Songwriters Morales Eady Durham
August 9
730 PM
Advance Tickets:
$15.00
Ticket price at the door: $16.00
Preferred seating for dinner guests.
Will you be dining with us before the show?:
Lisa Morales
Singer/songwriter Lisa Morales has branched out on her own after building a strong following as a member of Sisters Morales. Her latest release entitled “Beautiful Mistake” is a powerful piece of music, as Morales taps her inner soul to deliver one of her best albums.
She comes right out of the gate with “I Am The Weakest” which starts off slow then builds to a rocking chorus. Guest vocalist Walt Wilkins lends his voice to the Carol King-sounding “Fool That I Am.” Lisa gets her groove going in the blues shuffle of “I Don’t Want To Hear What You Have To Say.” The gentleness in Lisa voice shines on the ballad “You Forgot To Love Me” before getting help from Dustin Welch on the country sounds of “Beautiful Mistake.” Lisa Morales kicks it into gear on the high-energy rocker “Driving and Cryin” before returning to the folk sounds of “Looking For Something Beautiful.” The album closes with the slow blues of “This Heart For Sale.”
Lisa Morales displays her many passions for different musical genres on this latest release and she covers them all with perfection. - JP's Music Blog
Visit Lisa's Website

Lincoln Durham
born in Whitney, Texas. raised in Itasca. started playing fiddle at the age of four. that’s right, four years old. by eight, Lincoln Durham was performing in fiddle contests all over Arkansas and Oklahoma. in fact, at ten he won the Texas State Youth Fiddle Championship. come twelve, the young man hooked up a residency with the house band at the Oceola Opry. then, through his high school years, Lincoln decided to pick up the strat. he started a three-piece band playing who else but Jimi and Stevie Ray. took a spell, though, and put the guitar on the backburner for a while to pursue art and design. but, a couple years ago, he grabbed a resonator, a slide and an old Gibson j45. he impressed Ray Wylie Hubbard so much with his greasy, nasty sound that Ray signed on to produce his record.
Visit Lincoln's Website

Jason Eady
"This Mississippi native’s blues-rocker creeps up like gathering thunderheads." - USA Today on "Back To Jackson"
"At a time when radio is almost completely littered with empty vessels, pop country and overplayed fossil rock, it is very encouraging to hear such inspired original music"- Best In Texas Magazine
Visit Jason's Website