get app
Inscrição
Iniciar sessão
James McMurtry
Continental Club
1315 S Congress Ave
Austin, TX 78704
23 de abr. de 2024
22:00 GMT-5
Eu estive lá
Avaliar
Encontre um lugar para ficar
Programação do evento
Upcoming concerts from similar artists
Merch (ad)
The Horses and the Hounds
$13.99
Americana Master Series: Best of the ...
$10.98
Childish Things
$24.99
Saint Mary Of The Woods
$10.98
It Had To Happen
$10.98
Just Us Kids
$12.98
Live in Europe [Vinyl]
$18.98
Walk Between The Raindrops
$10.98
Live in Aught-Three
$20.23
Where'D You Hide The Body
$4.92
Live Photos
Ver todas as fotos
What fans are saying
Jay
18 de fevereiro de 2024
He’s a great artist and songwriter and even better performer. Played for 2 1/2 hours! I thought of Springsteen! He did one song with no amplification - just him and his voice and it was a cool move, in the end. At first it seemed like a mistake… Then everybody stopped even a whisper - the place quieted down to making no noise at all, and all we could hear was the rain, his voice and the guitar. A very risky move that turned out really well.
Tampa, FL@Skipper's Smokehouse
Descubra mais artistas para seguir e sincronize suas músicas
Encontre seus favoritos
Compartilhar evento
About the venue
Follow Venue
James McMurtry Biography
James L. McMurtry, along with his Austin-based band, James McMurtry & The Heartless Bastards, is a self-described "rock & roots" guitarist and singer-songwriter, drawing on elements of alt-country, folk and old-fashioned texas rock.
The son of novelist Larry McMurtry, James was born in Fort Worth, Texas in 1962, and grew up in Virginia. James McMurtry's seventh studio album, Childish Things, was released on Compadre Records in the fall of 2005. As writer L.E.Brady notes, "The album includes McMurtry's statement on American decline - We Can't Make It Here - his most unabashedly political number yet."
Ler maisThe son of novelist Larry McMurtry, James was born in Fort Worth, Texas in 1962, and grew up in Virginia. James McMurtry's seventh studio album, Childish Things, was released on Compadre Records in the fall of 2005. As writer L.E.Brady notes, "The album includes McMurtry's statement on American decline - We Can't Make It Here - his most unabashedly political number yet."
Alternative Country
Folk
Country
Singer
Songwriter
Seguir artista