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Tickets Going Fast for CFSB's Shenandoah Concert

Tickets Going Fast for CFSB's Shenandoah Concert
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By Jeremy Rose, CFSB
Jul. 14, 2019 | BENTON
By Jeremy Rose, CFSB Jul. 14, 2019 | 10:49 AM | BENTON
TUESDAY UPDATE: As expected, tickets for the concert at the annual CFSB Watermelon Bust on August 3 are going fast. Anyone who wants to get free tickets, which are required to see the legendary country group Shenendoah, is encouraged to get them quickly, since there were only about 100 tickets left on Tuesday afternoon. Tickets have been available since Monday morning.

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Legendary country band Shenandoah, featuring original lead singer Marty Raybon, is coming to Community Financial Services Bank's 45th Annual Watermelon Bust in Benton. The concert will take place on Saturday, Aug. 3, at the Kenneth Shadowen Performing Arts Center at Marshall County High School.

The Watermelon Bust features 2,000 lbs. of ice cold watermelon, kids games and more.  Watermelon serving, kids activities and socializing will begin at 5:00 p.m. near the rear entrance to the performing arts center, due to ongoing construction at the high school.

Doors open at 5:30 and Shenandoah will take the stage at 6:00 p.m.

The event is free, but because of the limited capacity of the venue, tickets will be required for the concert.  These free tickets will be available beginning on Monday at 8:00 a.m. at all CFSB Banking Centers while supplies last. There is a limit of 4 tickets per person, per visit.

Fueled by Raybon's distinctive vocals and the band's skilled musicianship, Shenandoah became well known for delivering such hits as "Two Dozen Roses", "Church on Cumberland Road" and "Next to You, Next to Me" as well as such achingly beautiful classics as "I Want to be Loved Like That" and the Grammy winning "Somewhere in the Vicinity of the Heart" duet with Alison Krauss.

Today, that legacy continues as original members Raybon and Mike McGuire reunite to launch a new chapter in Shenandoah's storied career. It all began when the guys got back together to perform a benefit concert for a friend battling cancer.  

"It's kind of like riding a bicycle," McGuire says of the band reigniting that chemistry on stage. "We had done so many shows over the years together, even though we spent 17 years apart, we got back up on the stage and it was like we never stopped. We knew those songs inside out. They were still dear to our hearts. It was great to get back up there and do them together again."

Raybon and McGuire formed the band in 1984 in Muscle Shoals, Alabama with bassist Ralph Ezell, keyboardist Stan Thorn and guitarist Jim Seales. McGuire invited noted producer Robert Byrne out to see the band perform and he was so impressed he recorded a demo on the group and pitched them to Columbia Records. 

Shenandoah inked a deal with the legendary label and began establishing a national fan base with their self-titled debut in 1987. However, it was the band's sophomore effort, The Road Not Taken, that spawned their first top ten hits— "She Doesn't Cry Anymore" and "Mama Knows."

Shenandoah followed with three consecutive No. 1 hits— "Church on Cumberland Road," "Sunday  in the South" and "Two Dozen Roses." "Church on Cumberland Road" spent two weeks at the top of the chart and  made country music history as it marked the first time that a country band's first No. 1 single spent more than one week at the summit. 

"We knew a hit song when we heard one," Raybon says. "We are songwriters and we wrote some of those hits, but we really prided ourselves on having an ear for songs. Mike, in particular, has always been a good song guy. When he played us a song he found, we knew it was going to be special."

Shenandoah became known for delivering songs that celebrated the importance of faith and family while reveling in the joys of small town life. "Next to You, Next to Me" topped the charts for three weeks and "Somewhere in the Vicinity of the Heart," a duet with Alison Krauss, won a Country Music Association Award for Vocal Event of the year and a Grammy for Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.  Shenandoah also won the Academy of Country Music's Vocal Group of the Year in 1991.

"When you hear Marty Raybon sing there's nobody that sounds like him," McGuire says. "There's nobody that's got the same chops that he's got and he's singing from his heart. That's one of the reasons that everybody wants to hear him sing. Marty and me, we go way back. We've done a lot of things together and we love each other like brothers."

Shenandoah recorded nine studio albums and placed 26 singles on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart. Though they've secured their place in country music history, Raybon and McGuire aren't content to rest on their laurels and are currently working on new Shenandoah music.

"I've spent the last 15 years looking for hit songs," McGuire says. "We have access to really top drawer material, and have found some great songs that we will be producing ourselves."

Even as Shenandoah records new music and hits the road on their upcoming tour, Raybon will still perform select solo dates. In the years since he exited Shenandoah, he's established himself as an award-winning bluegrass artist, a natural home for his soulful country voice.

Though much has happened since Raybon and Shenandoah parted ways, the bond has never been broken. It was music that brought them together and music that continues to bind them as they enter this next chapter.

"We were fortunate enough to have songs that seemed to touch a great deal of people and while doing so it created a lot of memories," says Raybon. "I truly do believe that there are seasons in life and I believe that there is a time and a place when God allows things. We've sat down and talked about reuniting before but it wasn't the right time for it then, but I do believe it is time for it now."

McGuire agreed.

"We are really proud of the quality of the material that we have in our catalog and how it's touched so many people's lives," McGuire says. "As far as the future goes, I'm expecting more of the same. We're still the same guys. Marty still has the same voice he had back in that day and I still have the same harmonies that I sung on all those records. I expect the records we cut in the future are still going to sound like Shenandoah and the songs are going to be just as good."

 

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