FULL SERIES TICKET - JUNE 27TH & 28TH - TICKET FOR WHOLE WEEKEND

FULL SERIES TICKET - JUNE 27TH & 28TH - TICKET FOR WHOLE WEEKEND

  • UNDER 16 WITH PARENT OR LEGAL GUARDIAN

June 27th - ALL ROCK with CHEAP TRICK & COLLECTIVE SOUL & June 28th - ALL COUNTRY with RUSSELL DICKERSON & CARLY PEARCE - ALL AGES SHOW

By Sylvan Cellars

Date and time

Friday, June 27 · 4 - 10pm EDT

Location

2725 E Northport Rd

2725 Northport Road Wolcottville, IN 46795

Refund Policy

No Refunds

About this event

  • Event lasts 6 hours
  • UNDER 16 WITH PARENT OR LEGAL GUARDIAN
  • Free venue parking

DALAPALOOZA 2-DAY FULL SERIES TICKET ALL WEEKEND MUSIC FESTIVAL

PRESENTED BY SHEPHERD'S FAMILY AUTO GROUP & DAL'S BIG HANDS BIG HEART MEMORIAL FOUNDATION


THIS TICKET IS FOR THE FULL WEEKEND FESTIVAL - JUNE 27TH & 28TH

FULL SERIES TICKET:

  • LIMITED AVAILABILITY
  • TICKET COST = $135 (Individual show tickets = $75 / Savings of $15)
  • TICKET GETS YOU IN THE GATE BOTH FRIDAY & SATURDAY


JUNE 27TH - ALL ROCK SHOW FEATURING:

  • CHEAP TRICK
  • COLLECTIVE SOUL
  • OPENER TBD

JUNE 28TH - ALL COUNTRY SHOW FEATURING:

  • RUSSELL DICKERSON
  • CARLY PEARCE
  • DRAKE WHITE
  • HUBIE ASHCRAFT TRIO

Tickets are available by the following:

  • $75 Single Show Ticket ( Rock Night or Country Night)
  • $135 Series Ticket ( Includes both Rock & Country Night June 27th & June 28th - limited availability on this ticket type )

GATES OPEN AT 4PM BOTH DAYS

ALL AGES SHOW - ALL SALES FINAL / NO REFUNDS

NO TICKETS WILL BE SOLD AT THE DOOR - MUST PURCHASE ON EVENTBRITE


Must have a ticket regardless of age for entrance to the events.

ALL BAGS MUST BE SEE THROUGH (NO BIGGER THAN 12"X6"X12")

  • NO RE-ENTRY ONCE YOUR TICKET IS SCANNED
  • NO OUTSIDE ALCOHOL / FOOD TO BE BROUGHT ON PREMISES
  • NO WEAPONS OF ANY SORT TO BE BROUGHT ON THE GROUNDS
  • NO TAILGATING ALLOWED ON SYLVAN CELLARS PROPERTY


WHAT TO EXPECT / BRING:

  • BRING YOUR OWN LAWN CHAIR &/OR BLANKET FOR SEATING
  • THERE WILL BE MULTIPLE BARS ON SITE ( 21+ IN BAR AREA ONLY)
  • FOOD TRUCKS AVAILABLE ON THE GROUNDS
  • SEPERATE VENDORS FOR UNDER 21 TO PURCHASE DRINKS
  • MANY OUTDOOR BATHROOMS THROUGHOUT THE CONCERT GROUNDS


~ HUGE THANK YOU TO ALL OF OUR SPONSORS! ~


PREMIER SPONSORS

  • Shepherd's Family Auto Group
  • Dal's Big Hands Big Heart Memorial Foundation


PLATINUM SPONSORS

  • BZ Auto
  • Black & Ramer Insurance
  • Dekalb Channel
  • Bayer Crop Science
  • "In God We Trust"


GOLD SPONSORS

  • AMI Investments
  • Aggregate Systems


SILVER SPONSORS

  • Scott Frick CPA
  • MOOM Properties
  • Community State Bank


About Cheap Trick:

the iconic rock band hailing from Illinois, has been rocking stages and winning over fans with their timeless sound for over five decades. Known for their electrifying live performances, catchy melodies, and innovative songwriting, Cheap Trick has become a staple in rock music history. With hits like “I Want You to Want Me”, “Dream Police”, “The Flame”, and “Surrender,” this legendary band continues to inspire and entertain audiences with their signature blend of hard rock and power-pop sensibilities. Cheap Trick is part of the very fiber of American music, inspiring and delighting generations with their unique union of massive melodies and razorblade riffs, their own special brand of mischievous wit and maximum rock ‘n’ roll. They achieved mainstream popularity in the US in 1979 with the triple-platinum live album At Budokan and a Top 10 single, a live recording of “I Want You to Want Me.” More success followed with the album Dream Police in 1979, which reached number 6 on the Billboard 200.The band experienced another resurgence in late eighties when they topped US charts with power ballad “The Flame.” Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2016, Cheap Trick maintain an almost constant touring schedule, having performed live more than 5,000 times since their formation, selling more than 20 million albums and building a dedicated cult following.


About Russell Dickerson:

Russell Dickerson is known for his electrifying performances and "unstoppable energy fans can’t get enough of” (E! News). After bursting onto the scene, the Tennessee native quickly stood out from the pack as he released four consecutive career-starting singles that reached No. One on the Billboard Country Airplay chart. Since then, Dickerson has earned platinum or better status on singles including “Yours" (3X Platinum), "Blue Tacoma” (2X Platinum), "Every Little Thing" (Platinum), "Love You Like I Used To" (Platinum), and “She Likes It” ft. Jake Scott (2X Platinum). Just last year, he clocked his fifth No. One with “God Gave Me A Girl.” This year, he released "Good Day To Have A Great Day,” followed by his latest single “Bones,” which was the biggest radio debut of his career. For more information, visit www.russelldickerson.com.

About Carly Pearce:

Fiercely rooted in the classics, the girl who left her Kentucky home and high school at 16 to take a job at Dollywood has grown into a woman who embraces the genre’s forward progression. GRAMMY® Award-winning singer-songwriter Carly Pearce lit a fire with her debut album Every Little Thing and the PLATINUM-certified history-making title track, and she hasn’t slowed down since. Pearce’s 3x PLATINUM-certified “I Hope You’re Happy Now" with Lee Brice won both the 2020 CMA Awards Musical Event and 2021 ACM Awards Music Event, plus ACM Single of the Year. Pearce, now a Grand Ole Opry and Kentucky Music Hall of Fame member, has come a long way from the pain she felt writing her critically acclaimed and commercially lauded third studio album 29 which includes Country Radio chart toppers “Never Wanted To Be That Girl” with Ashley McBryde and PLATINUM-certified “What He Didn’t Do.” For the PLATINUM-certified “Never Wanted To Be That Girl,” Pearce picked up her second consecutive ACM Music Event of the Year in 2022 and marked the third duet between two solo women to top Billboard’s Country Airplay chart. The song also took home the 2022 CMA Musical Event of the Year and won a GRAMMY® Award for Best Country Duo/Group Performance, marking Pearce’s first and making history as the first female pairing to win in the category. In 2023, Pearce joined Blake Shelton’s BACK TO THE HONKY TONK TOUR and made her 100th performance at the Grand Ole Opry. As she closed out that pivotal 29 chapter with her first live album 29: Written In Stone (Live From Music City), Pearce now steps into the next chapter of her musical career with the praised release of her latest Top-15-and-rising single “we don’t fight anymore” (featuring Chris Stapleton), which earned her second GRAMMY® nomination for Best Country Duo/Group Performance. Pearce went on to release “country music made me do it,” to critical acclaim, performing the song at the first annual People’s Choice Country Awards and on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. Last Fall, Pearce wrapped her headline Country Music Made Me Do It Tour, connecting with her fans all across the country. Pearce is currently joining Tim McGraw’s 2024 Standing Room Only Tour as direct support. She released her highly anticipated fourth album, hummingbird, on June 7, continuing to resonate with her honest lyrics and timeless musicality with songs such as the title track “hummingbird,” as well as “my place” and “fault line.” Pearce will head out on her hummingbird 2025 uk/eu tour in February 2025. For tour dates and more, visit CarlyPearce.com.

About Collective Soul,

Ed Roland can describe 30 years in Collective Soul with two words.

“It’s an honor and privilege,” said the frontman and songwriter behind the Georgia-born band known for a bedrock of time-tested hits. “It’s that simple. Just being able to do what you love, it’s an honor and a privilege.”

Since launching a major label career in 1994, Collective Soul has charted a path that most rock bands dream of, but only few achieve. They cut through a noisy 1990s rock scene with a knack for stick-to-you-like-glue melodies, roof-shaking guitars, and a touch of Southern grit. Behind enduring singles like “Shine,” “December” and “The World I Know,” the band hit the ground running for what would not be a short-lived sprint, but a steady marathon of uncompromising – and always catchy – albums. Since launching, they’ve become one of the most reliable rock bands in America, a tried-and-true force in a world often defined by turmoil and turbulence.

And in the same year the band celebrates three decades of music making, Collective Soul returns with what may be its most ambitious project to-date: HERE TO ETERNITY, a double LP cut in the California home once owned by Elvis Presley. With sharp, polished rock riffs and Roland’s signature wise-to-the-world storytelling, HERE TO ETERNITY plays like a full-throttle Collective Soul album from the moment it begins spilling out of stereo speakers.

“When I gave the album to management and radio promo,” he said, “I was like, ‘Put the needle on any song, I’m that proud of it.’”

Roland – alongside brother and co-founding member Dean Roland (guitar), childhood friend and bassist Will Turpin, guitarist Jesse Triplett and drummer Johnny Rabb – decamped for a month to Palm Springs, California, to record virtually all of HERE TO ETERNITY inside a house once owned by Elvis and Priscilla Presley. Called the “Elvis Presley Palm Springs Estate,” it’s believed to be the only home besides the famed Memphis estate owned by Presley at the time of his death.

Stepping inside the King’s one-time California getaway, his influence seeped into the album-making process. Ed Roland and album co-producer Shawn Grove slept in the home for the duration of the sessions, which overlapped with the death of Presley’s daughter Lisa Marie in early 2023.

“The sticky DNA, with Elvis being there,” Turpin said, “You can just tell it was his designs. All pink tiles. It’s straight out of 1977. It was super cool just to be there and in the zone.”

Or, in Triplett’s words: “It’s not something you can put your finger on specifically, but the vibe and energy of that place translated through the music. You almost don’t realize until the end and listen to the rough mixes and you go ‘oh shit … we did that.’”

Rabb added, “The energy was natural and the flow was incredible. We were all just in the pocket and the chemistry works so well.”

Listeners hear the results on HERE TO ETERNITY, a thrilling no-skips effort from start-to-finish. The album kicks into gear with songs the blues-tinged “Bluer Than Blue” and jangly roots rocker “Not The Same” before later cruising into the band’s long-running appreciation for Elton John and The Beatles with “Sister and Mary.”

They incorporate a Presley-like shuffle beat on throwback rockabilly jam “Matter of Fact,” adopt stripped-down balladeering on tender-to-the-touch number “Letter From E,” and croon a piano-backed tale of love on “Be The One,” which Ed Roland recorded solo in Elvis’ former bedroom. Plus, one of the standout songs on HERE TO ETERNITY wasn’t cut in Palm Springs, but in another room where Elvis once walked – the famed Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. Ed Roland tracked a live rendition of “Bob Dylan (Where Are You Today)” during a sold-out tour stop inside the hallowed Ryman halls.

But no song grabs on the first listen quite like “Mother’s Love,” the lead single and opening number debuted on the road last year. Featuring longtime Paul McCartney guitarist Brian Ray on slide guitar, “Mother’s Love” blasts off the turntable with a foot-stompin’, gnarled riff before gliding into a chorus layered by high-flying harmonies.

On “Mother’s Love,” Ed Roland sings: “Guess we’re all misunderstood/To what we can and what we should/Still I find above/All my strength from Mother’s Love.”

Alongside Ray, who lives in Palm Springs, guests on the album include longtime Sheryl Crow bandleader Peter Stroud and Mickey Thomas of Jefferson Starship fame.

“I happened to be walkin’ down the street and I had met Brian Ray a couple of times,” Ed Roland said. “I saw him and was like, ‘Brian, hey man. Why don’t you come over and break bread? We’re up at Elvis’ house.’”

The invite for a bite of grub turned into a session, of course. With a laugh, Ed Roland added, “I’m gettin’ pretty sneaky in my old age.”

And the album closes with “Over and Out,” an ominous folk-rock tune about life moving on – no matter if you’re ready or not.

“Last year, my niece was going over to college…and I don’t understand that yet, because my son’s 14,” Ed Roland said. “The song’s about letting your children go and letting them start their adulthood. I tried to feel what my sister and brother-in-law were feeling, which I’m about to feel.”

With 20 new songs, how does the band decide which to play live? You’ll have to catch a show to find out.

“It’s tricky,” Dean Roland said. “We know we wanna play the songs people came there to see, but it’s still fun. We’re gettin’ up there, doin’ our thing.”

And fans can bet on Collective Soul taking songs from HERE TO ETERNITY on the road for years to come. As the album title suggests, three decades is just the start.


Frequently asked questions

Do tickets need to be purchased for children?

Every person through the gate needs to have a ticket regardless of age. Per our contract with the talent every person through the gate is counted and need to have a ticket.

Is the party bus running?

No, the bus is not running the night of our large summer concert series.

Are coolers permitted through the gate?

No, per our contract with the talent no coolers are allowed to be brought in to the concert venue grounds.

Can we leave the concert grounds after ticket is scanned?

No, once your ticket is scanned you may not have re-entry back into the venue.

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