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In The Round with Will Rambeaux, Sherrié Austin, Alison Nichols & Natalie Stovall (from Runaway June)
with Will Rambeaux, SherriƩ Austin, Alison Nichols, Natalie Stovall
CDT (Doors: )

There are 18 tables, 8 bar seats and 8 church pew seats available for reservation. The remaining pew seats for this show are not reserved in advance. These seats are available on a first come/first served basis when doors open. 

Ticket reservations at The Bluebird Cafe are an agreement to pay the cover charge and applicable taxes/fees and to meet the $12.00 per seat food and/or drink minimum.

Ticket holders may cancel their reservation for a full refund of the ticket price and applicable tax (excluding ticketing fees) if the cancellation is made at least 48 hours before the scheduled showtime. Cancellations made within 48 hours of the show are non-refundable. To cancel, please email [email protected] or call 615-383-1461. Phone line hours are Monday-Friday, 12-4 pm.

Note: When making reservations, choose the table you would like and then add the number of seats you need to your cart by using the + button. You are NOT reserving an entire table if you choose 1 (by choosing 1, you are reserving 1 seat). We reserve ALL seats at each table. If you are a smaller party at a larger table, you will be seated with guests outside your party.



Artists

Will Rambeaux

Will Rambeaux was born in Lafayette, Louisiana in the heart of cajun country. He grew up listening to the classic pop, rock and country music of his day, as well as a healthy dose of the Cajun, Zydeco and New Orleans R&B native to Louisiana. With a degree in Literature under his belt, Will left home on a musical odyssey that took him first to Austin, Texas and then to New York City. On a chance visit to Tennessee in the 1980's Will managed to get a tape to his boyhood idol, Roy Orbison. Mr. Orbison took note of his talent and offered to bring Will to Nashville where his career as a writer and producer has blossomed.

Will fronted his own original roots-rock band for years, but really hit paydirt with his first cut as a songwriter in 1993. Recorded by Warner Brothers artist Faith Hill, "Wild One" took the country charts by storm staying at # 1 for four weeks and breaking all records for a new female artist. He then had a pair of back-to-back #1 songs for country crooner John Michael Montgomery, the first one, "How Was I To Know", followed by "Hold On To Me". He has also had several other Top 10 singles, including "Nobody Gonna' Rain On Our Parade" (Kathy Mattea) and "Can't Get Enough" (Patty Loveless), as well as the title track to the Blake Shelton CD "Startin' Fires. His songs have been recorded by such diverse artists as Dolly Parton, Hal Ketchum, Jo Dee Messina, Tammy Cochran, Trick Pony, Emily West, Lee Greenwood, Danielle Peck and Ronnie Milsap to name a few. Will's songs have also garned many BMI "Most Performed Songs of the Year" awards, as well as several BMI "Million-Air" awards. ( and he’s included in over XX million records sold WW. )

More recently, Will has been dividing his time between songwriting and record producing. He has recorded four CDs for singer/songwriter Sherrie' Austin, "Words", "Love In The Real World", "Following A Feeling" and "Streets Of Heaven" which have yielded many chart singles including "Lucky In Love", "Put Your Heart Into It" and "Never Been Kissed."

SherriƩ Austin

Sherrié Austin has been in the entertainment business since she was a teenager. At the age of fourteen, she opened for Johnny Cash in Australia. She moved to the United States and landed a role on The Facts of Life as “Pippa McKenna;” she also guest-starred in The Prince of Bel-Air. Austin signed her first record deal shortly after moving to Nashville; her solo debut album, Words, was released in 1997. “Lucky in Love,” “One Solitary Tear” and “Put Your Heart Into It” all charted within the Top 40. Love in the Real World followed in 1999, which included “Never Been Kissed” and “Little Bird.” After signing a new record deal, Austin’s next album, Streets of Heaven, was released in 2003. The heart-wrenching title track is her highest charting single to date and continues to resonate with fans.In 2005, Austin headed to Broadway and was cast in both Bonnie & Clyde and Ring of Fire – the Johnny Cash Musical Show. Back in Nashville, she continued to earn cuts from her country music peers: Trace Adkins (“If I Were a Woman,” featuring Blake Shelton), Tim McGraw (“Shotgun Rider,” featuring Faith Hill), Danielle Peck (“Bad For Me”), Blake Shelton (“Startin’ Fires”) and George Strait (“Where Have I Been All My Life”), among others. In 2011, she returned to television as a main cast member in Girls Who Like Boys Who Like Boys.

Music ultimately brought Austin back to Nashville and she began work on her latest album, Circus Girl. Since its release, Austin has noticed the gravitation toward “Tryin’ To Be Me,” the second track on Circus Girl. “Sometimes music or a song can speak to a heart in a way that the spoken word can’t do. That’s what I attempted to do with both ‘Tryin’ To Be Me’ and another song I wrote called ‘Hey Bully,’ Austin shares. “I believe there would be no bullying or suicides if we accepted each other and ourselves just the way we are – warts and all, the ugly, the beautiful, the crazy and the hurt. Then, maybe all those monsters under our beds wouldn’t be quite so scary because we would know that we weren't the only ones afraid and vulnerable at times.”

Austin has seen firsthand the emotional undoing bullying can have on a loved one. “As a writer, I always hope that my songs move people, whether it’s to draw a laugh, have a good cry or is something fun to sing along to,” she says. “But, there is one person in particular who I would have loved to have heard ‘Tryin’ To Be Me’ and ‘Hey Bully,’ and that’s my Uncle Pat. He committed suicide a few years ago. He was my biggest fan and had a smile and a heart that could light up the room. He ran away from bullies, his past and himself his whole life. He would have understood and loved these songs.” “I read somewhere once, ‘Treat everyone as if they are in pain,” she shares. “‘Tryin’ To Be Me’ is about self-forgiveness and self-compassion. ‘Hey Bully’ shows that the bully and the bullied are just both sides of the same coin.” With the increasing popularity of social networks comes the adverse effect of cyber-bullying becoming exponentially more prominent. “It baffles me how in a world where everyone is only a tweet away that we should be so disconnected from each other, that we could be so lonely.”Austin hopes that “Tryin’ To Be Me” and “Hey Bully” will bring encouragement to anyone being subjected to bullying and fear not having anyone to turn to. “My goal is not only to raise awareness for this senseless epidemic that is taking the lives of more and more people every day.”

Alison Nichols

It takes a lot of evolution to create a country music singer like Alison Nichols. As one of the first Asian-American artists in the country format (and second cousin to the late great Joe Diffie), Alison likes to say she is "half Korean, half redneck, and 100% American. 

From Georgia by way of Texas, she comes by her country roots honestly, growing up on the holy trinity of Miranda, Maren and Kasey. Her powerful singing voice is equal parts sass and vulnerability. Her songwriting is both cutting edge and wise beyond her years. 

She has cracked the code at TikTok with one of her posts for the song "is it just me?" hitting over 4.5 million views. This debut single is available on all streaming platforms. Look out for this one of a kind country diva coming to a honky tonk near you. 

Natalie Stovall

Natalie Stovall and her band, The Drive, are relentless road warriors. Performing over 200 dates each year across college campuses, clubs, festivals and military bases around the world.  Natalie, a Tennessee native, is a powerhouse vocalist and multi-instrumentalist, who has been playing professionally since she was ten.  A fiddle phenom, Natalie made her Grand Ole Opry debut at the age of 12, and has performed everywhere from the White House to The Oprah Winfrey Show.

Natalie was named one of CMT’s “Next Women of Country’ and was recently awarded “Best Female Artist” and “Best Music Artist” by Campus Activities Magazine.  Natalie has been touring with Bobby Bones and the Raging Idiots as a featured performer, writing and recording for her next 2018 release.