2016

Ian Prowse – Compañeros

Learpholl Recordings **** Ian Prowse makes a welcome return with his second solo album, Compañeros. Compañeros, Ian Prowse’s latest album, isn’t the easiest to rate out of five. I’ve not given it a perfect score as it didn’t blow me away, but it’s a very listenable 50 minutes of material that I can’t really fault (I’ll admit that the press release also says ‘listenable,’ but it’s a very suitable adjective). From jaunty soft-rock opener Town And Country Blues, all the way to the very enjoyable closer, Name & Number 2016, Compañeros doesn’t fail in its bid to entertain. This is a good selection of varied tracks, all delivered with a trademark Merseyside/Celtic tinge. Prowse may well be in his 50s now, but with the abundance of energy and pace on offer here, it’s evident that he harbours no plans of slowing down. His material is all the better for it, with songs like Derry Gaol and Spare Change providing further proof that Prowse remains an artist with fresh ideas and a cutting edge. The name of the album – in case you were wondering – derives from the fact that these are all songs that Prowse has heard on his travels as a musician. Compañeros gives these songs a new and welcome lease of life, and in that respect, the album also serves as a fitting reflection on Prowse’s career to date. This is an easy album to recommend. It perhaps fails to provide any breathtaking moments, but it’s a very solid production with absolutely no filler. Much like a good spread of sandwiches with no cucumber thrown in (unless, of course, you enjoy the ubiquitous crunchy aqueous space-waster). Ian Horne www.amsterdam-music.com

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Theo Bard – YOU GIVE

  Woodburner *** A medley of musical influences and brutally honest observations. Clever creativity Self-penned and self-produced, in collaboration with Tansay Omar (the mind behind works by the likes of Bjork and Boy George), Theo Bard’s YOU GIVE EP is an unusual and intriguing production. Never Alone is a strong opening track that shows off Bard’s distinctly British voice, fused with a Deep South sound that wouldn’t sound out of place in a New Orleans or Memphis back street bar. As the song displays a sense of claustrophobia, there’s something infectious about the sometimes-frenzied instrumentals and vocals, which offer a House Of The Rising Sun feel. You Give, which is the EP’s namesake, yearns for old times and relationships. Bard sings ‘I know those times are gone but the friendships still live on/ ‘Cause you give and you give’. A friendship anthem for school leavers and graduating classes, or friends who let life get in the way. Musically, this is the song Ed Sheeran would look to for inspiration if he ever dabbled in country or jazz. A fine example of how well the two can blend. With both reggae and folk undertones, Evil Eyes is a darker track in which you can hear the East London influence on Bard’s life and musical style. Though not necessarily a favourite, this is a unique track where you can appreciate what he’s done. The autobiographical Burning Wood Tonight and encouraging Time To Live are two very different tracks; one looking at Bard’s real life on London’s music scene, specifically his popular Woodburner events, and the other offering advice on life and love set to classic guitar. Yes, if this EP is anything to go by, there’s no doubt Theo Bard will become a more familiar name (and voice) across various UK music scenes – and what an apt name it is. Amy Jones www.theobard.com

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Duane Rutter – CRAZY THINGS

  Busted Flat Records **** Canadian singer-songwriter hits mark with third recording Based in Hamilton, Ontario, Duane Rutter looks, and sounds, like he’s lived a life and then some. “A published poet, preacher, gravedigger, hell raiser…” states the CD publicity. On first listening, Duane sounds like he really means it. His voice has a rasp to it while his band, clearly, express an empathy for him and his music. It wasn’t until I watched a Canadian podcast of Duane, with band, that I fully realised he has something special here. Rutter, I gather, has played his share of solo troubadour gigs but his band add dynamics, a sense of colour, and feeling, that it may have needed to bring out the full potential. Crazy Things mixes traditional country and Americana elements with a touch of psychedelia. Indeed opener, Don’t Forget, with its pedal steel, recalls the feel of The Byrds’ Wasn’t Born To Follow. Steve Woods’ steel playing is terrific throughout while Andrew Aldridge’s electric guitar adds tuneful muscle. The lilting Will I Ever Learn sounds like a great live number while the title track reveals Duane’s major strength, his ability to write from the heart. ‘Hearts so strange, make people do crazy things.’ One of the strengths of the record is the great duet singing with JB Reed. Her voice works really well with his. Rutter is a fan of The Band; so it’s a coup to have Garth Hudson appear on two tracks. I particularly like the driving I Found You. Garth’s wife, ‘Sister’ Maud Hudson also sings on closer, Take That Water. This is an enjoyable listen; I’ll leave the final words with Duane Rutter. “The players on the album are absolutely stellar and I simply couldn’t be more proud with what they’ve come up with.” John Brindle www.duanerutter.com

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LOCASH – I LOVE THIS LIFE

  Reviver Records ** Distinctly average EP where the majority of the tracks get very boring, very quickly After a re-branding and a new record deal, LOCASH released their new EP I LOVE THIS LIFE on October 30. Unfortunately there is a lot of work that needs to be done to this EP for it to really do them justice It’s unfortunate but the overall sound of the track stops you really liking title track I Love This Life. You can tell from the lyrics that this track could be very good if the right choices were made with it but it just fails to impress. Both Preston Brust and Chris Lucas have quite distinctive voices and neither are shown in the best light throughout the track, both feeling a little uncomfortable. A song title of Drunk, Drunk doesn’t particularly fill you with confidence and the track itself does nothing to change that. With a production that is distinctly more annoying than it is catchy and immature lyrics like one long island, two long island, three long island, floor, the track is more likely to make you roll your eyes in exasperation than dance or sing along. EP closer Till The Wheels Fall Off is, without a doubt, the strongest track in the EP and is quite a pleasant surprise after the rest of the EP! With a solid beat behind it the production is very catchy and the lyrics are actually quite sweet. Throughout the EP it sometimes sounds like there is an odd electric effect added to the vocals and this track is no exception to that however you can see past that to find track that does actually make you want to hear it again. With only one track coming close to stopping this EP from being absolutely atrocious it is clear a lot more thought needs to be put into the next release. Disappointing. Kasey Stone, www.locashmusic.com

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Brian Ritchey – BORDEAUX

  Barrelmaker Records *** Write what you know The adage passed from dad Steve to son Justin Townes Earle and thence to friend Brian Ritchey. So he has and BORDEAUX is the result – 11 self-written songs that detail loneliness, depression, loyalty and the birth of his son to name but a few of the subjects to be found here. 11 vignettes of gritty Americana and a fab rock band to beef up the sound of raw emotion, both powerful and vulnerable, pouring from the speakers. Despite the subject matter, an uplifting way to spend an hour or so. From the opening slide of Hello Lonely Friends you know it’s no easy ride – the love is not sweet and forgiving but hard won and rarely unconditional. I’m Not Gone leads you through the search for yourself, only to find that fulfilment comes with companionship. The darkness and depression of Rest My Head leads you a merry dance through your own places of rare dalliance. I’ve probably not oversold this work of exceptional artistry, and if you want the fey whimsical candyfloss of Dolly Parton then you will probably want your money back. But if you find the demons that possess the Earles and Van Zandts more your bag, then this will see you right. Ian Ambrose www.brianritcheymusic.com

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Kinky Friedman – THE LONELIEST MAN I EVER MET

  Avenue A / Thirty Tigers **** The return of a legend What would you think if someone suggested you make an album despite it being 39 years since you last made one? You’d probably think they were having a laugh or being exceptionally kind to a man feeling under the weather. I’ve no idea if either scenario is true but here is Kinky Friedman’s first album for 39 years. There is not enough space to précis the great man’s career, but he is held in very high regard by the great and the good, as evidenced by the appearance of Willie Nelson on a very spare version of his own Bloody Mary Morning. That is the opening track and very much sets the tone as liveliness doesn’t even put in a brief appearance. For those not born at the time of the last album trying to describe the voice of this legend will be much like trying to knit fog. There is absolutely no reason to like it but like Cohen, Kristofferson and Waits it is an instrument of strange compulsion, and all is almost spoken rather than sung – which gives a pathos and unnecessary depth to quite a few of the offerings, notably the closing Wand’rin Star and A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square – but wonderful nonetheless. I’ve only time to barely scratch the surface of this mighty disc but special mention must go to the harmonica maestro Mickey Raphael who imbues the whole thing with the necessary air of wistful beauty. But I do have to end with a warning that bad language is contained within, so parents be aware that you may have to ask the kids what on earth it all means. Ian Ambrose www.kinkyfriedman.com

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The Corrs

Making Magic Hyde Park in the summertime: An audience of 50,000. Andrea Corr holds the microphone out to the crowd and asks them to sing along with her. She smiles and glows with the Corr family’s natural charm but her nerves are clear too – no sound-check, no large-scale performance in ten years and weeks of tears before the show… She’s met with a chorus of voices singing along to smash hit Runaway, swaying to the dreamy love song. For the first time, her Dad Jerry isn’t physically present to support her career but her sisters Sharon and Caroline and brother Jim are beside her – and the band’s children are backstage watching their parents play as a band on stage for the very first time. The Corrs are back. The Corrs – Andrea (lead vocals, tin whistle), Sharon (violin, vocals), Caroline (drums, percussion, piano, bodhrán, vocals) and Jim (guitar, piano, keyboards, vocals) – were an international success in the 90s and early 2000s, playing a unique blend of Celtic pop and folk rock – and bringing Celtic rooted music to a mainstream audience. Their most successful album, TALK ON CORNERS, was the UK’s highest selling album in 1998 and went multi-Platinum in Australia; Third Corrs album, IN BLUE, reached number one in 17 countries. Hits such as Breathless, Runaway and What Can I do? and five studio albums won the band a loyal fanbase and critical success. Now, they have returned after a ten year hiatus, that was decided whilst they stood at the peak of success. Charlotte Taylor talks to Andrea and Jim Corr about their return to the industry, much-awaited new album and a comeback tour this year. Back on stage The Corrs released their sixth studio album WHITE LIGHT on November 27, 2015, following the announcement of their return to the industry (as a band) on Chris Evans’ breakfast show on BBC Radio 2, an impressive comeback performance as part of Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park 2015 and a series of smaller showcases. Launching their album was “amazing” and sharing this symbolic new release “after a year’s work … has been intense,” says Andrea. “As far as we are concerned, if you are going to come back after ten years it has got to be great,” she explains with an air of grounded confidence. “We have really pushed every song to the limit. I feel that each of us is very, very emotionally connected to this work and to each song. So it was kind of, it is kind of, almost a relief letting it go, to be honest. Letting it go out into the world – and then what will be will be …” The Corrs were active in the industry from 1990 – 2005, creating five studio albums and with Sharon and Andrea also pursuing solo careers. Ten years is quite the hiatus But the siblings didn’t worry Jim is just as “delighted with how it is going” as his sisters. “It feels wonderful. We really missed playing together and we only realised that to the extent when we got back up on stage and in Hyde Park.” “You know, it is quite funny, it feels really natural,” Andrea explains. “Even though our first gig back was when we were in the middle of making the record and that was Hyde Park, so that was obviously seriously deep end stuff – in front of 50,000 people! As crazy as that is after ten years, there were certain aspects of it that felt like it was yesterday that we had done it [last].” “…But then at the side of the stage we had proof that it wasn’t! Our children. The ten years was there in people on the right of the stage.” Since letting the band lie, Andrea, Caroline, Sharon and Jim have all lived lives centred around their families, with eight children between them. “I think that [with] the distance and the time away, we focused on our own individual lives … It gives you a greater perspective on the whole thing – that really we are here to enjoy it now,” recounts Andrea. And now they are back not out of boredom, not out of label pressures but “because of the music, because we were inspired together. And we do feel that we bring out the best in each other. We are loving being back and playing together.” I ask them both what it could have possibly meant to have seen the the crowd sing along to Runaway at Hyde Park after ten years of being parents – not musicians in an internationally successful band? “To be honest it was unbelievable. That was an incredibly emotional day for me … for all of us. But it built up for me. I went through crying maybe once a day for the weeks before [to] crying the whole day the day before,” Andrea admits. “It was the size of it, you know, the emotional gravity of being back with my sisters and brother on the stage and then also that it was the first that neither of our parents have seen – in the physical dimension anyway. So it really was really emotional – but the welcome we got then further added to that. I mean second song in we did Runaway and the whole crowd sang it. It was a real moment, for us anyway.” “…Especially through the quiet part of Runaway, it was amazing,” says Jim. “And Breathless. We had some technical issues on the first song and we were a little bit nervous,getting up on the stage because we didn’t have a sound check … without a sound check you don’t know how things are going to go. But as soon as we settled into it and once we entered in the second song and everything was going fine, we started to relax and it was wonderful to hear the crowd sing along with the songs.” Making magic again The

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Eva Cassidy

Nightbird On November 2, 1996 music lovers across the world lost one of their most treasured and loved artists. Yet, the tragedy is that at the time, they were still to discover her wealth of talent. To commemorate 20 years since Eva Cassidy’s passing, Megan Gnad speaks to her family, label and admirers, about her posthumous career, the iconic Blues Alley recordings, the price of fame and the legacy the sweet songbird leaves behind. Bill Straw remembers the life-changing phone call as vividly as if it were yesterday. The President of Blix Street Records listened carefully as singer Grace Griffith relayed with urgency how he must listen to a relatively unheard of young singer from Washington D.C. “She said ‘you have to hear this wonderful singer. This wonderful nightingale, I’m afraid we’re going to lose.’ She sent me a tape and it was cued up to Fields Of Gold. I knew immediately, within seconds, she was extraordinary and by the time I’d heard the whole album, I knew she was one of the best ever.” Tragically, within one month of hearing Eva Cassidy’s glorious recordings, he learned the singer had passed away at just 33 from melanoma. Family and friends mourned the loss of a loved daughter, sister, friend and talented musician, but, for an artist who would go on to have such a massive posthumous career, it now seems unfathomable that they wept in relative privacy. The outpouring of grief from the public would follow. Once the world realised what it had lost, music lovers took Eva to their hearts. She is now recognised as one of our greatest female musicians, with an influence on almost every genre, including jazz, blues, country, gospel, folk, pop and rock. The fact that her music even had the chance to be shared can be put down to a series of luck and good judgement, and a public desire to listen and make sure this songbird would never be forgotten. For that we have a set of recordings to thank from one special night at the Georgetown jazz club, Blues Alley. These tracks ensured she became a superstar and have now been reproduced and packaged into a 31 track album and DVD, NIGHTBIRD, set to commemorate 20 years since her untimely death. On the night of January 2, 1996, Eva and her band, made up of Chris Biondo (bass), Lenny Williams (piano), Keith Grimes (lead guitar) and Raice McLeod (drums) took to the Blues Alley stage, using money from the small pension Eva had cashed in at her tree nursery job.“We thought we’d get airplay, and sell a thousand copies so Eva could put some money toward a PA system,” explains Biondo. The band was booked for two nights and with family, friends and a few members of the press in the audience, it was a resounding success. They had nailed it in one take. But as they listened to the recordings back, their hearts sank. The lighting system had somehow created a buzz throughout the entire show and they were swiftly deleted. No one has ever heard them since. Suddenly the pressure was on. It was January 3 and Eva was suffering from a cold. While she gave it her all, she was not satisfied with the recordings and her first thought was to scrap the lot. Fortunately, once she heard the final mixes, she was persuaded by her band mates to allow the original, 12 track, LIVE AT BLUES ALLEY album to be released – with one condition. The album would end with her studio recording of Oh, Had I A Golden Thread, a performance she was particularly proud of. It was to be the only solo album Eva Cassidy released in her lifetime and helped her work become promoted to its legendary status. Within ten months of the showcase, Eva was gone, but Bill Straw had been keeping a close eye on her wellbeing, through Eva’s friend, Grace Griffith. “I knew that she was not long for this world, and I also knew she was most likely to be famous, and wasn’t going to be around to enjoy it,” he says. “I ran around in my car for months listening to it and it was just profoundly sad. I didn’t know how her parents would feel about it, whether they would have her music marketed, or if it would be too painful. I basically wasn’t thinking about business at all.” Bill says he had enough experience to know he was hearing a great performer but he also knew a lot of major companies had passed on signing her. “I knew audiences would embrace Eva immediately,” he says. “The individuals within [the industry] certainly knew what they were hearing, but they didn’t know who would buy it. They were trying to create packages that they could market using mainstream radio, and mainstream radio wouldn’t play Eva Cassidy, because it didn’t fit the formula.” By April 1997, Bill was in Washington working on Grace’s project, when he was invited for dinner with Eva’s parents, Barbara and Hugh Cassidy. He says her death hit the artistic community in D.C. “pretty hard” as many found out about her and lost her within the same timeframe. With this in mind, there was a desire from her parents to honour this groundswell of love and, with Chris Biondo’s help, they soon put out EVA BY HEART. By this stage, Bill had heard the original LIVE AT BLUES ALLEY, EVA BY HEART and the 1992 duet album with Chuck Brown, THE OTHER SIDE. He was soon harbouring plans to create a super album. With her parents’ support, he compiled the now-famous, SONGBIRD record, featuring a selection of songs from these previous recordings, notably Fields of Gold, Autumn Leaves and People Get Ready. Upon its release, the album’s impact and popularity occurred in stages, and soon the press were writing favourable reviews and radio stations were playing the songs. “We got little breakthroughs in different areas,” says

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Walter Trout

Starting Over Charlotte Taylor meets with bluesman, Walter Trout, to talk about overcoming his extremely close brush with death, the emotional new album BATTLE SCARS that followed and a subsequent tour that Walter “never would have considered” whilst lying on his hospital bed. BATTLE SCARS is Walter Trout’s 42nd album release; a blues guitar icon, he has been playing music for half a century, gaining international acclaim and receiving honours that include two Overseas Artist of The Year wins at the British Blues Awards. In fact, it was just before he was taken ill that Provogue Records had planned a ‘Year of the Trout’ worldwide tour and marketing campaign to celebrate his 25 years as a solo artist. But it was not to be. Darker times, living on the streets in the 70s, caught up with a now settled Walter, who was a whole world away with a successful music career, passionate and loyal fanbase and a family he adores. At the start of 2014, Trout was placed in intensive care, suffering from liver disease, losing staggering amounts of weight and muscle, and with no chance of recovering without a transplant. To his complete disbelief, Walter’s friends, family and fans raised almost a quarter million dollars in an online campaign to help pay for the expenses involved in receiving a new liver and the transplant surgery. This wonderful display of love and loyalty spurred on Walter, as he readied himself to face the next battle – relearning what once came naturally, playing the guitar and writing new songs once again. He had wanted to write a positive album to reflect his new lease of life, but found that what he needed to do was to write about his pain and his experiences. Even though Walter Trout has been through hell and back and his accounts of these times are vivid and heartbreaking; they, like Walter, are also full of hope. Speaking with him, he displays gratitude, humility as well as pride for what he has achieved, and hope for the future of his music and his genre – and he’s also still full of that matter-of-fact charm that he’s become so loved for in the industry. I begin our conversation with a congratulations for everything that Walter has achieved since his recovery – a new album, live shows and now a worldwide tour. But was a return to music always his goal along the way? “Never at all, if you told me a year ago I would have said ‘no way!’” Walter begins. “When I was at my worst I would say to my wife ‘if I can just survive this and still get to be with you and be with our kids, if I don’t play again – so be it…’ “I was prepared to live my life listening to records and watching YouTube videos and saying ‘that’s what I used to do.’ I had visions of cleaning a table in a restaurant or something and being a bus boy and saying to somebody ‘oh I used to play the guitar.’ – And I would have done it, but I’d have been hollow.” After his transplant on May 26, 2014, Walter moved home and started on the the road to becoming himself again. He made the decision to relearn how to play. “I lost more than half of my body weight. I lost 120 pounds – and that was muscle, not just fat. I had no muscles in my arms, I was skin and bones. I attempted to play when I was still in the hospital. My oldest son, John, came over … he brought me a Stratocaster and said ‘here, you have to keep in touch with who you are.’ I tried to get a note to come out and I could not press the string to the fret. I didn’t have the strength. I broke down and I said ‘take it out of here, I can’t look at it, I can’t think about that!’” But when Walter moved back home he started receiving physiotherapy and he used this time to work on reteaching his muscles to play the guitar. “I would sit on my couch and at that point I got determined. What else do I have to do? I’ve got three hours a day at this physical therapy place and then I’m home. So it would be get up and try to walk, and sit on the couch for hours and try to get it back… “It was still there. I still knew how to do it, I was just physically unable to do it … But little by little it started coming back.” The first time Walter played in front of anyone again was New Year’s Eve 2014. “I played two songs in my driveway for the neighbours with my kids. We have a family tradition, we set up in the front lawn, every New Year’s Eve at midnight we play to the neighbours until the cops come. We’ve done it for 12 years. So I played two songs. I did Born To Be Wild by Steppenwolf and Fortunate Son by Creedence. I played and I sang – but then I had to sit down, I was gone.” His second performance was a very different affair! “The first time I actually got in front of an audience though was not til June 15 at the Royal Albert Hall [2015], so that was nine months after I got out. It took me that long to feel that I could be in front of an audience and I was still very apprehensive … It wasn’t like going to the local pub.” “As soon as I counted the four and that band came in – I was at home.” These memories are incredibly emotional and we pause for a second as Walter collects himself. “As soon as they came in and they started playing and I saw those faces I just [thought] ‘I’m at home, this is

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Old Dominion

* with Drake White and James Otto ** with Morgan Frazier and David Ray *** with Rascal Flatts **** Kenny Chesney, Miranda Lambert and Sam Hunt ***** with Jake Owen Thu Jan 14: Nashville, Marathon Music Works Wed 20: Los Angeles, The Roxy Theatre Fri 22: Lynchburg, Phase 2 Sat 23: Charlotte, Coyote Joe’s Wed 27: Tulsa, Cain’s Ballroom Thu 28: Omaha, Ralston Arena Fri 29: Greeley, Union Colony Civic Center * Sat 30: Denver, Grizzly Rose Sun 31 – Wed Feb 3: Mexico, Great Escape 2016 at Royalton Riviera Cancún Thu Feb 11: Chicago, Joes Bar Fri 12: Minneapolis, Varsity Theatre Sat 13: Minneapolis, Varsity Theater Sun 21: Texas, San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo Wed Mar 2: Iowa City, U of I Main Lounge ** Thu 3: Forest City, Waldorf College Fieldhouse ** Fri 4: Des Moines, Seven Flags Event Center ** Thu 10: Detroit, Fillmore Detroit Fri 18: Kissimmee, Runaway Country Music Fest Thu Apr 7: Florence, Country Thunder Sat 9: Panama City Beach, Spring Jam *** Fri 15: Fort Lauderdale, Tortuga Music Festival Sat Apr 23: Auburn, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Sun May 1: Indio, Stagecoach Festival Sat 7: Phoenix, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Sat 28: Louisville, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Sun 29: Forest City, Tree Town Music Festival Sat Jun 4: Arlington, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Sat 18: Milwaukee, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Sat 25: Philadelphia, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Fri Jul 1: New York, Jam In The Valley Sat 2: Pittsburgh, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Wed 6: Fort Loramie, Country Concert Sun 10: Canada, Cavendish Beach Events Centre Wed 13: Canada, Rock The Park Music Festival ***** Sat 16: Kansas City, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Fri 22: Bozeman, Gallatin Country Fair Sat 23: Seattle, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Thu 28: Cheyenne, Frontier Days ***** Sat 30: Mountain Home County Music Festival Sun 31: Sweet Home, Oregon Jamboree Sat Aug 6: Santa Clara, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Sat 13: Detroit, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Sat 20: East Rutherford, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Fri 26 – Sat 27: Foxborough, Kenny Chesney’s Spread The Love Tour **** Sat Sep 3: Lake County Fair

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