in 1983, Ozzy went full werewolf on the title track of his third solo album, and the result is a gloriously unhinged piece of heavy metal theatre. It has absolutely nothing to do with space exploration and everything to do with why rock and roll exists.

“Clair de Lune” by Claude Debussy

Technically not a song, but disqualifying it would be absurd. Composed in 1905 as part of Suite bergamasque, Debussy’s depiction of moonlight on water is one of the most perfectly constructed pieces of music in the Western canon. Astronaut Chris Hadfield once named it as one of the pieces he’d want on the International Space Station. Good call.

“Dark Side of the Moon” (entire album) by Pink Floyd

Yes, it counts. Released in 1973 and spending a record-breaking 741 consecutive weeks on the Billboard charts, this is arguably the most ambitious piece of music ever built around lunar imagery. The far side of the Moon that Artemis II’s Orion spacecraft will skim past this week is the same dark side that Roger Waters, David Gilmour, Nick Mason, and Richard Wright turned into the greatest rock album ever recorded. The timing feels appropriate.

“Bad Moon Rising” by Creedence Clearwater Revival

John Fogerty wrote this in about ten minutes after watching the 1941 film The Devil and Daniel Webster, inspired by a storm sequence that gave him the image of a hurricane coming. It became one of the most covered songs in history and one of the most instantly recognizable guitar riffs ever committed to tape. Released in 1969, the same year Apollo 11 landed. The Moon was having quite a year.

“Man on the Moon” by R.E.M.

Released in 1992 on Automatic for the People, this is one of Michael Stipe’s most opaque and beautiful songs, a tribute to comedian and professional chaos agent Andy Kaufman wrapped inside a meditation on belief, absurdity, and what it means to take a leap into the unknown. With four astronauts literally heading toward the Moon as you read this, the song’s central question lands a little differently today.

Put some music on. Look up. It’s a good week to be alive.




Apple TV’s The Studio, Belissa Escobedo, and Beth de Araújo Head to the NHMC Impact Awards Gala

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The National Hispanic Media Coalition has announced the first wave of honorees for its annual Impact Awards Gala, taking place April 24 at The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills. The evening celebrates individuals whose work is actively expanding Latino representation in film and television, and this year’s list arrives with serious creative credentials behind every name on it.

Apple TV’s sharp Hollywood satire The Studio takes home the Beyond the Lens Impact Award, with recognition going to co-creator, writer, and co-executive producer Frida Perez, actor Keyla Monterroso Mejia, music editor and composer Lorena Perez Batista, and composer Antonio Sanchez. The show has made a genuine industry impact since its debut, and the NHMC’s recognition reflects exactly the kind of collective, behind-the-scenes contribution that rarely gets its due.

Belissa Escobedo receives the Outstanding Actress Performance in a Series Impact Award for her role as Isabella on NBC’s Happy’s Place opposite Reba McEntire, one of the few Latinas in a lead role on broadcast television right now. Beth de Araújo is honored with the Visionary Impact Award for her feature film JOSEPHINE, which won both the Audience Award and the Grand Jury Prize at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival and went on to compete at the 76th Berlin International Film Festival, where it was nominated for the Golden Bear. Netflix’s KPop Demon Hunters co-writers Danya Jimenez and Hannah McMechan share the Storytelling Impact Award for a collaboration that blends genre storytelling with themes of identity and belonging in ways the industry has rarely attempted.

Comedians Chris Estrada and Frankie Quinones co-host the evening. “This year’s honorees are the latest examples of our voices having an impact and leading their work into award and cultural recognition,” said NHMC President and CEO Brenda Victoria Castillo. Additional honorees and presenters will be announced ahead of the April 24 gala.

Third Man Records Unearths the Lost World of Detroit Folk Genius Ted Lucas With Stunning 3xLP Boxset ‘Images of Life’

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Ted Lucas spent his life making music that almost no one heard. Third Man Records is methodically correcting that. Following last year’s reissue of Lucas’ 1975 cult classic self-titled album, the label announces ‘Images of Life,’ a career-spanning 3xLP retrospective boxset arriving May 22. Today, disc two, ‘Rainy Days (1970-1974),’ is available to stream in full, offering the most direct entry point yet into the world of one of Detroit’s most gifted and overlooked songwriters. Listen here.

The boxset covers three distinct chapters. Disc one, ‘Strange Mysterious Sounds (1965-1970),’ documents Lucas’ psychedelic early period with his bands The Spike-Drivers, The Misty Wizards, and The Horny Toads. Disc two, ‘Rainy Days (1970-1974),’ captures the solo acoustic warmth that defines his self-titled album, featuring live performances, unreleased studio tracks, and intimate home recordings from the peak of his creative power. Disc three, ‘Impossible Love (1979),’ is his lost second album, produced by the legendary Don Was, a smoother, near-yacht-rock turn that never compromises his core artistry.

The story behind Lucas is one of genuine tragedy and genuine greatness in equal measure. A trained sitarist under Ravi Shankar, a first-call session player at Motown where Norman Whitfield called him his “exotic instrumentalist,” and by all accounts the most talented guitarist and songwriter in the Detroit counterculture scene of his era. He was never able to translate any of it into lasting recognition during his lifetime. What he did leave behind was hundreds of hours of recordings: reel-to-reel tapes, brittle acetates, homemade cassettes, and obsolete video formats. Third Man is making good on all of it.

Pitchfork called his transmissions “glowing” and enduring. AllMusic placed his sole album at the border of timelessness. ‘Images of Life’ gives listeners the full picture, and it is a substantial one.

‘Images of Life’ Tracklist:

Strange Mysterious Sounds: Group Recordings (1965-1970)

The Spike-Drivers, “Strange Mysterious Sounds”

The Misty Wizards, “It’s Love”

The Horny Toads, “High on Love”

The Spike-Drivers, “High Time”

The Misty Wizards, “Often I Wonder”

The Misty Wizards, “Harold Lloyd”

The Spike-Drivers, “I’m So Glad”

The Spike-Drivers, “Can’t Stand the Pain”

The Misty Wizards, “Love Took a Trip”

The Spike-Drivers, “Blue Law Sunday”

The Horny Toads, “Head in California”

Rainy Days: Solo Recordings (1970-1974)

You’ve Got the Power

Rainy Days

It’s Love

Nobody Loves Me Like My Baby Does

Stay High

It’s Not Easy

Anastasia

Take What You Need

Driftin’ Free

Images of Life

I Wish I Knew

Impossible Love: The Unfinished Second Album (1976-1979)

Slow Motion Ocean (of Love)

Impossible Love

What Can I Believe in Without Love

Searching for Love

You Win Again

Sgt. Pinhead

If I Can’t Be Your Lover (I Won’t Be Your Friend)

How Does It Feel

I Can See It in Your Eyes

Impossible Love (Acoustic)

Grand Ole Opry Stalwart T. Graham Brown Brings Lonestar’s Richie McDonald to SiriusXM’s LIVE WIRE

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T. Graham Brown’s monthly SiriusXM show has built a reputation for bringing country music’s real voices together, and this episode delivers. The GRAMMY-nominated, Grand Ole Opry member welcomes Richie McDonald of The Frontmen to LIVE WIRE on Prime Country Channel 58, airing April 1 at 10 p.m. ET with multiple replays throughout the month. McDonald, best known as the lead voice behind Lonestar’s run of number-one hits including “Amazed,” “No News,” and “I’m Already There,” now performs alongside Tim Rushlow of Little Texas and Larry Stewart of Restless Heart in The Frontmen.

The episode is built around a full sit-down interview with McDonald, but the music runs deep throughout. Live performances from Asleep At The Wheel, Martina McBride, Alabama, The Frontmen, Waylon Jennings, and Ringo Starr fill out the broadcast, making this one of the stronger lineups LIVE WIRE has assembled. Brown has a gift for choosing recordings that remind listeners exactly why live country music hits differently, and this episode is no exception.

The episode lands during a busy stretch for Brown personally. He is marking the 40th anniversary of “I Wish That I Could Hurt That Way Again,” the second single from his debut album ‘I Tell It Like It Used To Be’ on Capitol Records, written by Curly Putman, Rafe Van Hoy, and Don Cook. He also recently appeared at The Gatlin Brothers’ 70th anniversary celebration at the Ryman Auditorium and Ronnie Milsap’s 50th anniversary as a Grand Ole Opry member, two milestone events Brown clearly took to heart. “Ronnie is my hero,” Brown said, “and he’s been a huge influence on what I do.”

LIVE WIRE is available on demand through the SiriusXM app and Pandora NOW for standard subscribers. With 15 studio albums, more than 20 Billboard charted singles, and a touring schedule that shows no signs of slowing, Brown remains one of country music’s most committed lifers.

T. Graham Brown Upcoming Tour Dates:

Apr 3: Grand Ole Opry, Nashville, TN

Apr 17: The Sewanee Inn, Sewanee, TN

Apr 30: Little Roy and Lizzy Music Fest, Lincolnton, GA

May 9: The Amish Country Theater, Berlin, OH

May 16: Riverside Casino and Golf Resort, Riverside, IA (with Lorrie Morgan)

Oct 9: Clay Cooper Theatre, Branson, MO (with The Malpass Brothers)

Oct 17: Auburn VS Georgia Party, Dadeville, AL