2025

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Country Stars Unite for Kenny Campbell Foundation’s First Ryman Auditorium Benefit

The inaugural Kenny Campbell Foundation Benefit Concert is set to take place on Thursday, July 24, 2025, at the historic Ryman Auditorium in Nashville. Headlined by country singer and songwriter Craig Campbell, the concert will raise funds and awareness for colorectal cancer in memory of Campbell’s father, who passed away at 36 from the disease. This marks the first benefit concert organised by the Kenny Campbell Foundation, which Campbell established following his father’s death. For over a decade, he has hosted a celebrity cornhole tournament to support the cause, but 2025 introduces this new musical event to the foundation’s fundraising efforts. The evening will feature performances by Bradley Gaskin, who joins Campbell as a co-host, alongside a line-up that includes Michael Ray, Bryan White, Hailey Benedict, and social media star Tayler Holder. Tickets are currently available through the Ryman Auditorium’s official website, priced between $65 and $175, plus fees. A limited number of VIP tickets are on offer at $175, which include an exclusive two-song acoustic performance by Campbell and Gaskin before the main show, a commemorative show poster, and a photo opportunity with both artists on the Ryman stage. During the event, a guitar signed by all participating artists will be auctioned to raise additional funds. The Kenny Campbell Foundation works to promote awareness of colorectal cancer, an aggressive form of cancer that develops in the colon or rectum. Proceeds from the benefit will support initiatives aimed at early detection, prevention, and support for those affected by the disease. The concert promises to be a meaningful evening of live music and community support in one of Nashville’s most iconic venues. To read more exclusive articles and latest news, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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Bob Dylan UK tour 2025 - Maverick

Bob Dylan Announces 2025 UK and Ireland Tour

Legendary songwriter and musician Bob Dylan will return to the UK in 2025 for a string of live shows as part of his acclaimed Rough and Rowdy Ways tour. This summer, Dylan will perform across the US, before coming to the Brighton Centre, on the south coast of England, on 7th November. The tour will then cross the UK and Ireland with dates in Swansea, Coventry, Leeds, Glasgow, Belfast, Killarney and Dublin. Dylan’s first gig in the UK was at The King & Queen pub in Fitzrovia, London, in 1962, while he first played Ireland at the Adelphi Cinema on his famous 1966 world tour. The release of new music in 2020 surprised and delighted fans, with the album Rough and Rowdy Ways dominating end-of-year lists and marking another milestone in the career of one of the great artists of modern times. These upcoming concerts are an opportunity to experience this great artist on stage for a series of very special evenings. The shows are in partnership with Yondr, who will prohibit the use of video cameras and mobile phones, making the occasion even more unique. To read more exclusive articles and latest news, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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Lady A to Spread Holiday Cheer with Winter Tour

Bringing irresistible holiday cheer in the heat of the summer, multi-Platinum and GRAMMY Award-winning group Lady A has announced their 2025 THIS WINTER’S NIGHT TOUR, spreading 12 days of Christmas music, joy and magic this December. The holiday tour will launch on Dec. 5 in Atlanta, GA at The Woodruff Arts Center’s Atlanta Symphony Hall and wrap with three consecutive shows at Nashville’s historic Ryman Auditorium. Presale tickets for most dates are available beginning this Wednesday (7/16) at 10 AM local time with the code HOLLYJOLLY, and general tickets go on sale this Friday (7/18) at 10 AM local time at LadyAMusic.com. Known for consistently delivering harmony-soaked performances “unlike any other” (The New York Post), the trio’s inaugural Christmas tour will kick off after the release of ON THIS WINTER’S NIGHT VOL. 2 on Sept. 26. Both the upcoming album and tour will be packed with holiday classics as well as new festive originals as a companion and refresh of their 2020 album ON THIS WINTER’S NIGHT, which featured a “variety of musical styles from the simple acoustic-guitar-and-strings arrangement to the horns and sleigh bells” (USA Today). “We have been in such a season of family and that’s the first thing we think of when we think of Christmas and the Holiday Season,” said Lady A’s Hillary Scott. “We hope this record and our first ever Christmas tour will be an opportunity for families and fans to usher in the Holiday Spirit with fun, joy and gratitude.” To read more exclusive articles and latest news, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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Noah Cyrus Releases Sophomore Studio Album ‘I Want My Loved Ones To Go With Me’

GRAMMY nominated artist, songwriter, musician and producer Noah Cyrus has released her career-defining sophomore studio album I WANT MY LOVED ONES TO GO WITH ME. Rooted in Americana, indie folk, and country music, and co-produced by Noah Cyrus alongside trusted collaborators Mike Crossey and PJ Harding, I WANT MY LOVED ONES TO GO WITH ME is an other-worldly, humbling and heartfelt listening experience, mixing ethereal and whispered vocals with full-throated declarations, all tied together by gorgeous organic instrumentation; pedal steel, banjo, dulcimer, mandolin, cellos, and acoustic guitars framing Noah’s smoky and distinctive voice. “For a long time, I couldn’t really trust in my own choices. I had to learn how to make decisions for myself and make that transition into adulthood,” Noah Cyrus, now 25, says. “But I’ve found who I am, I know who I am, and this record shows what I had inside me all this time. This album is me.” Paying homage to members of her family and nature in ways both subtle and overt pair effortlessly with Noah and Crossey’s immersive interpretation of country music throughout the album. “When I was a kid, I was so enamored with how each instrument came together with the beat to create a memorable moment in a song, like the outro chorus in ‘Don’t Put It All On Me’ and ‘New Country.’ I remember asking my father, ‘Dad, what’s that called?’ and he said, ‘Sissy, that’s called dynamics,’” Noah says. “I think of that every time I walk into a studio to make my own music. I’m always focused on sonics and dynamics.” The album opens with “I Saw the Mountains,” a rousing tale of recognising and communing with the beauty in nature. As a child of Tennessee and California, Noah was always outdoors, and often on horseback. “The harmony between people and the earth is really taken for granted,” she says. “My dad taught us from an early age to connect with nature and the animals that inhabit it.” On “Don’t Put It All On Me,” a song her brother Braison wrote for her, Robin Pecknold of Fleet Foxes, one of Braison’s favorite bands joins Noah. “My brother observed our family dynamics and how in some ways I’d take it all upon my shoulders and he wrote that song from his perspective,” she says. “We’ll always be there for each other, and I wanted to honour him with that performance.” “Apple Tree” embodies the album’s aesthetic. Over a brooding piano melody, Noah sings, “Love is a bottomless pit/And because of you I’m falling forever in it,” evoking the gothic wordplay of inspirations like Nick Cave and Leonard Cohen. Near song’s end, she unleashes a cathartic, wailing vocal before ceding the spotlight to a voice from long past: that of her grandfather, Ron Cyrus, who is heard reciting a hymn written by Eldon Lindsey Cyrus, Noah’s great grandfather. “All of my thoughts turn back to days of childhood… My father and mother, sisters and brothers, I never dreamed how far we’d roam,” Noah’s grandfather, whom they called “Pappy,” says in the vintage audio sample that inspired the album’s title. “When I hear that part of the song, I see my mom tucking me in, I see us with my dad up on the hill by the fire. Memories of us all together flood my mind,” Noah says “That’s something I really hope for. Death itself doesn’t scare me, but the chance of never seeing my loved ones together again after death, terrifies me.” She also brings to life the very first song her father, Billy Ray Cyrus, ever wrote. “With You” is a crisp electric-guitar ballad about undying devotion: “Just listen in the wind and know that I’m your friend/And always with you,” she sings. “My dad is one of my biggest influences,” Noah says. “He turned me on to so many great songs and artists. My musical inspirations came from somewhere, and more often than not, it’s been him.” “Way of the World,” with its easygoing groove, is reminiscent of Noah’s favourite song by Bob Seger, “Against the Wind,” as Langley and Cyrus trade lines and lean into the track’s free-spirit vibes — it’s reminiscent of the groundbreaking Trio album by Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt, and Emmylou Harris. The lyrics underscore Noah’s mature writing style, as she charts a life from birth to its end: “You can’t return to the safe space you lost,” she sings, “From your mother’s womb/Into the chaos of a cold hospital room.” On “New Country,” Noah plants her flag of independence, with harmonies from Shelton, whose appearance co-signs Noah as a true country songwriter. “All these eyes on you/Waiting on you to fall/Cause the box they put you in/Just don’t fit you anymore,” goes one lyric. Elsewhere, she writes about being unable to ever go back: “Then you have to find new country.” “It’s a song about finding a new place in life, about walking on your own two feet, and realizing that change is the only thing that’s constant,” she says. “The only way out is through.” On I WANT MY LOVED ONES TO GO WITH ME Noah Cyrus continues to walk, confident in the knowledge that she’s finally found herself and hopeful that listeners will too. On 18th July, Noah Cyrus will be headlining Islington Assembly Hall in London for a special album release show, and on September 12 she’ll embark on her North American headline tour. To read more exclusive articles and latest news, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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Shrewsbury Folk Festival Tickets Selling Out Fast for 2025 Edition

Tickets for the 2025 Shrewsbury Folk Festival are selling fast, as one of the UK’s most beloved music events gears up for another unforgettable summer celebration. Running over four days, the festival brings together a world-class lineup of folk, world, and Americana artists across four vibrant stages. Held in Shrewsbury’s picturesque showground, the event offers more than just music. Festival-goers can experience everything from high-energy ceilidhs and intimate acoustic sets to inspiring workshops, late-night sessions, and dedicated spaces for children and teens. Camping, craft classes, yoga sessions, countryside walks, and live performances create an immersive experience for all ages. Families will enjoy the kids’ programme featuring crafts, circus skills, and silent discos, while adults can take in the diverse performances and activities on offer. With its warm atmosphere, international acclaim, and strong sense of community, the Shrewsbury Folk Festival remains a highlight of the summer calendar. The festival will take place at West Mid Showground from 22nd – 25th August. To read more exclusive articles and latest news, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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‘Your Roots Are Showing’ to Host Curated Tour of Ireland

Your Roots Are Showing, Ireland’s Folk Conference and innovative event makers, Lark & Owl Ltd., have announced that seats are now available for  The Irish Mix Tape Tour, a six-day boutique tour blending live music, whiskey tastings, and cultural exploration, set against the backdrop of Ireland’s stunning east coast. Taking place January 8–13, 2026, and based at the elegant Bellinter House in County Meath, this limited-capacity experience is headlined by acclaimed Nashville-based artist, Kenny Sharp, known for his signtaure style which melds soul, country, folk and Americana. Guests will enjoy acoustic performances and private whiskey tastings hosted by Sharp, curated day trips to Carlingford, Belfast, Dublin and Newgrange, and a relaxed, high-quality itinerary designed to connect and inspire. The tour also includes full registration to Your Roots Are Showing – Ireland’s Folk Conference and a ticket to the opening concert, Folk in Fusion, held in Belfast. The Irish Mix Tape is a six-day boutique tour blending music, culture, great food, and even better company. Stay in a stunning countryside manor, explore some of Ireland’s most iconic sites, and experience live performances, whiskey tastings, and unforgettable moments along the way. This edition features special guest Kenny Sharp, a Soul/R&B meets Americana/Country artist based in Nashville whose music brings warmth and energy to every room. From trad sessions to acoustic sets and the buzz of Belfast to the calm of Carlingford, this tour is designed for people who love music, stories, and making memories that stick. To read more exclusive articles and latest news, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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Tami Neilson Duets with Neill Finn on NEON COWGIRL Album

Tami Neilson, a Canadian native who calls New Zealand home, has teamed up with fellow Kiwi and Crowded House frontman Neil Finn for the fourth single from her upcoming album, NEON COWGIRL, her highly-anticipated follow up to Kingmaker. Tami and Neil duet on the title track, an autobiographical song dedicated to a younger version of herself, a girl who spent her childhood on the road performing in her family’s gospel band, The Neilsons. The version of herself that left Canada and her brother and longtime collaborator, Jay Neilson, to make a new life and start a family of her own in New Zealand. After decades in the musical trenches, her dreams were starting to come true. In 2023 she and Jay played the Ryman for the first time and 2024 found her wowing the audience at her Grand Ole Opry debut. Tami shares the story behind the song, saying: “I wish I could time travel and play this song for past versions of myself. The teenager sleeping on the floor on a mattress after her family band had lost everything. She got a job at the makeup counter of a local pharmacy. Her small paycheque supported all five of them for a while. ‘Fall at Your Feet’ by Crowded House played multiple times a day through the pharmacy speakers. She sang the harmony quietly, feeling defeated and wondering if she’d ever be in music again. “The 27-year-old who sat in the audience with her brother Jay in the darkness of Toronto’s Massey Hall, listening to Neil Finn and his brother Tim sing ‘Disembodied Voices,’ a song about siblings. She grabbed Jay’s hand while they both cried, knowing she was moving across the world to New Zealand in just a few weeks. “Two decades later, I walked through the doors of the Ryman Auditorium to fulfill a lifelong dream of performing on that stage for the first time. Neil had invited me to open for Crowded House —the Kiwis invading Nashville! Jay was by my side, my husband and children in the wings, the Finns watched side stage, the audience were on their feet and the Neon Cowgirl shone down on us all.” On July 11, NEON COWGIRL will be released on Outside Music. The album features guests JD McPherson, Neil Finn, Grace Bowers, and Ashley McBryde and Shelly Fairchild, who co-wrote Tami’s current Americana radio single, “Borrow My Boots.” Following dates in France, Belgium, and the Netherlands, Tami and her band joined Willie Nelson, and then Willie and Bob Dylan, on select dates on the 2025 Outlaw Music Festival tour. They also played Willie’s Fourth of July Picnic and were invited back for two appearances at the The Grand Ole Opry. The “fire-breathing R&B belter” (Rolling Stone) and “full-tilt badass” (Saving Country Music) is still chasing that dream, and with NEON COWGIRL, she may well have achieved it. To read more exclusive articles and latest news, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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The Monday Moment

British country trio Remember Monday made history at Eurovision 2025, proving that heartfelt harmonies and genre-defying grit can resonate far beyond Nashville’s borders. When Remember Monday were announced as the United Kingdom’s official entry for Eurovision 2025, a ripple of disbelief ran through the country music community — the good kind. For fans of the genre, long accustomed to living in the cultural margins of UK mainstream music, this wasn’t just a win for three talented women. It was a milestone. It was proof that British country music, long simmering beneath the surface, had finally taken the spotlight.  Eurovision, known for its glitter, drama and unapologetic pop excess, has never been particularly synonymous with pedal steel guitars or three-part harmony. Yet Remember Monday — a female country-pop trio armed with powerhouse vocals and emotionally resonant lyrics — managed to not only cut through the noise but to top the national vote, securing their place on the continent’s most flamboyant stage. For many, it wasn’t just unexpected. It was historic.  In the same way that Sam Ryder’s chart-storming success in 2022 reminded the UK how to take Eurovision seriously, Remember Monday’s 2025 entry reminded it how to do so sincerely. Their selection didn’t feel like a gimmick. It felt like the natural outcome of a movement — the rise of country music in the UK, the mainstreaming of a sound once seen as niche, and the sheer magnetism of three artists who refused to compromise who they were.  From open mics to arena stages, from The Voice UK to Malmö, Sweden — the journey of Remember Monday is not just a story about Eurovision. It’s about a band that brought British country music home, then took it to the world.  Meet Remember Monday  Before Eurovision, before national headlines, and long before their harmonies echoed across Europe, Remember Monday were three friends trying to carve out a space for country music in a land more familiar with Britpop and grime. Formed in 2018, the trio — Holly-Ann Hull, Charlotte Steele, and Lauren Byrne — met through a shared background in musical theatre and soon discovered a mutual love for storytelling, melody, and the Nashville sound.  To read the full article, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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Shrewsbury Folk Festival: Where the Fiddle Finds the Fire

Set in the heart of Shropshire, Shrewsbury Folk Festival, taking place 22-25 August, blends tradition and twang in a four-day celebration of music, movement, and soulful storytelling. There’s something about the sound of a fiddle floating over open fields that makes your heart stand still. Not for long, mind you. Because before you know it, your boots are tapping, your hips are swinging, and some stranger’s pulled you into a reel without so much as a howdy. That’s the Shrewsbury Folk Festival—where folk meets fire, and a small English town becomes a stomping ground for sounds older than the hills but fresher than this morning’s coffee.  Nestled on the edge of Shropshire’s rolling countryside, the festival doesn’t shout. It doesn’t need to. Instead, it hums—steadily, soulfully—like a tune you’ve heard before but can’t quite place. Maybe it’s because this place knows its roots. You won’t find glitz or gimmick here. No neon stages or laser shows. What you will find is authenticity carved into every tent peg, every song lyric, every pint pulled under canvas.  A Festival Built on Spirit, Not Spotlight  Shrewsbury isn’t trying to be something it’s not. That’s its quiet magic. It’s not trying to catch trends—it’s just catching songs. The kind passed down over kitchen tables or hollered across Appalachian hillsides. Here, the festival pulses with the energy of storytellers, wanderers, heritage-carriers and the curious alike. It’s a celebration that wears its legacy lightly, but proudly.  The grounds feel less like an event and more like a gathering—like the campfire your grandparents talked about, where music wasn’t a performance but a pulse. Children run barefoot between craft stalls, teenagers discover old songs that suddenly feel new, and long-time festivalgoers nod knowingly over tankards and tunes. You’re as likely to see a mandolin circle break out next to the food trucks as you are to find a crowd two-stepping to some rhythm that tastes of Nashville and Norfolk all at once.  The site itself is a tidy sprawl: big enough to get lost in the sound, small enough to still feel like a secret. It’s the kind of festival that welcomes everyone, from the solo backpacker with a banjo to families three generations deep.  Where Folk Gets Grit, and Country Gets Roots  Musically, Shrewsbury Folk Festival is a map of tangled roots. Sure, the word “folk” might conjure finger-in-the-ear ballads and sea shanties—and you’ll find those here, sung with soul and honesty. But what surprises many is how far that word stretches. Shrewsbury doesn’t gatekeep genre; it gathers. It takes folk’s bones and dresses them in blues, in roots-rock, in gospel harmony and bluegrass twang.  To read the full article, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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Encore: Ian Flanigan

Ian Flanigan was the runner-up on the 19th season of The Voice USA. Flanigan then released album ‘Strong’ and there’s a song on there that features Blake Shelton, and more recently, new single “Second Chances”. First song that you learned all the words to?  My memory and brain is so fried these days, I can’t remember the first one. I remember that with my guitar teacher one of the first songs I learned when I was like 12, was Green Day off the record Dookie. I remember pretty much every song on that. I know. I learned, I think almost every song on that record.  A song that makes you think of touring?  For me, it would be Blaze Foley, probably ‘Clay Pigeons’. Just because when I personally think of touring I’m always thinking of like West Texas. I got my start out there and those long highways and Blaze Foley on the radio, for me that’s what it is.  A song that reminds you of growing up?  This is where my brain has it’s limits. I gotta say probably Hotel California or D’yer Mak’er by Led Zeppelin. I think I played that song more than anybody.  A live show that changed your life?  I was fortunate enough to be on the TV show, The Voice. But before that, the show that changed my life was, I did a guest appearance for Bob Schneider at Austin City Limits. And that was my first time as an independent artist on a really big stage like that.  A song you can no longer listen to?  Probably some random song from high school. I think I can listen to any song at any time though.  An album that made you want to be a musician?   I grew up with two records that my father played a lot. I had the box set of Creedance Clearwater Revival as a kid and John Fogarty and I’d say I had an Eric Clapton album unplugged when I was a kid that really guided me to be an Acoustic Guitarist.   How did The Voice shape you as a musician?  It was such a humbling experience. It was a real learning experience for me, because I’d been touring for so long but it gives you an insight into the working on a whole different level. Normal touring, where you’re just doing live shows, it’s a whole different world than like TV or production. So I think it changed me as an artist by getting a better perspective of the back end of it, and all that’s going on.  To read the full article, see our last issue here. Never miss a story… Follow us on: Instagram: @Maverick.mag Twitter: @Maverick_mag Facebook: Maverick Magazine Media Contact Editor, Maverick Magazine Tel: +44 (0) 1622 823 920 Email: editor@maverick-country.com

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