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Alex Williamswith George Shingleton& Erin Viancourt
Fri, 1 Mar, 8:00 PM CST
Doors open
6:00 PM CST
3rd and Lindsley
818 3rd Ave. S, Nashville, TN 37210
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Tickets are currently unavailable on TicketWeb
Description
"I grew up on 80's hair metal," Alex Williams says with a laugh. "My dad listened
to Cinderella and Ratt, so that was my musical upbringing until I was about 16.
That's when my grandparents played me 'Dreaming My Dreams' by Waylon
Jennings and 'Red Headed Stranger' by Willie Nelson."
It would be hard to overstate the importance of those records on Alex Williams'
life. After hearing them, he traded in his electric guitar for an acoustic, dove deep
into classic country music, and, most importantly, began writing his own songs.
Roughly a decade later, Williams is releasing his debut album, 'Better Than
Myself,' and much like Willie and Waylon, he's doing it on his own terms.
"It seems like there's a lot of people out there just trying to get through the day,"
reflects Williams. "They're working a job they don't love or following somebody
else's dreams just because it's safe and it keeps them comfortable. I didn't want
to be like that."
Williams was born just outside Indianapolis, in the small town of Pendleton, IN.
After graduating from high school, he relocated to Nashville for a short-lived stint
at Belmont University, but he quickly dropped out after realizing he could learn
more about life by hitting the road and experiencing it than he ever could in a
classroom.
Williams had a band with some of his former college classmates, and by the time
he was ready to make the leap and go solo, buzz about the group had caught the
ear of Big Machine Label Group's Julian Raymond. While Big Machine might be
best known as home to crossover stars like Taylor Swift, Raymond's illustrious
pedigree as a GRAMMY-winning songwriter and producer included work with old
school greats like Glen Campbell and Hank Williams Jr., and he sensed
something special in Williams.
It's an arresting moment, and an apt metaphor for a songwriter with the ability to
lodge his melodies and lyrics deep beneath your skin. Forget fame and fortune,
hits and hype. As far as Williams is concerned, the legacy you leave behind with
the ones you care about most is the true measure of any man. With that in mind,
and with a debut album as good as 'Better Than Myself' under his belt, it's clear
that Alex Williams is here to do more than just survive.
Event Information
Age Limit
All Ages

Country Soul
George Shingleton
George Shingleton
Country Soul
Generations of Shingleton men have played an amalgam of bluegrass and the Appalachian "hill country" music familiar in their area of rural West Virginia, but George Shingleton was the first to make the move from the local church choir to Nashville.
"We were all taught that blood was basically your savior and your lifeline, and how close we needed to be to one another," Shingleton says. "We didn't grow up with money at all, but the 'family-ness' was very, very rich in our household, and I could never have asked for anything better."
Despite a childhood spent with music at the forefront, Shingleton didn't seriously begin writing songs until he was an adult. A number of years into making music his full-time job, it's still Shingleton's family, as well as his friends and fans, who drive him to go after this dream.
"I know that I couldn't keep doing what I'm doing without the support from people who really care about the music that I'm putting out," says Shingleton. His wife, Emily, saw his potential and was the person who initially encouraged him to pursue this career, and his fans are the reason he keeps pursuing it. "I've been doin' this a long time," Shingleton adds. "The reason I know I can do it is because of them."
All that support certainly isn't misplaced. Shingleton's second full-length album, 2020's Out All Nighter, proved him "a skilled song craftsman and a talented vocalist... straddling the line between outlaw country and southern rock in his own original style" (Glide Magazine). His Shot or Two EP, released in January 2023, paired him once again with dear friend Dave Pahanish -- who has co-written #1 singles for Toby Keith, Keith Urban, and Jimmy Wayne -- as his producer, and Shingleton is working on more new material, to be released later this year.
Among those new songs are "Beer Drinkin' Women," co-written with Justin Wilson, a "let-your-hair-down, have-a-good-time" track -- a rarity for Shingleton, the artist admits -- and "I Can't Let You Go," a brokenhearted ballad with a darker, more rock-leaning edge. Neither, however, is completely out of left field for Shingleton, who as a teenager fell in love with the outlaw country and southern rock sounds of the Allman Brothers Band, Merle Haggard, Waylon Jennings, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Hank Williams Jr.
"I don't feel like I'm straying away from any of my roots, but I feel like these new songs are a little more accessible," says Shingleton, whose music toes the blurry lines between Americana, country, blues, southern rock, and gospel. The man with the "rich baritone full of love and comfort" (Americana Highways) remains committed to maintaining authenticity and integrity within his stories and sound -- a move that has, throughout his career, garnered him the respect of artists such as Bucky Covington, Charlie Daniels, John Michael Montgomery, Darryl Worley, and others who have invited Shingleton to share the stage.
In addition to earning spots on a variety of digital music playlists -- Apple Music's "Country Roads," "Back Porch Country," "New in Country," and "Country Lovin'"; Spotify's "New Music Nashville"; and Amazon Music's "Fresh Folk & Americana" -- Shingleton's songs have found their way onto television. His 2021 single "West Virginia Moon" was used in the fly-fishing show "Fly Rod Chronicles," and another of his songs, "Restless Ways," was featured in an episode of the hit TV series "Yellowstone."
Prior to the pandemic, Shingleton began livestreaming regularly on Facebook, and fans eager to see him perform can catch him monthly on his Facebook page for his "Tuesday Night Tunes" series, which more than 1.4 million viewers have tuned in to watch. In 2023, though, Shingleton is eager to be out on the road more often, after years as a "weekend warrior."
"I just want to be playing my music for people," he asserts. "I want to make music that people can connect to in times of both celebration and sadness. Music brings us together in such a universal way."

Country
Erin Viancourt
Erin Viancourt
Country
Full-hearted, free-spirited, and irresistibly genuine, Erin Viancourt’s take on country music is both timeless and entirely attuned to the chaos of modern life. On her debut album Won’t Die This Way, the Cleveland-bred singer/songwriter/ guitarist brings her lived-in storytelling to a gritty but gorgeously detailed batch of songs, encompassing everything from Americana to Western swing to classic outlaw country. Rooted in the warm and radiant vocal presence she’s shown onstage in touring arenas with Cody Jinks (who recently made Viancourt the first signing to his Late August Records), Won’t Die This Way ultimately reveals her rare capacity to soothe the soul and leave the listener newly empowered to live each day to the absolute fullest.
