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Enjoy a night of country music with Joe Nichols at The Bowl on Saturday, September 20! Doors open at 7 p.m. on show day. Get your tickets for a show you won’t want to miss!
In a genre that has occasionally drifted away from its three chords and the truth mission statement, Joe Nichols has never wavered. “I’m a singer of country songs,” he declares. “That’s what I do.”
It’s that steadfast commitment to country music that’s made Joe one of Nashville’s most honest and versatile voices, regarded for his warm and distinctly country tone by everyone from Dolly Parton to Post Malone — he’s sung with both. On his new album Honky Tonks and Country Songs, Joe continues to connect country’s traditional past with its diverse present over 11 radio-ready tracks.
The ability to connect with fans both on a record and on a stage is a rare gift, but Joe — like fellow dyed-in-the-wool trad-country vocalists George Strait, Parker McCollum, and Cody Johnson —made a career out of making it look easy. Since arriving on the scene as a teenager, he’s had a knack for finding and singing just the right song for the right moment. He did it with Number One hits “The Impossible,” “Gimmie That Girl” and “Brokenheartsville” (the latter of which he and Post Malone recently duetted live in Nashville), with the irreverent chart-topper “Tequila Makes Her Clothes Fall Off,” and with the back-to-back Number Ones “Sunny and 75” and “Yeah.” He does it with cover songs too: His mashup of Hank Williams Jr.’s “A Country Boy Can Survive” and Alice in Chains’ “Rooster” is a fan favorite. It’s this same authentic connection that has earned Nichols over two billion audio streams to-date as well as three GRAMMY nominations, a CMA award, ACM and CMT Music Award trophies plus multiple gold and platinum-certified records.
“My job is to make people feel good. And sometimes that means with fun and happy songs, and other times with sad and sorrowful truths. But the goal is always to make them feel good,” Joe says. “This album is meant to do exactly that. Everyone can find a good time in a honky-tonk and a country song.”