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Trace Adkins
Effingham Performance Center
Nov 5, 2026 • 7:00pm
Effingham, IL
Trace Adkins: 30th Anniversary Tour
Hollywood Casino at Charles Town Races
Sep 19, 2026 • 8:00pm
Charles Town, WV
Trace Adkins
Carteret Performing Arts and Events Center
Sep 18, 2026 • 8:00pm
Carteret, NJ
Trace Adkins 30th Anniversary Tour With Aaron Tippin
Bowman Gray Stadium
Aug 14, 2026 • 6:30pm
Winston Salem, NC
Trace Adkins 30th Anniversary Tour
Gila River Resorts & Casinos - Wild Horse Pass
Aug 8, 2026 • 8:00pm
Chandler, AZ
Trace Adkins - 30th Anniversary Tour
Sunset Station Outdoor Amphitheater
Aug 6, 2026 • 8:00pm
Henderson, NV
Club Underground Presents - Country 'n the City Starring Trace Adkins
Club Underground
Aug 6, 2026 • 4:00pm
Reno, NV
Trace Adkins
Club Underground
Aug 6, 2026 • 4:00pm
Reno, NV
Trace Adkins 30th Anniversary Tour
Amphitheater at Las Colonias Park
Aug 4, 2026 • 7:00pm
Grand Junction, CO
Trace Adkins w/ John Foster
Porter County Fairgrounds
Jul 26, 2026 • 7:30pm
Valparaiso, IN
Riley Green w/ Trace Adkins
Cheyenne Frontier Days
Jul 22, 2026 • 8:00pm
Cheyenne, WY
Trace Adkins
Point of the Bluff
Jul 25, 2025 • 6:30pm
Hammondsport, NY

Baritone Roots, Big Boots: Trace Adkins

Three decades in, Trace Adkins brings the low, lived-in baritone that first cut through Nashville in the mid 90s.

Thirty years, deeper stories

Raised in Louisiana and seasoned by oil rigs and honky-tonks, his sound blends sturdy country, gospel lift, and a hint of Southern rock. This 30-year milestone frames the night as a career survey, with stories and an easy pace between big hits.

Hits with room to breathe

Expect Honky Tonk Badonkadonk, You're Gonna Miss This, and Every Light in the House, with a chance for Arlington if the room feels right. The crowd skews mixed-age and local, from work shirts to pearl snaps, with couples two-stepping near the rail and military families close to the stage. Trivia: Honky Tonk Badonkadonk was co-written by Jamey Johnson early in his Nashville grind, and Trace Adkins joined the Grand Ole Opry in 2003. Early on, Trace Adkins cut late-night demos while holding day jobs, a grit you still hear in his phrasing. Note: specific songs and staging details mentioned here are educated guesses based on recent shows and may differ on the night.

The Scene Around Trace Adkins

This crowd feels neighborly and mixed, with clean denim, worn boots, and a few vintage tour tees from 90s radio days.

Boots, chrome, and kind nods

You will hear friendly call-and-response during Honky Tonk Badonkadonk, then a hush when a service tribute or Arlington appears. Merch leans classic, with bold fonts, chrome-and-black art, and anniversary logos that nod to long-haul careers. Plenty of fans bring partners or parents, swapping stories about first spins of Every Light in the House on local stations. Hats are common but you also see camo caps, clean ballcaps, and a few dress shirts straight from work, all fitting without fuss. Pre-show house music often cues 90s anthems, which turns the aisle into a soft sing-along before the lights drop. Post-chorus chants flare up on the big hooks, and people compare favorite deep cuts as they file out, already picking the next show to share.

Musicianship and Pulse: Trace Adkins Onstage

The voice stays front and center, a low register that favors long, steady lines and a relaxed pocket.

Heavy timber, light touch

Twin electrics trade crisp fills while steel or fiddle paints the top, and the rhythm section keeps a firm backbeat without rushing. Ballads breathe, with acoustic guitar and piano leaving space for air, then the band swells for choruses. On the rowdier numbers, the guitars add a clipped, danceable chop that lets the baritone sit like a kick drum.

Arrangements built for a low voice

A frequent live tweak is dropping some songs a half step and using a baritone guitar on a few cuts to thicken the low end. Listen for an extended breakdown in Honky Tonk Badonkadonk where the band rides a stop-and-go groove for crowd call-and-response. He often starts You're Gonna Miss This with a lean acoustic verse before bringing the full band in for lift. Lighting tends to stay warm and simple, shifting to cool whites for rockers and amber for the reflective moments.

Kindred Roads for Trace Adkins Fans

If you like deep voices and story-first writing, Josh Turner is a natural neighbor, with warm baritone hymns and easy swing.

Big hooks, baritone roots

Fans of arena-ready singalongs often cross over with Blake Shelton, who shares the jokes-on-stage charm and radio-polished stompers. For a grittier edge and songwriter focus, Jamey Johnson brings outlaw mood and even co-wrote Honky Tonk Badonkadonk. If you lean toward modern crunch and small-town pride, Justin Moore lines up in tone and crowd energy. Those who favor powerhouse pipes with Southern soul should try Randy Houser, whose live band punches in the same way on mid-tempo heaters. Across these acts, the overlap comes from sturdy grooves, sing-back choruses, and a respect for classic country forms colored by rock guitars. All of them draw multi-gen crowds who value strong songs over stage gimmicks.

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