Jan 20, 2022

Jamey Johnson, Randy Houser coming to the Stiefel Theatre

Posted Jan 20, 2022 2:20 AM

By SALINA POST

Jamey Johnson and Randy Houser are bringing their Country Cadillac Tour to the Stiefel Theatre.

Jamey Johnson and Randy Houser: A Special Acoustic Performance Together, Part 2 is scheduled for 8 p.m. April 14 in the Stiefel Theatre, 151 S. Santa Fe Avenue.

Tickets start at $49 and go on sale at noon on Friday. Tickets may be be purchased online at stiefeltheatre.org. Tickets also are available at the Stiefel box office from noon-5 p.m. Monday through Friday, and by calling 785-827-1998.

Check the Stiefel website for current COVID-19 policies.

Following is performer information as provided by the Stiefel Theatre.

<b>Jamey Johnson.&nbsp;</b> Photo by Charles Reagan Hackleman courtesy Stiefel Theatre
Jamey Johnson.  Photo by Charles Reagan Hackleman courtesy Stiefel Theatre

Jamey Johnson
Eleven-time Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Jamey Johnson is “one of the greatest country singers of our time,” according to the Washington Post. He is one of only a few people in the history of country music to win two Song of the Year Awards from both the CMA and ACMs. His 2008 album, That Lonesome Song, was certified platinum for 1 million in sales, and his 2010 ambitious double album, The Guitar Song, received a gold certification. In addition, he won two Song of the Year trophies, for Give It Away  and  In Color, both from the Academy of Country Music and the Country Music Association. He has received tremendous praise from The New York Times, Rolling Stone, The Wall Street Journal and other publications, many of which have hailed his albums as masterpieces.

In 2012, the Alabama native released his fifth studio album, a tribute project to late songwriter Hank Cochran. The Grammy-nominated Living for a Song: A Tribute to Hank Cochran paired him with Willie Nelson, Alison Krauss, Emmylou Harris, Ray Price, Elvis Costello, George Strait, Vince Gill, and Merle Haggard. In 2013, the Nashville Scene’s 13th annual Country Music Critics’ Poll named it the year’s best album. Two years earlier, the same poll named Johnson’s The Guitar Song as the year's best album, and Johnson himself as best male vocalist, best songwriter and artist of the year.

<b>Randy Houser.</b> Photo courtesy Stiefel Theatre
Randy Houser. Photo courtesy Stiefel Theatre

Randy Houser
With an inimitable voice the New York Times describes as “wholly different, thicker and more throbbing, a caldron bubbling over,” Houser racked up three consecutive No. 1 hits with his album, How Country Feels, plus earned critical acclaim for his powerful delivery of the Top 5 smash and CMA Song of the Year-nominated Like A Cowboy. Houser added a fourth No. 1 to his catalog with We Went from his 2016 album, Fired Up.

Houser’s fourth studio album, Magnolia, marks a new era for the singer/songwriter which many have called “Houser at his best.” Listeners got their first taste of Houser’s critically acclaimed rootsy project with the Top 30 hit What Whiskey Does,  which debuted at Country radio as No. 1 Most Added and Rolling Stone immediately dubbed “a classic tears-and-twang drinking song.” The album, which NPR claims is home to “some of the most expressive performances of his career,” also includes his single, No Stone Unturned, a gypsy-hearted traveling song that Whiskey Riff calls “the best song, from the best album of 2019.”

In early 2021, Houser teamed up with good friend Jamey Johnson to share the stage on their unforgettable co-headlining Country Cadillac Tour. The tour, amongst the first routed tours in 2021 consisted of 18 social distanced tour dates and a one-of-a-kind live stream: Live from Graceland from the iconic home of Elvis Presley.