Lucky Man Concerts Present
JIM DALTON & AMIGOS HOLIDAY BRUNCH
Sunday, December 7th 2025
Doors at 11:00am / Show at 12:00pm
16+
General Admission Ticket: $35 - 40 + fees
Bleachers Ticket: $45 - 50 + fees
Sun Dec 7 2025
12:00 PM (Doors 11:00 AM)
$44.52
Ages 16+
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Lucky Man Concerts Presents
JIM DALTON & AMIGOS HOLIDAY BRUNCH
-
Jim Dalton blurs the lines between rock & roll, alt-country, and beyond, balancing his solo records with band projects like the Railbenders, Roger Clyne & the Peacemakers, and the Hickman-Dalton Gang. It's been a diverse and dynamic career — one that's earned Dalton a spot in the Arizona Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame, as well as numerous "Best Of" awards from the Colorado press and a cross-country audience that spans both sides of the Mexican border.
In My Head, his solo debut, arrived in 2021. While playing those songs live, Dalton began inviting a rotating cast of musician friends to serve as his backing band. Known as "The Amigos," the group regularly featured members of the Tucson-based band The Jons, as well as Jeremy Lawton (multi-instrumentalist of Big Head Todd & the Monsters), fellow Peacemaker Nick Scropos, and guests like Jesse Dayton and Miles Nielsen and his band.
Known for their loose, bawdy nature, those shows eventually gave way to a second solo record, 2024's The Sound Of That. An ambitious album that balanced humor with heft, The Sound Of That found Dalton offering positive messages during challenging socio-political times with tracks like "It's Gonna Be Cool," "Kinder," "Shine Your Light," and "Rose Colored Glasses."
~ Andrew Leahey, Rolling Stone
$44.52 Ages 16+
Lucky Man Concerts Present
JIM DALTON & AMIGOS HOLIDAY BRUNCH
Sunday, December 7th 2025
Doors at 11:00am / Show at 12:00pm
16+
General Admission Ticket: $35 - 40 + fees
Bleachers Ticket: $45 - 50 + fees
JIM DALTON & AMIGOS HOLIDAY BRUNCH
Sunday, December 7th 2025
Doors at 11:00am / Show at 12:00pm
16+
General Admission Ticket: $35 - 40 + fees
Bleachers Ticket: $45 - 50 + fees
Jim Dalton blurs the lines between rock & roll, alt-country, and beyond, balancing his solo records with band projects like the Railbenders, Roger Clyne & the Peacemakers, and the Hickman-Dalton Gang. It's been a diverse and dynamic career — one that's earned Dalton a spot in the Arizona Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame, as well as numerous "Best Of" awards from the Colorado press and a cross-country audience that spans both sides of the Mexican border.
In My Head, his solo debut, arrived in 2021. While playing those songs live, Dalton began inviting a rotating cast of musician friends to serve as his backing band. Known as "The Amigos," the group regularly featured members of the Tucson-based band The Jons, as well as Jeremy Lawton (multi-instrumentalist of Big Head Todd & the Monsters), fellow Peacemaker Nick Scropos, and guests like Jesse Dayton and Miles Nielsen and his band.
Known for their loose, bawdy nature, those shows eventually gave way to a second solo record, 2024's The Sound Of That. An ambitious album that balanced humor with heft, The Sound Of That found Dalton offering positive messages during challenging socio-political times with tracks like "It's Gonna Be Cool," "Kinder," "Shine Your Light," and "Rose Colored Glasses."
~ Andrew Leahey, Rolling Stone
In My Head, his solo debut, arrived in 2021. While playing those songs live, Dalton began inviting a rotating cast of musician friends to serve as his backing band. Known as "The Amigos," the group regularly featured members of the Tucson-based band The Jons, as well as Jeremy Lawton (multi-instrumentalist of Big Head Todd & the Monsters), fellow Peacemaker Nick Scropos, and guests like Jesse Dayton and Miles Nielsen and his band.
Known for their loose, bawdy nature, those shows eventually gave way to a second solo record, 2024's The Sound Of That. An ambitious album that balanced humor with heft, The Sound Of That found Dalton offering positive messages during challenging socio-political times with tracks like "It's Gonna Be Cool," "Kinder," "Shine Your Light," and "Rose Colored Glasses."
~ Andrew Leahey, Rolling Stone
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