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Texas Tunes: Max Stalling

Max Stalling takes the Huffines Performance Hall stage at the Lewisville Grand Theater on the evening of Saturday, July 15. Tickets start at $25. Lewisville residents may purchase select $20 tickets, subject to availability, in person with proof of residency at The Grand during regular business hours. Sales tax and ticket fees are included in the price.

Texas country singer-songwriter Max Stalling pens tunes that connect, songs that form a snapshot of his life, songs that make an album. Five years after his previous record, 2010’s relaxed honky-tonking opus Home to You, Stalling felt compelled to mold a full-length record. One-off singles are great, he admits, but there is such artistic strength in a cohesive body of work.

Enter Banquet, Stalling’s sixth studio album, which released in 2015 on his longtime imprint Blind Nello Records. Produced by A-list Texas music helmsman Lloyd Maines and recorded at The Zone in Dripping Springs, Banquet boasts 11 tracks played by Jason Steinsultz on bass, Tom Lewis on drums, Bryce Clarke on guitar and mandolin, Heather Stalling (Max’s wife) on fiddle, Maines on steel guitar, and Stalling himself on guitar and lead vocals. The project was engineered by Pat Manske.

Link to the tickets!

Theater doors open: 7:30 p.m.
Concert begins at 8 p.m.

Reserved Seating: 
Tier 1: $35
Tier 2: $25

Lewisville residents may purchase select $20 tickets, subject to availability, in person with proof of residency at The Grand during regular business hours.

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About the Artist:

Texas based singer/songwriter Max Stalling followed a unique path into the music business. He is originally from the Crystal City/Carrizo Springs area of southwest Texas. He has a master’s degree in horticulture from Texas A&M University and left a day job as a research scientist for snack food giant Frito Lay to pursue a fulltime career as a songwriter.

He has 6 studio albums and three live projects including a full-length DVD.  In addition to solo and duo shows, Max travels with a four-piece band and does 150+ shows annually.  Of recent, his wife Heather, a very accomplished fiddle player and songwriter herself, has been playing with Max and his band.

Five years after his previous record, 2010’s relaxed honky-tonking opus Home to You, Stalling felt compelled to mold a full-length record. One-off singles are great, he admits, but there is such artistic strength in a cohesive body of work.


More about Max Stalling, including upcoming shows