Sweet home Alabama: benefit concert at Meijer Gardens has music, meaning 

Alabama in concert, and the concert at Meijer Gardens will be just as bright and boisterous. (Supplied)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Picture it now: a perfect early fall evening, classic American country-rock music blasting from the stage, and every audience member playing an important role in supporting the mission of Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park.

 

That will be the scene Aug. 23 when Alabama takes the stage at the partially refurbished outdoor amphitheater for a special concert to benefit the Garden’s ongoing Welcoming the World: Honoring a Legacy of Love capital campaign, as all net proceeds from the show will be contributed to the campaign.

 

“Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park is a non-profit and all of our land, facilities, Gardens and Sculpture are due the generosity of Fred and Lena Meijer, the extended Meijer Family and the thousands of people from the community that support us,” David S. Hooker, President and CEO of Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park, said to WKTV. “The Alabama concert represents a unique way for people to support our mission and expansion and to enjoy a performance from this legendary band. We are humbled and grateful to have Alabama be part of the Fifth Third Bank Summer Concerts at Meijer Gardens.”

 

Hooker did not mention if he was a fan of the classic American country and Southern rock band, but we would not be surprised — after all, the boys in the band are as hardworking as all the working folk buzzing around Meijer Gardens this summer.

 

 

The band’s website tell Alabama’s all-American story:

 

“It’s been 40 years since a trio of young cousins left Fort Payne, Alabama, to spend the summer playing in a Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, bar called The Bowery. It took Randy Owen, Teddy Gentry and Jeff Cook six long years of tip jars and word of mouth to earn the major label deal they’d been dreaming of, but then seemingly no time at all to change the face of country music.

 

“Alabama proceeded to reeled off 21 straight No. 1 singles, a record that will probably never be equaled in any genre. They brought youthful energy, sex appeal and a rocking edge that broadened country’s audience and opened the door to self-contained bands from then on, and they undertook a journey that led, 73 million albums later, to the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Hollywood Walk of Fame.”

 

A sampling of Alabama’s No. 1 singles include “Love in the First Degree”, Mountain Music”, “Dixieland Delight”, “If Your Going to Play in Texas (You Gotta have a Fiddle in the Band” and “Song of the South”.

 

The lasting appeal of Alabama’s music is evidenced by another story from the band’s website:

 

“I was in Nashville,” Teddy Gentry says, “walking by this club full of young people — I’m talking 18 or 20. The band started playing ‘Dixieland Delight’ and everybody in the place started singing and sang all the way through. I had to smile at the longevity of the songs. Maybe some of those kids didn’t even know who Alabama was, but they knew the music, and so I think that’s a tribute to the fact that we spent a career putting out good songs that stand the test of time.”

 

You can bet that there will be plenty of older, and younger, fans of classic country-rock — as well as simply supporters of Meijer Gardens — on the amphitheater grass that August night.

 

And it might just be a picture-perfect night.

 

Tickets to Alabama are $153 member and $155 public. For tickets to the special benefit concert, visit here. For a complete list of Summer Concert Series concerts with tickets available, visit meijergardens.org .

 

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