Ronnie Milsap
An Evening With Ronnie Milsap
General Admission - $77 (plus fees)
Gold Section - $92 (plus fees)
ticket prices increase by $5 Day of Show (if available)
Ronnie Milsap
Born blind (his family thought it was retribution for sin), Ronnie Milsapâs grandparents gave the boy over to the North Carolina State School for the Blind hoping for a better chance. Â There, Milsap discovered music â deviating from the schoolâs classical curriculum to explore the nascent realms of race music, rock & roll and jazz.General Admission - $77 (plus fees)
Gold Section - $92 (plus fees)
ticket prices increase by $5 Day of Show (if available)
Ronnie Milsap
Being the brilliant kid he was, it wasnât long until heâd found his way into the local clubs and the tiny indie labels.
â¨Suddenly, he was sharing bills with Ray Charles (who took the Ashford & Simpson-penned B-side to Milsapâs Scepter single âNever Had It So Goodâ and scored his own hit with âLetâs Go Get Stonedâ), and James Brown on a circuit that included the Howard Theater, the Royal Peacock, and more.
â¨It was Ray Charles who told the young pianist when he was offered a scholarship to Young Harris Collegeâs law program, âSon, I can hear the music inside you...â
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It settled Milsapâs fate.
â¨Living in Atlanta, playing clubs and doing sessions the future Country Music Hall of Famer caught wind that JJ Cale was looking for a keyboard player. Cale hired him. Ronnie went on to work at the Whiskey for a good while.
From Atlanta, Ronnie moved to Memphis where he was doing sessions with Chips Moman, where Elvis famously commanded, âMore thunder on the keys, Milsap,â during the recording of âKentucky Rain.â It was there he was asked to play the Whiskey on the famed Sunset Strip in LA. While staying at the notorious Hyatt House, Charley Pride, a famous man in country music, saw the white kid playing rock & soul and suggested giving Nashville a try.
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Forty #1s. Five decades of charted singles. Creating a new way of recording (being blind his hyper-attuned hearing led him to create/build what is now known as Ronnieâs Place, where the new album, the Duets, was captured), he broke genre rules and became one of the biggest pop/AC and even R&B artists of the late â70s and early â80s.
â¨Six Grammys. CMA Entertainer of the Year and four Album of the Year Awards. The first country video played on MTV (the ironic âShe Loves My Carâ). An early champion of NFL star Mike Reid, who wrote many of Ronnieâs #1 hits and whoâd go on to write Bonnie Raittâs second most enduring classic âI Canât Make You Love Me.â
â¨Always chasing the music, always hungry for the songs, he is now an inspiration for a new generation of country stars from critical standard setters Kacey Musgraves and Little Big Town to CMA/ACM Entertainers of the Year Luke Bryan and Jason Aldean, as well as a standard-setter for friends like Dolly Parton, George Strait, Willie Nelson and even groundbreakers Leon Russell and Billy Gibbons.
In a world of marketing match-ups, the Duets is an homage to blurring lines, great songwriting and vocals that celebrate soul over product â something rare in todayâs flashcard jingle country.
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But just as importantly, Ronnie Milsap is a testament to going where you donât belong with an open heart and a true sense of music as compass. A rebel blind boy often at odds at school for following the music in his heart, that music took him to places white people didnât go... brought him a wife who would be not just a steadfast companion, but a fellow traveller in the songs (theyâre still together!!)... give him stages from the chitlin circuit, soul clubs, rock rooms to the biggest arenas, âSolid Gold,â the White House and beyond.
â¨He saw racism inside out. He led with an open-mind, and a hunger to play. He created action in songs instead of words without tangible works. Heâs the same guy today, but all these years later, heâs still a man who lives to play.
â¨And man, can he tell a story.
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