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Jamie Richards
Neon Moon Restaurant and Social Club
4672 TX-154
Yantis, TX 75497
Apr 5, 2025
8:30 PM CDT
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About this concert
About Jamie Richards
A staunch musical traditionalist with a modern edge, Jamie Richards has won a strong regional following in the Southwest for his songs rich in pedal steel, broken hearts, and plainspoken storytelling.
Richards was born in Oklahoma, where his folks ran a dairy farm. Growing up on the farm, Jamie inherited his father's work ethic and his mother's love of music. He learned to sing with his mom, as she played classic gospel songs on the family's piano and he sang along. As he grew older, Richards became a serious country music fan. In time, he began writing songs and singing them with a band that played honky-tonks across Oklahoma. After years of working in clubs, then 26-year-old Richards, decided to take a shot at the big time, and he moved to Nashville, Tennessee. In Nashville, Richards worked in construction to make ends meet and soon signed developmental deals with RCA and Capitol Records. After both deals fizzled out, he soon realized that most Music City record labels were looking for artists with more pop sensibility and less of a hard country edge.
With unwavering perseverance, Richards' gifts as a songwriter didn't go unnoticed, and he was signed as a staff songwriter with Curb Records. Jamie's songs enjoyed success as recorded by Cody Jinks, Hal Ketchum ("That's What You Get for Loving Me"), Ken Mellons ("Believe"), and Kevin Fowler ("Loose, Loud and Crazy"). After five years in Nashville, Richards was eager to make his mark as an artist. In 2001 he began traveling from Nashville for Houston, where Wes Daily was reviving the D Records label, which first recorded George Jones. Richards and Daily saw eye to eye about country music, and in 2002 D released Richards' first full-length album, No Regrets. The album fared well in Texas and Oklahoma, and two songs from No Regrets became Top Ten singles on the Texas Regional Radio chart. In 2005, Richards made the permanent move to Texas and never looked back.
Becoming a popular attraction on the Texas music scene, both as a live act and a recording artist, fans will often drive hundreds of miles to attend a show. Richards has since released eight full-length albums with 25 radio singles, 13 of which went to #1 on the Texas Regional Radio chart. "Second-Hand Smoke," co-written with Mark Powell, was named song of the year in 2016. His song, "One Tequila" was featured in the 2018 film, "Zoe."
Richards is currently writing a brand new album to be released in 2025. You can expect to continue to hear real-deal Texas country music, with a few surprises up his sleeve. His true grit and vulnerable delivery make him effortlessly relatable to the everyday working man and woman.
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What fans are saying

Patrick
February 9th 2025
Finally got to check off a bucket list concert. Great show! Terrible that Jamie Richards isn't bigger.
Plano, TX@Love & War In Texas
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Jamie Richards Biography
Rarely do you find a singer with a voice that delivers emotions as convincingly as Jamie Richards. At home anywhere there’s cold beer and a sawdust dance floor, Jamie is successfully climbing the country music ladder, one rung at a time-- and he’s doing it his way.
From his first single, “Don’t Try To Find Me” (2002), to his most recent hit, “She’s Cold As That Beer She’s Drinkin’” (2011), Jamie’s popularity continues to soar. He’s lived enough, loved and lost enough and defied the odds enough to write songs that relate to hearts of all ages.
Pleasing a crowd has always come easy for the Shawnee native. At the age of four, he got his first glimpse of audience approval while performing from the top of his mother’s piano bench during all-night gospel revivals.
By the time he was 18, Jamie’s music had expanded. Developing a rugged signature sound that was perfect for honky-tonks and bars, he found himself playing 100 shows a year, making fifty dollars per night.
Jamie eventually found his way to Music City’s Curb Records where, as a staff writer, he wrote with the industry’s finest. Oftentimes sacrificing his craft for the sake of putting bread on the table, Jamie worked in construction for several of his early Nashville years. It wasn’t until he met Wes Daily of Houston’s D Records that he became a force to be reckoned with in the Texas music world-- and Texas became his “second home.”
His first of four successful albums, “No Regrets,” hit the airwaves with four singles in the Top Twenty on the Texas Music chart. After that, there was no stopping the determined “rebel with a cause.”
Since 2002, Jamie has released 15 crowd-pleasing singles—11 of which made it into the Top Ten / Texas Music chart. His single, “Drive,” took the #1 spot. In addition, he continues to write hits with and for some of country’s biggest names-- among them, Kevin Fowler (“Loose, Loud and Crazy”), Ken Mellons (“Believe”), Hal Ketchum (“That’s What You Get For Loving Me”), and “I Would Love You Anyway” on international artist Vanessa Camargo’s Platinum album, and many others.
From the fan-favorite “Last Call,” to the rowdy beer-drinkin’ anthem “I Can Party When I Need To,” Jamie knows exactly what his followers want: a honky-tonk singer with a bit of an edge. About to release his fifth album, “All About the Music,” following 2010’s successful “Sideways,” the Oklahoma hit-maker has again extended his boundaries; he’s steadily gaining a nationwide fan-base, and also performing abroad.
With a “cradle to the grave” music philosophy and lyrics that run the full gamut of human emotions, he can’t be bothered with genre labels; he makes his own kind of music. Jamie’s simply a self-proclaimed honky-tonk singer who’s using his intoxicating voice and powerful lyrics to take him to the top of the charts.
“I just wanted to do music that moved me in some way—music that was soulful,” says Jamie. “I just wanted to put it out there and wherever that takes me, I’m fine.”
With a lot of grit and a good dose of humor, he’s again in construction; this time, building a successful career-- on his own terms.
Read MoreFrom his first single, “Don’t Try To Find Me” (2002), to his most recent hit, “She’s Cold As That Beer She’s Drinkin’” (2011), Jamie’s popularity continues to soar. He’s lived enough, loved and lost enough and defied the odds enough to write songs that relate to hearts of all ages.
Pleasing a crowd has always come easy for the Shawnee native. At the age of four, he got his first glimpse of audience approval while performing from the top of his mother’s piano bench during all-night gospel revivals.
By the time he was 18, Jamie’s music had expanded. Developing a rugged signature sound that was perfect for honky-tonks and bars, he found himself playing 100 shows a year, making fifty dollars per night.
Jamie eventually found his way to Music City’s Curb Records where, as a staff writer, he wrote with the industry’s finest. Oftentimes sacrificing his craft for the sake of putting bread on the table, Jamie worked in construction for several of his early Nashville years. It wasn’t until he met Wes Daily of Houston’s D Records that he became a force to be reckoned with in the Texas music world-- and Texas became his “second home.”
His first of four successful albums, “No Regrets,” hit the airwaves with four singles in the Top Twenty on the Texas Music chart. After that, there was no stopping the determined “rebel with a cause.”
Since 2002, Jamie has released 15 crowd-pleasing singles—11 of which made it into the Top Ten / Texas Music chart. His single, “Drive,” took the #1 spot. In addition, he continues to write hits with and for some of country’s biggest names-- among them, Kevin Fowler (“Loose, Loud and Crazy”), Ken Mellons (“Believe”), Hal Ketchum (“That’s What You Get For Loving Me”), and “I Would Love You Anyway” on international artist Vanessa Camargo’s Platinum album, and many others.
From the fan-favorite “Last Call,” to the rowdy beer-drinkin’ anthem “I Can Party When I Need To,” Jamie knows exactly what his followers want: a honky-tonk singer with a bit of an edge. About to release his fifth album, “All About the Music,” following 2010’s successful “Sideways,” the Oklahoma hit-maker has again extended his boundaries; he’s steadily gaining a nationwide fan-base, and also performing abroad.
With a “cradle to the grave” music philosophy and lyrics that run the full gamut of human emotions, he can’t be bothered with genre labels; he makes his own kind of music. Jamie’s simply a self-proclaimed honky-tonk singer who’s using his intoxicating voice and powerful lyrics to take him to the top of the charts.
“I just wanted to do music that moved me in some way—music that was soulful,” says Jamie. “I just wanted to put it out there and wherever that takes me, I’m fine.”
With a lot of grit and a good dose of humor, he’s again in construction; this time, building a successful career-- on his own terms.
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