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DWIGHT YOAKAM American Bank Center Selena Auditorium SUNDAY, MAY 14 AT 7 P.M. Special Mother's Day Dinner Available Before the Show! Visit dwightyoakam.com
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Show Date and Time: Dwight Yoakam at the American Bank Center Selena Auditorium Sunday, May 14 at 7 p.m.
Ticket Information: Tickets prices are $31, $38.50, and $56.50. Tickets are available at the American Bank Center Box Office, all Ticketmaster outlets including FYE Music Store, Foley's in Padre Staples Mall, select H-E-B's,* and Rich's in Sunrise Mall or charge by phone at (361) 881-8499. Buy online at ticketmaster.com.
Mother's Day Dinner Before Dwight Yoakam!
This coming Mother's Day you don't have to spend your evening in a crowded restaurant because the American Bank Center Selena Auditorium is offering dinner before the honky-tonk favorite Dwight Yoakam takes the stage. This special Mother's Day dinner begins at 5 p.m. and will overlook the beautiful Corpus Christi Bay.
Our award-winning in-house caterer, Centerplate, has a delicious menu in store for only $17 per person. You can purchase your dinner tickets when you buy your concert seats available at the American Bank Center Box Office, all Ticketmaster outlets, online at ticketmaster.com or by phone at 361-881-8499.
Mother's Day Buffet Menu by Chef Roderick C. Jackson
Tomato and Cucumber Salad With a Lemon Oregano Vinaigrette
Mixed Baby Greens with Kalamata Olives and Feta Cheese Served with a Greek Vinaigrette
Carved Roulade of Chicken Stuffed with Herbs and Spices
Carved Top Round of Beef with Silver Dollar Rolls
Minted Saffron Rice with Currants and Toasted Pine Nuts
Oven Roasted Root Vegetables with Toasted Garlic and basil Oil
A Lavish Display of Assorted Desserts
*Select H-E-B's:
3500 Leopard
10241 S Padre Island
5313 Saratoga
11100 Leopard – Calallen
3133 S. Alameda
409 E.Kleberg - Kingsville
1115 E. Main Street - Alice
The two-time Grammy winner has garnered 21 Grammy nominations throughout his career, while selling more than 23 million albums worldwide and earning praise from the likes of Time magazine, hailing him as “A Renaissance Man,” Rolling Stone, noting “he has no contemporary peer,” and Vanity Fair, proclaiming “Yoakam strides the divide between rock’s lust and country’s lament.”
Dwight Yoakam's unorthodox approach to country music gives every album he produces a taste of his honk-tonk roots. The chorus on track #9 of Dwight Yoakam’s powerful album, Blame The Vain, captures in a nutshell the pervasive feeling of renewal radiating from the hillbilly rocker’s 18th sonic outing in 21 years. How fitting that Yoakam’s first self-produced album would be completed in the spring, that time of rebirth: “You have to continue to discover and rediscover yourself through pushing toward a new context for expression,” Yoakam explains. “And that’s what this is – I’m still me, but maybe it’s just more me on this record.” Over the past two years, Yoakam has immersed himself in music: playing raucous live shows with a rambunctious new band, writing a fresh batch of hook-filled songs, and fearlessly grabbing the reins of the recording process. As a result, the twelve tracks comprising Blame The Vain may “tell the story of the demise of a love relationship between a couple,” says Yoakam, “but the subtext is about my love for music. I’m really looking forward to playing this stuff on the road!”
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