Pam Tillis Coming to Sioux Falls This June
Country music artist Pam Tillis will make her way to Sioux Falls this June, appearing at the South Dakota Military Heritage Alliance on Friday, June 14.
Tickets for the show go on sale this Friday, February 16 at 10 am. Presale tickets are available Thursday, February 15 at 10 am, use code "pepper".
You can get your tickets for the show, beginning this Friday at this link.
The show is part of the Miles and Lisa Beacon concert series, and you can win tickets by listening to the Andy & Christine Morning Show on KXRB this week, in the 7 am hour.
Courtesy of Pepper Entertainment:
The daughter of country legend Mel Tillis, Pam Tillis made her own way in the music business,
eventually becoming a contemporary country star in the '90s. Tillis was born on July 24, 1957, in
Plant City, Florida, but raised mostly in Nashville, and started taking piano lessons at age eight.
She switched to guitar at 12 and played in talent contests during her teenage years. Somewhat wild
and rebellious, she survived a near-fatal car crash at age 16 that required extensive facial
reconstruction. Fortunately, she fully recovered and pursued music aggressively at the University
of Tennessee, singing with the High Country Swing Band (which played country-rock and jug
band music) and in a folk duo with Ashley Cleveland. She quit school in 1976 and worked at her
father's publishing company, placing her composition "I'll Meet You on the Other Side of the
Morning" with Barbara Fairchild. She also formed her own backing band, which soon relocated tothe San Francisco Bay Area and renamed themselves Freelight; they developed an adventurous
style based on jazz and rock, not country. Tillis returned to Nashville in 1979, though, and sang
backup for her father while raising her first child as a single parent, fronting an R&B band and
continuing to write songs, a couple of which were recorded by Gloria Gaynor and Chaka Khan.
Tillis performed regularly at Nashville's Bluebird Cafe with several other female
singer/songwriters and landed a deal with Warner Bros in the early '80s. She released one album,
the pop-oriented Above and Beyond the Doll of Cutey, in 1983 and had her first chart single the
following year with "Goodbye Highway." Several more singles were released through 1987, but
none managed to make the Top 50; even so, Tillis was making her name as a songwriter for Tree
Publishing, with compositions recorded by Highway 101 and Conway Twitty, among others. In
1989, the same year she acted in a Tennessee production of Jesus Christ Superstar, she landed a
new deal with Arista. Tillis released her label debut, Put Yourself in My Place, in 1991, and the
lead single, "Don't Tell Me What to Do," raced into the Top Five, giving Tillis her long-awaited
breakthrough. Of the album's five total singles, "One of Those Things" and "Maybe It Was
Memphis" made the Top Ten (as did the album). 1992's Homeward Looking Angel was an equally
successful follow-up, with "Shake the Sugar Tree" and "Let That Pony Run" both making the Top
Five.
Get your tickets for the upcoming Pam Tillis concert here.
Story Sources: Pam Tillis Tickets, South Dakota Military Heritage Alliance Website, Pam Tillis Website, Pepper Entertainment Website
Mount Rushmore's Secret Chamber
Gallery Credit: Andy Gott