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Jimmie Allen LIVE at Saddlebags (Nov. 13)

Fri, Nov 13

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Saddle Bags Savannah

Catch country superstar, Jimmie Allen, with hits like "Make Me Want To" & "Best Shot" live at Saddle Bags Savannah on November 13th, 2020

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Jimmie Allen LIVE at Saddlebags (Nov. 13)
Jimmie Allen LIVE at Saddlebags (Nov. 13)

Time & Location

Nov 13, 2020, 8:00 PM

Saddle Bags Savannah, 317 West River Street, Savannah, GA, USA

About the Event

*Jimmie Allen*

Opening Act: TBA

Tickets: www.saddlebagsbar.com

General Admission Tickets Available NOW

This event is 21 and up.

Must show photo ID at the door.

Doors at 8pm

The entirety of the venue is general admission standing room.

Jimmy Allen Bio:

For breakthrough country artist Jimmie Allen, a simple phrase sums up his view on life and music: Never give up.

A native of Southern Delaware – the “slower, lower” part of the state, he explains – Allen has carried that mantra with him through good times and bad, whether than meant living in his car or receiving his first ACM Nomination for New Male Artist of The Year in 2019.

He poured out his soul at Music City’s famous Bluebird Cafe, wrote a song that was featured in a Super Bowl commercial, and appeared in a Diet Coke ad with superstar Taylor Swift. But now with the release of his debut album Mercury Lane – named in tribute to the street he grew up on and the origin of his incredible journey – on BBR Music Group’s Stoney Creek Records, a lifetime of never giving up has brought him full circle.

“I didn’t quit, I never will,” he says. “Stuff ain’t easy, and you shouldn’t quit either. There’s a big difference between busting your ass, and sitting on it.”

For Allen, musical dreams and a love of true-to-themselves artists like Alan Jackson, Aaron Tippin, Montgomery Gentry, and Jason Aldean brought him all the way to Nashville – and eventually around the world for an Armed Forces Entertainment tour of Japan.

But it was actually a nightmare which turned this promising singer into the artist he is today. After a series of bad breaks, Allen was forced to live in his car, too proud to ask for a bailout. For months he worked multiple jobs and finally saved enough for an apartment, but hit then another snag – country music wasn’t ready for him.

“People were just trying to help,” he says now. “But they wanted me to change my sound and told me I had to lose my boots. The turning point came when I stopped listening, and finally, let my music be a natural reflection of who I am.”

Since then Allen has been following his own compass, and it’s leading somewhere special.

“I don’t regret it,” he explains about his trials. “I think each thing you do adds a layer, whether it’s a layer of toughness, perseverance, motivation, or just a layer of wisdom. At the end of the day, you come back to what you know, and what’s embedded in you.”

What’s embedded in Allen is a powerful, soulful sense of groove – “If my body don’t move in the first four seconds, it ain’t for me,” he says – a love of deep messages and a knack for razor-sharp hooks.

Those driving forces form the bedrock of Mercury Lane, a cutting-edge mix of country, rock, R&B, and pop produced by Ash Bowers and Eric Torres; the project received critical acclaim, with Rolling Stone raving that it “challenges the narrowly defined model of what constitutes a next big thing in country music” and The New York Times hailing it one of 2018’s strongest, calling it a “conventional country album, filled with songs about the small details.” Ironically, it’s the same sound he had when he first arrived in Nashville, but now things are different.

“Underdogs” and “Best Shot” reveal Allen’s true story of laying it all on the line, while “Back Home to You,” “Back of Your Mind,” and “Blue Jean Baby” find the singer-songwriter reflecting on his journey to the spotlight – with all the love he left behind and romantic hopes included.

Allen’s hard-won dreams are finally a reality, but he knows he can’t rest now. Wrapped around his wrist is a homemade bracelet given to him by a fan. It bears another simple phrase – “explore” – and now it serves as a daily reminder.

“To me, it means to explore every part of your heart that desires to do something,” he says. “No matter what it is. Take a chance and never stop until you figure out where you’re supposed to be.”

For Allen, those chances have paid off. He has made history as the first black artist to launch a career with two consecutive No. 1 hits on country radio, with “Best Shot” claiming the No. 1 spot for three weeks and his second single “Make Me Want To” hitting the top spot in March 2020.

His current single “This Is Us” is a genre-defying track featuring Noah Cyrus and co-written by Cyrus, Tyler Hubbard of Florida Georgia Line, Jordan Schmidt, Ilsey Juber, and Dernst “D’Mile” Emile II. “This Is Us” was the most added song at country radio in its first impact week and continues to ascend the charts.

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