King of Country Music Took Fans on a Journey with
Hit After Hit
in Two-Plus Hour Set;
Dean Dillon joined Strait for Rare Performance
Collaborations on Night One
George Strait Performs at T-Mobile Arena
Credit: Ethan Miller/Getty Images |
LAS
VEGAS, Nev. (Saturday, Sept. 10, 2016)
Early Friday afternoon, before the
doors opened at Las Vegas' T-Mobile Arena for only its second pair of Strait
to Vegas shows of 2016, George Strait stood in the nearly-empty arena
thumbing his Merle Haggard Signature Telecaster, contemplating his setlist for
the night. As his Ace in the Hole Band ran through selections from the man
the Dallas Morning News dubbed as “the most influential genre
artist of the last 30 years,” BMI Icon Award winner and longtime collaborator
and friend of Strait's, Dean Dillon, sat in for the rehearsal, almost as if an
extension of the tight-knit, 11-piece backing band for the King of Country. For
those few witnesses in the soon-to-be-at-capacity, less-than-a-year-old arena,
it was a sign of what was to come – a night where Strait's smooth vocals
spotlighted the poignant writing and influencers that have contributed to his
storied career – one that has amassed 60 No. 1 singles and counting.
As the
arena filled to capacity, the energy was palpable. With nearly five months
since his last show, Strait’s fans were brimming with anticipation. Seemingly
appropriate, he met their excitement and kicked off the night with “Here
For A Good Time,” a song Strait penned with Dillon his son Bubba that
became Strait’s first No. 1 as a songwriter.
“You have no idea how good your voices sound
tonight,” Strait commented before taking a detour just a few songs in to
pay tribute to one of his biggest influences, Merle Haggard, again enlisting the telecaster he teased in rehearsal.
“I’m going to play a few songs from
someone who was my musical hero and probably the reason I’m standing on this
stage right now…” Strait shared before playing a medley of “Mama
Tried,” “Workin’ Man Blues” and “My Life’s Been Grand.”
Next,
Strait pulled up two wooden stools and invited the man with whom he shares 55
songs with, Dillon, up to the stage, only insisting he sit adjacent to him this
time and share the spotlight and tales. The pair swapped memories – and praise
for each other – while the crowd relished in their storied exchange.
“I’ll never forget. A buddy of mine pulled
his car up on the sidewalk on Music Row one day playing George Strait [in the
car stereo] and asked, ‘who does he sound like?’,” shared Dillon. “I said, ‘well, I think he's got his own
thing.’ We had this thing; we just wrote and was gonna pitch to Johnny
Paycheck, but he was in jail, and so instead we pitched it to George. And that
song was ‘Unwound,’” Dillon continued, candidly revealing the song’s origin
while grinning. “I don't get nervous [saying that] until I'm sitting up here
with the King of Country Music.”
Strait
was quick to return the admiration, “That's nice of you to say that, but I'm a
bit nervous up here with you! I’ve been really fortunate to write some songs with
Dean, and hopefully we'll do that some more,” he said while smiling at his
friend. With that, they traded verses while performing “Honky Tonk Crazy” and “Nobody
In His Right Mind Would’ve Left Her” before Dillon left the stage to a
standing ovation.
Strait
retired the stools after those two songs with Dillon and went into the latter
part of his 30+ song set before
reinvigorating the crowd with a four-song encore that closed with his hit from
1984, “The Cowboy Rides Away.”
For an
artist with so many celebrated successes and hits, it was clear from tonight’s
show that Strait’s focus right now is on the craft, the songs and the stories.
For the five-time Entertainer of the Year, it was a chance to celebrate his
influences as well as look ahead to some things he’s yet to say. For the
17,000+ crowd, it was a night they won’t soon forget.
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