Luke Combs Tickets:

There's not an ounce of artifice involved in a Luke Combs concert. The big, burly, bearded country star has a voice to match and a no-nonsense performance style that's all about stepping up to the mic and keeping it real. No pyrotechnics, no stage dives, just pure, honest country music. After his unprecedented string of hits from his first album (“Hurricane,” “When It Rains It Pours,” “One Number Away”) made him a major Nashville star straight out of the gate, he wasted little time in hitting the road hard. In 2017 he launched his first outing as a headliner with the 55-city Don't Tempt Me With a Good Time tour, breaking attendance records along the way, and bringing along openers Ray Fulcher, Josh Phillips, and Faren Rachels. By 2018 he was busy showing the broad range of his appeal by playing shows all over Europe. Not long after, he announced another leap forward with his 2019 Beer Never Broke My Heart tour, which moved the young singer up to the arena circuit, supported by LANCO and Jameson Rogers. Unsurprisingly, most of the venues sold out in just the first couple of days.
Luke Combs grew up in Asheville, North Carolina, where he got his start as a performer by singing in vocal groups in school. After moving to Nashville with the determination to make a name for himself as a country singer and songwriter, Combs began the DIY way, releasing his first couple of EPs on his own. Even without a big label behind him, his first single, “Hurricane,” started tearing things up in 2015, and soon Columbia Nashville came calling, reissuing the single, which soon went triple Platinum. Combs' 2017 debut album, ‘This One's for You,' went to No. 1 on the country charts and crossed over the pop provinces as well, hitting No. 4 on the Hot 100. With a Platinum album and a couple more huge country hits, “When It Rains It Pours” and “One Number Away,” Combs was a straight-up star in shockingly little time. CMT and CMA award nominations followed, as well as TV appearances on ‘The Late Show with Stephen Colbert' and ‘Good Morning America.' And just a couple of years into his career, Combs had amassed a startling one billion streams of his music.
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