Boys From Oklahoma Heads Back to Stillwater For Round 2

August 28, 2025-Following their historic, sold-out, four-night run this past spring, Cross Canadian Ragweed and Turnpike Troubadours will bring their The Boys From Oklahoma concert back to Stillwater, OK’s Boone Pickens Stadium on Saturday, April 11, 2026. In addition to the co-headliners, the lineup will include The Great Divide, Wyatt Flores and Shane Smith & The Saints. The first Boys From Oklahoma shows in Stillwater last April brought 200,000 plus fans not only from across the U.S., but from around the globe making it the most historic event in the town’s history. A co-headlined bill between Ragweed and Turnpike Troubadours, also featuring Red Dirt icons The Great Divide, Jason Boland and The Stragglers and Stoney LaRue, manifested a monumental “lovefest” that was felt by every single person there. An additional 100,000 plus fans were left without a chance to get tickets for the initial Stillwater shows as well as the bands’ subsequent run in Waco, TX, but will now get another crack at it. Sign up to get your pre-sale password at theboysfromoklahoma.com beginning on August 28th at 10 AM CST and ending on September 3rd at 5 PM CST.

The overall sentiment shared by each member of the band about walking out on stage together for the first time after so many years is the same. It’s like when you haven’t talked to your close friend in years, and then when you do, it’s like no time has passed and you pick right back up where you left off. Randy Ragsdale (drums) described it as, “Like wearing an old pair of shoes. It felt very natural again. It was a big stage, but we stayed close like we always did.” Jeremy Plato (bass) echoed the feeling, “It brought back that old time feelin,’ getting back to the fun part of what we did. It felt like we never stopped.” Nobody in the band ever imagined the response to their reunion would be as massive as it turned out to be. Cody Canada is still reeling from it, “I had no idea we could do this. I thought it was going to be one show, then the love started pouring in. After the first one sold out, I left the house, and when I came back to find out there was going to be three more shows…I’m still in shock. When we walked out on that stage for the first time, it was pure rock and roll adrenaline.” Grady Cross (rhythm guitar) had a similar reaction. “It was hard to imagine that we could do that; sell out a stadium. I knew we made a mark as a band, and owning a pub I have heard a lot from other artists, but when I heard we sold out 4 shows, I had to go for a drive to process it. We felt so much love from everyone, a vibe that was in the air the whole way through.” Plato was equally stunned. “I didn’t know we had that kind of impact on that scale.” That kind of “impact” is a situation that can put a town on alert, and also inspire local legislation. With Stillwater having a population of 50,000, the 200,000 pouring into town for the concert can make a wide-open space seem rather crowded. Yet not a single fight broke out at any of the shows. After it was over, Canada spoke to police who told him how great their fans were. “It was a true reunion; everyone was so happy.” Plato agrees wholeheartedly, “There was no time for fighting, people were too busy having fun. It was the most Oklahoma concert ever for the Red Dirtiest time.”

The Boys From Oklahoma Round 2 event will fall smack dab in the middle of Red Dirt Music Week (April 7-13), a newly instated celebration decreed by Stillwater Mayor William H. Joyce immediately following the landslide of tickets sales for the original shows. The reunion type atmosphere both inside the stadium and along the streets of Stillwater represents the very definition of the Red Dirt music culture, and the artists that create its soundtrack. It’s about sharing; sharing the love, sharing the music, and sharing the stage, so it comes as no surprise that Ragweed’s set features many of their friends throughout their performance. “For a lot of our friends to be there with us…means the world.” Canada explains. “We have always shared the stage, and we always will.” As the guys gear up for the return to what is sure to be the sequel to another epic event, the love and reverence continues to mount. “For me, this is a way to honor my son first off.” explains Ragsdale. “He wanted the band to be together and didn’t understand why we weren’t. He watched us on the iPad all the time. His passing right before the first show…it was an honor to him. Second, it was a dream come true for me. I didn’t think this would happen again. I am completely honored to be able to do it again.” Cross is also very humbled. “I’m more than grateful. I’m happy for all our families, happy for our band. I’m still on a high from the last one. I may never come down.” Canada feels a large debt of gratitude to the town itself. “I grew up in Yukon, but if it weren’t for Stillwater, I wouldn’t have anything. Not my wife, my kids, or my career. For the shows to be there, to be that size, that easy…that shows me that Stillwater and Ragweed was really meant for each other.”

Gary Allan at Whitewater Amphitheater 2025

Gary Allan was at Whitewater Amphitheater in New Braunfels, TX on June 21, 2025, with Mark Mackay and Palmer Anthony opening the show.

Here are some video highlights of the show!



Lost Charley Pride project coming SOON!

August 5, 2025-The world lost renown country music artist Charley Pride in December 2020, leaving behind an extraordinary legacy full to bursting with a mass of honors and awards, a 40-count trail of #1 hit songs, and tens of millions in record sales. His decades long career in music is a success story no one saw coming until Pride walked away from his stint as a semi-pro baseball player in the Negro league in the late 50’s and walked into a league all his own in the country music world.

His smooth, warm baritone vocals immediately endeared him to country music fans worldwide and remains one of the most recognized voices today. In 2017 that familiar voice was rediscovered when a couple of forgotten reels were found buried deep in a storage room in Pride’s production office in Dallas, Texas. After his death, it was confirmed that the multi-track reels contained the long-lost Brook Benton tribute recordings Pride recorded in the 80’s but never released. In 2021 the tapes were carefully transferred to multi-track digital audio files, and Endlessly: a Tribute to Brook Benton will now be released on September 19th on Music City Records. This marks the 94th anniversary of Brook Benton’s birth. The album’s first single “Thank You Pretty Baby” will be released on Friday, August 29th on all digital music platforms. charleypride.com

Brimming with vintage country, rhythm & blues (R & B) and pop music sounds, this retro-sonic homage to legendary singer/songwriter Brook Benton clearly demonstrates that Pride’s versatility as an artist extended well beyond the confines of country music. Originally recorded in Pride’s adopted home of Dallas, Texas during a brief mid-1980s interlude between his RCA Records and 16th Avenue Records recording contracts, this previously unreleased album displays Pride flexing newfound artistic freedom on productions that sound notably different than his 1970s/1980s country music output. Produced and engineered by Bob Pickering, chief engineer at Pride’s home studio CECCA Sound, Endlessly features a genuine string section, and an impressive array of world-class musicians who proudly called North Texas home during the mid-1980s, including legendary bassist Chuck Rainey (Steely Dan, Aretha Franklin, Quincy Jones), drummer/percussionist Gene Glover (Ricardo Arjona), jazz pianist Fred Crane (Al Belletto, Johnnie Mercer, Al Hirt, Doc Severinsen), guitarist Jerry Matheny (LeAnn Rimes) and Texas Western Swing Hall of Fame inductee Billy Briggs Jr. (Bob Wills) on sax. The rest of the session players backing Pride were all handpicked, seasoned North Texas studio professionals with breathtaking resumes.

The songs that Pride chose to record for this tribute album were mostly derived from Brook’s initial 1959 to 1961 flurry of hits. “It’s Just a Matter of Time,” “Endlessly,” “Thank You Pretty Baby,” “So Close,” “So Many Ways” and “Kiddio” were all Top 5 R & B smashes that also crossed over to become significant Top 40 pop chart hits. More than just an outstanding homage to Brook Benton, this lavish, timeless sounding album is a potent testament to both Pride’s versatility as a music artist and the exceptional abilities of the world-class North Texas studio talents that backed him. Perhaps in time this long-lost treasure will earn the respect and acclaim necessary to elevate it into the upper echelon of Pride’s already extraordinary body of work.

Alison Krauss and Union Station at Whitewater Amphitheater

Alison Krauss and Union Station brought their Arcadia album release tour and Willie Watson to Whitewater Theater back in May. Here is a video sampling from the show!



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