Event Details

Two Tons of Steel - Shiner Sunday at Love and War in Texas in Plano, Texas

Two Tons of Steel - Shiner Sunday at Love and War in Texas in Plano, Texas

DATE:
Sunday, November 10, 2024
TIME:
Doors | 2:30 PM
LOCATION:
Love and War in Texas
601 E. Plano Pkwy
Plano , Texas 75074
About this Event:

Two Tons of Steel - Shiner Sunday

November 10th - Doors at 2:30 pm / Show at 4:00 pm

  • $20 - GA
  • $20 - Reserved Table Seats (must buy whole table)
  • Ages 12 and under admitted free (with an adult)
Kitchen is open all day. Come early and grab a seat.

PLEASE NOTE: UNLESS REFUND PROTECTION IS PURCHASED, This event is Rain-or-Shine. With the exception of complete event cancellation, no refunds will be issued. Refunds due to personal unforeseen circumstances may be covered if the request meets limited conditions and Refund Protection was purchased. Please select Refund Protection at checkout. Refund Protection Fees are NON-Refundable. See OuthouseTickets Refund FAQ Page for more details.

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Price: $20.00
Ticket Type Price Quantity
Reserved Seats $20.00 Pick Seats
GA $20.00
TWO TONS OF STEEL
If there’s one thing Texans love, it’s a good party. But if you ask self-respecting Lone Star carousers what turns a bash into a blast, they won’t say beer or barbecue. They know it all comes down to the music. And there’s one band that can rouse revelers like no other: Two Tons of Steel. Two Tons’ rambunctious brand of country-rooted rock has been inspiring listeners in the great republic — and far beyond — for more than two decades, and with its 10th album, NOT THAT LUCKY, the band is ready to throw its weight around even more. NOT THAT LUCKY, the band’s first studio album since 2005’s VEGAS (which ranked among the top 20 Americana albums for 2006) is its fourth helmed by Lloyd Maines, Texas’ most in-demand producer (the Flatlanders, Dixie Chicks, Pat Green, James McMurtry). 

Explaining why he always clears his schedule for Two Tons of Steel, Maines simply declares, “They’re one of the best bands in Texas.” And beyond. Already familiar to fans of the Grand Ole Opry, where Two Tons has performed some eight times, and to visitors at Nashville’s Country Music Hall of Fame, where it appears in a documentary about country music, Two Tons tours Europe regularly and in 1997, became the first U.S. act in 37 years to perform in the national theater of Havana, Cuba. It’s so beloved in its home state that Two Tons of Steel is featured in the IMAX film, “Texas: The Big Picture,” and is considered an institution at the state’s oldest, most revered dance hall, Gruene Hall, where its annual Two Ton Tuesdays summer series has been selling out for 14 years (and can be witnessed via the 2006 CD/DVD release, TWO TON TUESDAY LIVE!). 

Lead singer-acoustic guitarist Kevin Geil does the heavy lifting when it comes to describing the San Antonio-based band’s sound. “Two Tons is two tons of steel,” he says. “We’re kind of in your face, almost punk rock at times.” It’s high-energy, that’s for sure. Inspired equally by Elvis Presley and the Ramones, Two Tons combines the talents of the kinetic Geil with Dennis Fallon on electric guitar, Chris Dodds on drums and harmony vocals, and Chris Rhoades on upright and electric bass, joined in the studio by regular contributor Danny Mathis on pedal and straight steel. B3 player Riley Osborne, fiddler Brian Beken, acoustic guitarist/vocalist Tom Gillam and vocalist Drew Womack also played on NOT THAT LUCKY along with producer Maines, who added some acoustic guitar. Gillam, in fact, wrote the closing track, “Bottom of the Bottle,” and sings the second verse. 

The album was recorded over the course of a month at The Zone in Dripping Springs, outside of Austin. “It was really nice, because VEGAS was done in six days straight, including mixing, so there wasn’t a lot of chance to sit back and listen,” Geil says. Recording a few days at a time gave the band the luxury to change a line here and there, or try new approaches — often based on Maines’ suggestions. “Lloyd is a master at taking what you have and making it better, but it’s still the same,” says Geil with a laugh, “like on ‘Alcohol and Pills,’ which is a Fred Eaglesmith song. 

When we went in, we were doing it as almost a train beat, and when Lloyd listened to it, he said, ‘Try this. Boom-chi-chi-dom.’ So that right there changed the whole feel of the song. The train beat was just too busy. It would have been a good song, but when you listen to it — when we listen to it — it’s like, that’s right. It’s all about the feel. “We push the envelope of our abilities every album,” says Geil, “and this album, Lloyd just really did a great job pushing us even further.” 

The new disc also contains the debut recording of “Without Your Love,” a song by hit-making tunesmith Monte Warden (co-writer of George Strait’s “Desperately”) penned with Two Tons of Steel in mind. Geil, who wrote the other cuts on NOT THAT LUCKY, until recently had a second career as the San Antonio Express-News’ award-winning senior photographer. A massive round of layoffs gave him the opportunity to concen