ON SALE FRIDAY, JANUARY 14 AT 10 AM!
Fox Concerts & Exceptional Artists present
MERLE HAGGARD &
KRIS KRISTOFFERSON
March 9 at 8 pm
Live at The Fox Theatre!
$68, $58, & $48
Limit of 8 tickets per customer
On-Sale Information:
Tickets on sale Friday, January 14 at 10 am!
Purchase tickets at the Fox Box Office,
MetroTix outlets or by calling 314/534-1111.
Order tickets online at www.metrotix.com
Two icons of American music, Merle Haggard and Kris Kristofferson, come together for a landmark evening of timeless,
storytelling songs at the Fabulous Fox Theatre on March 9 at 8 p.m. Backed by an elegant, six-man version of Haggard’s
legendary road band, the Strangers, the two sing their classics: Kristofferson delivers “Me and Bobby McGee,” “Help Me
Make It Through the Night,” “For the Good Times” and “Sunday Morning Coming Down.” Haggard serves up “Working
Man Blues,” “If We Make it Through December,” “Today I Started Loving You Again” and, naturally, “Okie from
Muskogee.” The two never leave the stage, often singing harmonies on each other’s songs and swapping tales about the
Army (Kristofferson), prison (Haggard), Louisiana Oil rigs (Kristofferson) and stealing Buck Owens’ wife (Haggard).
“They remain true to their musical and personal roots, and they explore the everyday world of common people,” describes
Mario Tarradell in the Dallas Morning News. “They vent, dream, reflect and examine.”
The man behind country music’s working man’s anthems, MERLE HAGGARD recently joined Sir Paul McCartney,
Oprah Winfrey and Broadway composer Jerry Herman as a Kennedy Center Honoree. The televised awards presentation
included performances of Merle Haggard compositions by Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson, Sheryl Crow, Miranda
Lambert and Vince Gill, all paying tribute to the man who has hung his soul on the line with songs that bring a lyrical
depth to tales of hard living. Ever the lonesome fugitive, outlaw and flesh-and-bones performer, Haggard weaves his oneof-
a-kind vocal textures to reveal the heart and soul of a musician who may be the most well-rounded country talent ever
to take the stage.
KRIS KRISTOFFERSON rose through the ranks literally holding a broom. The Rhodes Scholar turned down a teaching
position at West Point for a job as a janitor at Columbia Records in Nashville. Music City soon took notice. The prolific
entertainer ventured into acting in 1971 with leads in A Star is Born, Convoy, Where the Red Fern Grows and most
recently, the cult-favorite Blade vampire series. Still, he has always considered himself a writer, weaving themes of love,
war, aging, gratitude and more into a rich and remarkable soundtrack that has continued to grow through the years.
# # #
No comments:
Post a Comment