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Wade Bowen / About This Artist

Artist Details and Stats:

Hometown: New Braunfels, TX

Management: Rogue Music Group-Pete Olson, Pete Olson

Website: www.wadebowen.com

Genre: Country

#-
Country charts for New Braunfels, TX
  • 1,450
    Total Fans
  • 10,150
    Profile Views
  • 2,631
    Widget Hits

Biography:

On the heels of the success of If We Ever Make It Home, Bowen will release the next installment of the Live at Billy Bob’s Texas music series in the spring of 2010. Bowen recorded his CD and DVD in November 2009 to a packed house at the legendary, honky tonk, Billy Bob’s Texas. This is a live album with only one take – raw emotion, passion and intensity captured for fans to relive again and again. The album consists of 20 tracks which include hits “Lay It All On You,” “You Had Me At My Best,” “One Step Closer,” and “Trouble.” As an added bonus, two NEW, unheard studio cuts produced by Frank Liddell (Miranda Lambert, Chris Knight) will be introduced on the CD. The DVD features 20 tracks with special footage caught the week leading up to the show, an interview section and a must-see confessional booth where fans poured their heart out to Wade and the band.

Press:

“Waco native Wade Bowen (right) walked off with Best Artist of the Year, Best Song of the Year (“You Had Me At My Best”) and Best Album of the Year for his If We Ever Make It Home.”
Carl Hoover - Waco Tribune

“The latest studio effort from Wade Bowen, If We Ever Make It Home, won't disappoint fans, either. The album, produced by J. R. Rodriguez, is a disc lush with soul-stirring lyrics that, although brand-new, feels well-worn and comfortable, like a favorite pair of jeans. ”
Lisa Rollins - Suite101.com

“Review: Wade Bowen "If We Ever Make It Home" Wade Bowen scores big with a healthy, Red Dirt meal full of new Texas country classics in his new album "If We Ever Make It Home." ”
TBA - CountryChart.com

“When a heart breaks in one of Keen's songs, every crack and shattered shard is felt, as Bowen demonstrates in his take on the exquisitely etched portrait of a man watching his former love return to town with someone new in "Lynnville Train."”
Randy Lewis - Los Angeles Times