Jesse Dayton
W/ Mike Stinson
Saturday | September 14, 2024
on StageOne
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Details
What You Need to Know
Onsale Schedule
Primo Presale  Mon 7/22 | 12PM
Classic Presale  Thu 7/25 | 12PM
Public Onsale  Fri 7/26 | 10AM
Pricing
Standard $32
$25 + $7 Fees
Member $29
$22 + $7 Fees
Fees apply to phone & internet purchases
Event Schedule
7PM  Doors
8PM  Show
Times subject to change
Description
Study Up

Jesse Dayton isn’t just an unsung hero of modern-day American music; he’s a towering figure in the realm of Outlaw Country, a master storyteller who effortlessly blurs the boundaries between genres and disciplines. With a career spanning multiple decades, Dayton has left an indelible mark as a chart-topping songwriter, guitar virtuoso, author, frontman, sideman, producer, and relentless road warrior. From his early days with the Road Kings, where he fearlessly melded Texas Rockabilly and Country with the raw energy of Punk Rock, Dayton has been a trailblazer. His innovative style not only earned him acclaim but also paved the way for collaborations with legends like Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, and Kris Kristofferson. Over the years, Dayton’s collaborations have spanned a diverse array of artists, from blues sensation Samantha Fish—his partner on the Grammy-nominated Death Wish Blues—to icons of country like Willie Nelson and Glenn Campbell, rock rebels such as Guns ‘N Roses’ Duff McKagan and Glenn Danzig, and even visionary horror filmmakers like Rob Zombie. Yet amidst this vast spectrum of work, Dayton’s solo albums stand as a testament to his refusal to be confined by genre, earning him recognition as a roots-rock renaissance man.

"Mike Stinson is dangerous, the kind of songwriter who can upend the way you see the world with a single line, and whose lean, mean rock and roll machine of a band usually starts at a Chuck Berry gallop and goes from there. They can crank it so hard, in fact, it’s entirely possible to miss all the diamond-tipped rejoinders, double entendres, aphorisms, and the occasional outright burn that litter Stinson’s songs, and make him one of the wickedest lyricists around today." — Houston Press