Photo of Dustin Lynch -Live & Acoustic- feat. Kameron Marlow (reduced capacity) for the Shipshewana Event
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Dustin Lynch -Live & Acoustic- feat. Kameron Marlow (reduced capacity) - (May 08, 2021)

Reduced Capacity Show

Showtime: 8:00pm (Opener) | Doors open 1 hour prior to show.
Prices: Tickets Only - $29.95 - $89.95 | Dinner and Theater - $48.95 - $108.95
This Concert will be held at the Blue Gate Performing Arts Center

  This concert or show has concluded.
Dustin Lynch has "built one of the most consistent recording careers in modern country music" (Billboard), achieving seven #1s, four Top 5 albums, eight GOLD and PLATINUM certified singles, and tallying over 2 BILLION total streams. His most recent release, TULLAHOMA, has delivered consecutive chart-toppers: PLATINUM "Ridin' Roads" and GOLD "Good Girl" - both co-written by Lynch, in addition to current hit "Momma's House." In June, he'll host the ultimate party of the summer with DUSTIN LYNCH POOL SITUATION: VEGAS taking over Sin City on June 3-6, 2021. Since his PLATINUM breakout "Cowboys and Angels" in 2012, Lynch's headlined packed venues and toured with the genre's biggest names like Luke Bryan, Florida Georgia Line, and Brad Paisley. The Tennessee native has also earned industry recognition as a Grand Ole Opry member, in addition to high-profile nominations for the Billboard Music Awards, iHeartRadio Music Awards, and CMT Music Awards.

Kameron Marlowe

They say Nashville is a 10-year town, but it only took Kameron Marlowe seven months to launch himself from struggling singer-songwriter and into the spotlight.

Marlowe found success with his independent debut release, "Giving You Up" - a heartbreak anthem that has topped more than 50 million streams and counting. It's the first song Marlowe finished writing and it came with a personal price. The singer was 20 years old and planning to propose when his would-be fiancee dumped him for someone else. To get his feelings out, he picked up a pen.

"I had things I wanted to say," Marlowe said. "I started writing and over the course of several weeks, it turned into a song that means something to me and honestly, helped me through a hard time."

Born in the small town of Kannapolis, North Carolina, Kameron sold car parts at General Motors for a living before he got a call that changed his life forever. A recruiter from NBC's "The Voice" found performance videos of Marlowe on YouTube and reached out with an offer to take him straight to the series' live auditions. The offer was too good to pass up.

While he didn't win, Marlowe said "The Voice" is responsible for getting him to Nashville. Some of his cast-mates were songwriters from Music City. He had dabbled in songwriting at home, but the concept of doing it professionally was foreign. When his new friends explained the collaborative nature of Nashville's creative community, everything clicked into place.

"I knew that was just exactly where I wanted to be career-wise," Marlowe said. "But I just didn't understand how to do it."

After "The Voice" ended, he began to make the 13-hour round-trip drive to Nashville multiple times a week to write songs. He soon decided the drive was too much, found some roommates and moved to Music City.

Influenced by artists ranging from Brooks & Dunn and George Strait to Travis Tritt and Ray Charles, Marlowe's sound is a culmination of his life-long love of country music. His first memories include riding around in his grandpa's truck listening to Garth Brooks and Darius Rucker. But he didn't realize he could sing until he was a teenager. Marlowe played snare drum in his high school's marching band for two years before he decided the experience wasn't for him. A praise and worship leader who found joy in performing, Marlowe approached the music teacher about starting an unstructured class he dubbed "Rock Band." Ten students formed two five-piece bands. They learned 10-to-20 cover songs a year and then performed them in a small club.

Now his goals are much higher.

"I want to sell out a stadium just one time," Marlowe said. "It's always been a dream of mine. I never thought in a million years I could do this for a job. I thought I would move here for 10 years and then go back home and sell car parts, but it's happening!"