
As Tenille Townes releases her first major label full-length project, The Lemonade Stand on Friday (June 26), this 26-year-old Columbia Nashville (in partnership with RCA Records) artist will be doing some very sweet celebrating.
“My family, we do have an ice cream tradition. We’re going to have to do ice cream on Friday, probably over FaceTime—maybe vanilla, maybe cookies and cream—It’s good to celebrate the victories along the way. We used to do that at home, too, so now we just have ice cream through the distance,” Townes wells MusicRow.
The album release follows the success of “Somebody’s Daughter,” which reached the Top 30 on the Country Airplay chart, and marked her first of two No. 1s on the Canadian country radio chart. For the album’s title, Townes plucked lyrics from the song, which imagines what life must have been like for a girl Townes spotted standing on street corner, holding a cardboard sign.
Bet she was somebody’s best friend laughing
Back when she was somebody’s sister
Countin’ change at the lemonade stand
Probably somebody’s high school first kiss
“To me, a lemonade stand is a metaphor for a gathering place. It’s like an anchor of community where, I hope, people can just come and be filled by this music. I want them to feel like they can just show up and be who they are, and be reminded of the fact that they are not alone, and reminded of the dreams they had as a kid at a lemonade stand.”
Yes, the image of a child’s lemonade stand conjures nostalgic images of neighbors dropping by and chatting, but also it also represents youthful ambition and tenacity.
Like that budding entrepreneur, building up success one nickel or quarter at a time, Townes has been steadily winning over fan after fan since she first began singing in her hometown of Grand Prairie, Alberta at the age of five. By 14, she had taken up guitar and writing songs. By the time she was in her late teens, when her schoolmates were choosing colleges, Townes was mapping out her own months-long tours, wrangling sponsors and booking concerts at schools, where she simultaneously built a following and used the tour encourage students to chase their own dreams.
Upon arriving in Nashville in 2013, Townes sought out the famed songwriter haunt Bluebird Café, where she watched Lori McKenna (known for stirring hits such as Tim McGraw’s “Humble & Kind” and Little Big Town’s “Girl Crush”) perform in a writers round. “I just hung around after her writers round and was like, ‘Can I have my picture with you?’” Townes recalls with a laugh. “I love her so much and just feel so inspired by her writing, the way she communicates through her style of playing.”
Only a handful of years later, Townes earned a publishing deal with Big Yellow Dog Music, followed by her record deal with Columbia Nashville. She now counts McKenna among her co-writers.
Like McKenna, Townes shines brightly on her debut when she marries her keen eye for detail with complex storylines, such as “Jersey On The Wall (I’m Just Asking),” a clear-eyed glimpse into how loss of a loved one can challenge spiritual beliefs.
As she did with building those early tours, Townes’ approach to The Lemonade Stand was a step-by-step process. Music lovers first heard tracks from The Lemonade Stand in 2018, such as “Where You Are,” “Somebody’s Daughter,” and “White Horse,” in acoustic form via Townes’ four-track project The Living Room Worktapes.
The collection expanded with the EP The Road To the Lemonade Stand, a six-track effort that also included a cover of Sarah Buxton’s “Stupid Boy,” which Keith Urban later turned into a radio hit in 2006.
“Those were the songs that spoke the loudest, message-wise and the acoustic feeling worked well on The Living Room Worktapes. Then we just kept turning corners along the way, wanting to introduce a bit of a different side with ‘I Kept The Roses,’ and then the energy of ‘Holding Out For The One.’”
This full-fledged album is the fulfillment of two items on Townes’ bucket list—releasing her own full-length album, and working with producer Jay Joyce, known for his work with Miranda Lambert (who is signed to the same management company as Townes, Shopkeeper Management), as well as Eric Church and Patty Griffin. Townes poured her heart and melodies out inside the walls of Joyce’s church-turned-studio in east Nashville.
“In a lot of ways I really felt like he put like a leather jacket on these songs,” she says, “just this element of edge that these songs get wrapped in.”
“His albums—all those Eric Church albums and Patty Griffin’s Flaming Red—just set the absolute bar, production-wise, for music. Meeting him and playing some of these songs on guitar and hearing the way he started speaking to the vision of how he would make this record just felt so very right to me.”
Whether the ambiance in her songs welcomes in elements of carefree pop, country-leaning strings or unembellished acoustic guitar, Townes sketches truth throughout every song, such as “I Kept The Roses.”
“I had this idea for ‘I Kept The Roses’ in my phone for a while and I really do keep the roses for events and things. I love the way a dried flower represents something that happened, a moment in time. I think in going through the not-so-fun things that we go through, being able to smile at the parts that were good and the parts that shaped us for the better, is so important.”
She’s at her most hopeful and vulnerable on “When I Meet My Maker,” which Townes penned solo, inspired by her late great-grandmother.
“She was an anchor for our family. This song brought a lot of healing through the writing process, when I was just imagining where she is now. The day I recorded this song, Jay had moved the area where I would normally be recording in to the altar of the church and I was wearing her earrings when I recorded the song, so I just very much felt her with me. Then we sat in a semi-circle, and we just played it to see what happened, and we felt like we captured something really special on that first try. On the record, it’s just the run-through, in its vulnerable and untouched state.”
Alongside her musical ambitions, Townes set herself apart from the beginning with an equal passion for serving those around her. She counts her family, including her great-grandmother—who had been a foster parent—as an inspiration.
“I grew up watching that from both my parents and from my grandparents and it’s just how our community is wired in a lot of ways,” she recalls. “We did lots of little fundraisers for families struggling through different things, or some of our family’s friends that had a house fire and people just showed up in an incredible way, or different friends going through cancer and everyone would take turns making meals for them.”
At age 15, Townes launched Big Hearts for Big Kids, an organization dedicated to helping teens struggling with homelessness. She was moved to action after seeing a pamphlet about kids in her hometown who were struggling with family issues, addiction, and homelessness. “It blew me the away that the statistics of how many kids in my small town were needing that kind of love and guidance.”
The initiative has earned nearly $2 million to date. Last year, Townes partnered with the Girl Scouts of Middle Tennessee Troop 6000 to record a new version of “Somebody’s Daughter.” “It was just one of the coolest things I’ve ever been a part of, getting to witness their courage and hear their voices.”
On June 30, just days after her album release, Townes will host a concert onstage at the Ryman Auditorium to benefit Big Hearts for Big Kids—a virtual concert, alongside her talented friends including Dierks Bentley, Luke Combs, Brandi Carlile, Mickey Guyton, Ashley McBryde and more.
It’s fitting then, that the voice of a child closes out The Lemonade Stand.
On album’s piano-laced, poetic closing track, “The Most Beautiful Things,” the song concludes with the voice of 7-year-old Amelia, the daughter of album engineer Jason Hall.
“That was one of my favorite moments of being in the studio ever, just witnessing her standing in that vocal booth with those big headphones, just singing her heart out,” Townes says. “Jay had this idea to just bring in a little kid’s voice at the end of that song and it meant a lot to have her voice as sort of the thematic ending to this piece of music. It felt so full-circle, just remembering the 7-year-old kid that I used to be, listening to my favorite records and singing along to them at the top of my lungs in the back seat of the car, dreaming of getting to do music some day and make a record like this, and this record very much is that dream.”
Kameron Marlowe Signs With Columbia Nashville
/by Lorie HollabaughKameron Marlowe
Kameron Marlowe has signed with Columbia Nashville. The rising artist is releasing his latest track, “Burn ‘Em All,” Friday (June 26).
Influenced by artists ranging from Brooks & Dunn and George Strait to Travis Tritt and Ray Charles, Marlowe’s sound culminates from his lifelong love of country music. He recently inked an exclusive, global publishing deal with Sony/ATV, and released an acoustic version of his autobiographical, self-penned breakout hit “ Giving You Up.” The track has racked up 30 million on-demand streams, and in May, YouTube Music selected Marlowe to their Trending Artist on the Rise program. He is managed by The AMG.
“I couldn’t be more excited to be joining the Columbia team,” said Marlowe. “It still feels like a dream that I haven’t woken up from. I’m so thankful to Sony for believing in me.”
Tenille Townes Finds Success On Her Own Terms With ‘The Lemonade Stand’ [Interview]
/by Jessica NicholsonAs Tenille Townes releases her first major label full-length project, The Lemonade Stand on Friday (June 26), this 26-year-old Columbia Nashville (in partnership with RCA Records) artist will be doing some very sweet celebrating.
“My family, we do have an ice cream tradition. We’re going to have to do ice cream on Friday, probably over FaceTime—maybe vanilla, maybe cookies and cream—It’s good to celebrate the victories along the way. We used to do that at home, too, so now we just have ice cream through the distance,” Townes wells MusicRow.
The album release follows the success of “Somebody’s Daughter,” which reached the Top 30 on the Country Airplay chart, and marked her first of two No. 1s on the Canadian country radio chart. For the album’s title, Townes plucked lyrics from the song, which imagines what life must have been like for a girl Townes spotted standing on street corner, holding a cardboard sign.
Bet she was somebody’s best friend laughing
Back when she was somebody’s sister
Countin’ change at the lemonade stand
Probably somebody’s high school first kiss
“To me, a lemonade stand is a metaphor for a gathering place. It’s like an anchor of community where, I hope, people can just come and be filled by this music. I want them to feel like they can just show up and be who they are, and be reminded of the fact that they are not alone, and reminded of the dreams they had as a kid at a lemonade stand.”
Yes, the image of a child’s lemonade stand conjures nostalgic images of neighbors dropping by and chatting, but also it also represents youthful ambition and tenacity.
Like that budding entrepreneur, building up success one nickel or quarter at a time, Townes has been steadily winning over fan after fan since she first began singing in her hometown of Grand Prairie, Alberta at the age of five. By 14, she had taken up guitar and writing songs. By the time she was in her late teens, when her schoolmates were choosing colleges, Townes was mapping out her own months-long tours, wrangling sponsors and booking concerts at schools, where she simultaneously built a following and used the tour encourage students to chase their own dreams.
Upon arriving in Nashville in 2013, Townes sought out the famed songwriter haunt Bluebird Café, where she watched Lori McKenna (known for stirring hits such as Tim McGraw’s “Humble & Kind” and Little Big Town’s “Girl Crush”) perform in a writers round. “I just hung around after her writers round and was like, ‘Can I have my picture with you?’” Townes recalls with a laugh. “I love her so much and just feel so inspired by her writing, the way she communicates through her style of playing.”
Only a handful of years later, Townes earned a publishing deal with Big Yellow Dog Music, followed by her record deal with Columbia Nashville. She now counts McKenna among her co-writers.
Like McKenna, Townes shines brightly on her debut when she marries her keen eye for detail with complex storylines, such as “Jersey On The Wall (I’m Just Asking),” a clear-eyed glimpse into how loss of a loved one can challenge spiritual beliefs.
As she did with building those early tours, Townes’ approach to The Lemonade Stand was a step-by-step process. Music lovers first heard tracks from The Lemonade Stand in 2018, such as “Where You Are,” “Somebody’s Daughter,” and “White Horse,” in acoustic form via Townes’ four-track project The Living Room Worktapes.
The collection expanded with the EP The Road To the Lemonade Stand, a six-track effort that also included a cover of Sarah Buxton’s “Stupid Boy,” which Keith Urban later turned into a radio hit in 2006.
“Those were the songs that spoke the loudest, message-wise and the acoustic feeling worked well on The Living Room Worktapes. Then we just kept turning corners along the way, wanting to introduce a bit of a different side with ‘I Kept The Roses,’ and then the energy of ‘Holding Out For The One.’”
This full-fledged album is the fulfillment of two items on Townes’ bucket list—releasing her own full-length album, and working with producer Jay Joyce, known for his work with Miranda Lambert (who is signed to the same management company as Townes, Shopkeeper Management), as well as Eric Church and Patty Griffin. Townes poured her heart and melodies out inside the walls of Joyce’s church-turned-studio in east Nashville.
“In a lot of ways I really felt like he put like a leather jacket on these songs,” she says, “just this element of edge that these songs get wrapped in.”
“His albums—all those Eric Church albums and Patty Griffin’s Flaming Red—just set the absolute bar, production-wise, for music. Meeting him and playing some of these songs on guitar and hearing the way he started speaking to the vision of how he would make this record just felt so very right to me.”
Whether the ambiance in her songs welcomes in elements of carefree pop, country-leaning strings or unembellished acoustic guitar, Townes sketches truth throughout every song, such as “I Kept The Roses.”
“I had this idea for ‘I Kept The Roses’ in my phone for a while and I really do keep the roses for events and things. I love the way a dried flower represents something that happened, a moment in time. I think in going through the not-so-fun things that we go through, being able to smile at the parts that were good and the parts that shaped us for the better, is so important.”
She’s at her most hopeful and vulnerable on “When I Meet My Maker,” which Townes penned solo, inspired by her late great-grandmother.
“She was an anchor for our family. This song brought a lot of healing through the writing process, when I was just imagining where she is now. The day I recorded this song, Jay had moved the area where I would normally be recording in to the altar of the church and I was wearing her earrings when I recorded the song, so I just very much felt her with me. Then we sat in a semi-circle, and we just played it to see what happened, and we felt like we captured something really special on that first try. On the record, it’s just the run-through, in its vulnerable and untouched state.”
Alongside her musical ambitions, Townes set herself apart from the beginning with an equal passion for serving those around her. She counts her family, including her great-grandmother—who had been a foster parent—as an inspiration.
“I grew up watching that from both my parents and from my grandparents and it’s just how our community is wired in a lot of ways,” she recalls. “We did lots of little fundraisers for families struggling through different things, or some of our family’s friends that had a house fire and people just showed up in an incredible way, or different friends going through cancer and everyone would take turns making meals for them.”
At age 15, Townes launched Big Hearts for Big Kids, an organization dedicated to helping teens struggling with homelessness. She was moved to action after seeing a pamphlet about kids in her hometown who were struggling with family issues, addiction, and homelessness. “It blew me the away that the statistics of how many kids in my small town were needing that kind of love and guidance.”
The initiative has earned nearly $2 million to date. Last year, Townes partnered with the Girl Scouts of Middle Tennessee Troop 6000 to record a new version of “Somebody’s Daughter.” “It was just one of the coolest things I’ve ever been a part of, getting to witness their courage and hear their voices.”
On June 30, just days after her album release, Townes will host a concert onstage at the Ryman Auditorium to benefit Big Hearts for Big Kids—a virtual concert, alongside her talented friends including Dierks Bentley, Luke Combs, Brandi Carlile, Mickey Guyton, Ashley McBryde and more.
It’s fitting then, that the voice of a child closes out The Lemonade Stand.
On album’s piano-laced, poetic closing track, “The Most Beautiful Things,” the song concludes with the voice of 7-year-old Amelia, the daughter of album engineer Jason Hall.
“That was one of my favorite moments of being in the studio ever, just witnessing her standing in that vocal booth with those big headphones, just singing her heart out,” Townes says. “Jay had this idea to just bring in a little kid’s voice at the end of that song and it meant a lot to have her voice as sort of the thematic ending to this piece of music. It felt so full-circle, just remembering the 7-year-old kid that I used to be, listening to my favorite records and singing along to them at the top of my lungs in the back seat of the car, dreaming of getting to do music some day and make a record like this, and this record very much is that dream.”
Lucas Hoge To Launch New Television Series ‘Hoge Wild’
/by Jessica NicholsonLucas Hoge will premiere a new series, Hoge Wild, starting at 7 p.m. ET/6 p.m. CT on June 29 via the Sportsman Channel. The show will feature the singer-songwriter traveling the globe to highlight environments around the world, and according to Hoge, to “focus on conservation and changing the narrative of hunting.”
Hoge will welcome viewers as he goes duck hunting in Nebraska, elk hunting in Colorado, deep sea fishing in Purerto Vallarta and diving in the Cayman Islands.
“This show has been a passion of mine and a long time in the making,” Hoge says. “My guitar has been my passport to traveling across the globe and meeting amazing people…In the first episode, I will be in the mountains of New Mexico harvesting Mule Deer, giving everyone a taste of my life as a touring artist and just how and where that life takes me. From the desert to the snow, scuba diving 100 feet down, to the mountains of New Zealand I’m going take you with me across this beautiful planet of ours.”
The first season will feature 10 episodes. Hoge serves as creator and executive producer, and is already working on season 2 of the series. The series is produced by Forge Entertainment Group, Fall West Collective and Subspace Media.
Hoge recently released the song “Wishin’ I Was Fishin’,” which he co-wrote with Philip Lammond. Hoge’s album Dirty South reached No. 1 on the Billboard Country Album Sales chart in 2017.
"Nashville Needs A Song" Winners Announced
/by Jessica NicholsonNashville Mayor John Cooper has announced the winners of the Nashville Needs A Song COVID-19 songwriting competition, a joint initiative between the Nashville Songwriters Association (NSAI), the Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp., and the Mayor’s office, to uplift Nashvillians during the coronavirus pandemic.
“We Will Survive,” from Ryan Kinder and Justin Morgan, was chosen by NSAI as the “Songwriters Choice.” “Looking Up,” penned by Jesse Labelle, Rob Crosby and Jamie Moore, was selected via Nashville residential voting as the “Fan Favorite.”
“For generations, Nashville songwriters have played a vital role in telling the stories and creating the intricate melodies that encourage us all through difficult times,” said Mayor Cooper. “I’m grateful to all the contestants of the ‘Nashville Needs a Song’ competition. The winning songs remind us that we are ‘Nashville Strong’ and will continue to push forward, in solidarity, through any challenge that comes our way.”
Over 100 songwriters submitted entries, with the top three songs selected by NSAI to participate in Nashville’s “Fan Favorite” competition. While “Looking Up” took first place, “Times Like These” by Conner Sweet, Lance Carpenter, and Liz Hengber won second place, and “We Will Survive” took third.
“I am so proud of the quality of songs submitted for ‘Nashville Needs a Song,’” said Bart Herbison, Executive Director of Nashville Songwriters Association International. “They were inspiring, uplifting, and met the goal of utilizing music to help us navigate the coronavirus pandemic. Thanks to all of the songwriters who joined in this exercise.”
Winning songs may be used by the city and NCVC as part of marketing initiatives. Writers and their publishers will retain all future rights to their songs.
Jordan Lehning Releases Taste Of New Album, ‘Little Idols,’ Due Out In August
/by Lorie HollabaughJordan Lehning has released the contemplative new song “Little Lie” off his upcoming new album Little Idols, due out Aug. 7.
Written in the style of a short film, the new album tells the story of an affair between a married woman and a single man that unfolds over the length of the entire album. Set in the story’s halfway point, “Little Lie” illustrates the moment after the affair begins, when the characters first realize the implication of their actions.
“‘Little Lie’ is a quiet song. It’s about the moment after an affair begins and the diametric emotions of guilt and passion,” said Lehning. “We’re in the character’s apartment for most of the song and they’re laying there quietly in bed. Towards the end her naked back is turned towards him and she’s quietly crying. She knows she’s in love with him. I recorded the guitar and vocal of this song alone and I feel like you can hear that in the recording. It’s such a private and intimate song. Austin Hoke, who plays cello on it, also plays saw. I love the saw – it has an anxious beauty which worked perfectly for the setting.”
Lehning approached his new solo album from a director’s perspective while finding inspiration in the deliberate works of filmmakers like Ingmar Bergman. Released earlier this month, the swirling first track “Oolaloom” acts as the opening credits on the project, with an off-kilter time signature that hints at the impending chaos.
In addition to producing, composing and arranging on a number of records, Lehning has played in several bands and released a pair of his own acclaimed solo albums, Jordan Sings! and Long Live The Dead.
Miranda Lambert Celebrates New RIAA Certifications
/by Lorie HollabaughMiranda Lambert is increasing her heavy metal status with two more RIAA certifications. Her hit single “Little Red Wagon” has officially been certified Platinum, while the Top 10 hit “Somethin’ Bad” (with Carrie Underwood) has earned double-Platinum status.
Both tracks originally appeared on Lambert’s album Platinum, which will be available on vinyl beginning tomorrow (June 26). Her current single, “Bluebird,” from her critically-acclaimed album Wildcard, has reached Top 5 at country radio and continues its rise, and has earned more than 102 million on-demand streams.
Sara Evans, Oak Ridge Boys, Mark Wills Set For Grand Ole Opry’s July 4th Celebration
/by Lorie HollabaughCircle will be celebrating a July 4th America’s Birthday Bash all weekend including Saturday’s Opry Live, as well as Circle Sessions with Craig Morgan at 6:30 p.m. CT immediately prior to the live Opry and Authentic America hosted by Nan and Charlie Kelley at 8 p.m. CT after the Opry. Opry Live on Circle will be hosted by Bobby Bones, and the livestream will be guest hosted by Natalie Stovall, a member of the country trio Runaway June and a host of Circle’s Southern Weekend.
America’s Birthday Bash Fourth of July Circle programming is in association with Wounded Warrior Project, and Shriners Hospitals for Children, Bass Pro Shops and Cabela’s will be part of the July 4th broadcast of Opry Live on Circle.
Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival 2020 Canceled
/by Jessica NicholsonBonnaroo Music & Arts Festival is the latest music festival to cancel its 2020 run due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Manchester, Tennessee-held festival’s organizers made the announcement on Thursday (June 25). In March, the festival’s dates were initially shifted from its regular June dates to Sept. 24-27, 2020.
“Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival will not take place this September 24-27, 2020 as originally rescheduled,” Bonnaroo organizers said in a statement. “Our annual time together on the Farm is nothing short of magical, but out of an abundance of caution and for the health and safety of all Bonnaroovians, artists, staff, partners and our community, this is a necessary reality. More information on lineup, camping and accommodations will be available at a later date.”
The festival will now be held June 17-20, 2021, and tickets to the 2020 event will be honored for next year, though refunds are also available. The deadline to request a refund is July 31.
The 2020 Bonnaroo performer lineup was to include Lizzo, Brittany Howard, Lana Del Rey, Tool, Tame Impala, and more.
Dixie Chicks Officially Change Name To The Chicks
/by Jessica NicholsonThe Dixie Chicks have changed their name to The Chicks. The trio updated their official social media accounts, as well as their official website, with the new moniker on Thursday (June 25), dropping the controversial word “Dixie” from their title.
“We want to meet this moment,” says a brief statement on The Chicks’ website.
In a separate statement, the trio noted, “A sincere and heartfelt thank you goes out to ‘The Chicks’ of NZ for their gracious gesture in allowing us to share their name. We are honored to co-exist together in the world with these exceptionally talented sisters. Chicks Rock! — Emily, Natalie and Martie”
The move follows the recent announcement from country trio Lady A, who revealed on social media that they dropped the word “Antebellum” from their band name, due to the Civil War-era connotations of the name. The change also brought controversy, as a Seattle-based musician had already been using the name Lady A for years. The trio shared on social media recently that they had met with the Seattle-based Lady A and that the issue was in the process of being resolved.
The Chicks will release their first new project in 14 years, Gaslighter, on July 17, and dropped the new song “March March,” today.
The Texas-bred trio had been going by The Dixie Chicks since sisters Martie and Emily formed the group (and soon added Natalie to the outfit) three decades ago. The trio released a handful of projects before releasing their major label debut, Wide Open Spaces, on Monument Records in 1998. The album went on to earn Diamond status from the RIAA, ultimately selling more than 13 million units. The follow up, 1999’s Fly, went on to sell 11 million units, while 2002’s Home has been certified 6x multi-Platinum, and 2006’s Taking The Long Way has been certified 2x multi-Platinum.
Luke Bryan’s Proud To Be Right Here Tour Dates Moved To 2021
/by Lorie HollabaughLuke Bryan. Photo: Jim Wright
Luke Bryan is rescheduling his Proud To Be Right Here Tour dates to 2021 out of caution for the safety and health of his fans due to the ongoing pandemic.
Morgan Wallen, Caylee Hammack, and Runaway June will support Bryan on the dates next year, and additional details on the full 2021 schedule and sales will follow at a later time.
Earlier this Spring Bryan launched his Two Lane American Golden Lager with Constellation Brands in states around the South. He was heavily involved in the manufacturing of the new beer line, from tasting to creative development.
“Proud To Be Right Here” 2021 dates:
May 30-Youngstown, OH-Stambaugh Stadium
June 4- Orange Beach, AL-The Wharf Amphitheater
June 10-Cincinnati, OH-Riverbend Music Center
June 16-Hartford, CT-Xfinity Theatre
June 17-Darien Center, NY-Darien Lake Amphitheater
June 24-St. Louis, MO-Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
June 25-Milwaukee, WI-Summerfest at American Family Insurance Amp.
July 17-Bristow, VA-Jiffy Lube Live
July 23-Charlotte, NC-PNC Music Pavilion
July 24-Raleigh, NC-Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek
July 30-Nashville, TN-Bridgestone Arena
August 5-Bangor, ME-Darling’s Waterfront Pavilion
August 6-Gilford, NH-Bank of NH Pavilion
August 12-Columbia, MD-Merriweather Post Pavilion
August 27-Los Angeles, CA-Staples Center
August 28-San Bernardino, CA-Glen Helen Amphitheater
September 4-Brandon, MS-Brandon Amphitheater
September 23-San Diego, CA-North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre
September 30-Bend, OR-Les Schwab Amphitheater
October 1-Bend, OR-Les Schwab Amphitheater
October 2-Portland, OR-Sunlight Supply Amphitheater
October 7-Fresno, CA-Save Mart Center
October 8-Sacramento, CA-Toyota Amphitheatre
October 9-Mountain View, CA-Shoreline Amphitheatre