Luke Bryan is bringing some of his talented friends to perform on his sixth annual Farm Tour shows this fall. Cole Swindell, The Peach Pickers (Dallas Davidson, Rhett Akins and Ben Hayslip), Chancie Neal and DJ Rock will join the tour as it stops in eight southern towns beginning October 1st in Knoxville.
Farm Tour 2014
October 1 Knoxville, Tennessee Maple Lane Farms
October 2 Auburn, Alabama Ingram Farms
October 3 Tallahassee, Florida Cross Creek Place
October 4 Gainesville, Florida Whitehurst Cattle Farm
October 8 Statesboro, Georgia Perry Field
October 9 Athens, Georgia Meldon Farm
October 10 Columbia, South Carolina Culler Farms
October 11 Macon, Georgia Midway at Central City Park
(dates & cities subject to change)
All Farm Tour dates are currently on sale with tickets available at www.lukebryan.com. VIP experiences are also available through the website and a special “Harvest Time VIP Experience” includes a general admission ticket that comes with an exclusive VIP viewing area with a premium view of the stage, a parking pass, access to VIP only restrooms, limited edition Farm Tour poster, private cash bar and more. Find out more information from Luke’s official VIP partner, CID Entertainment at: http://www.cidentertainment.com/events/luke-bryan-farm-tour-2014/ .
Last year Luke performed for over 115,000 fans in eight Farm Tour towns breaking the previous year’s record. A portion of the proceeds are granted for local college scholarships (“Luke Bryan Farm Tour Scholarship”) to students from a farming family within the communities the tour plays.
Farm Tour is sponsored by Texaco, Cabela’s, Miller Lite, and AT&T U-verse® .
Audio / Luke Bryan (Farm Tour 2014) 1
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Luke Bryan (Farm Tour 2014) 1 OC: …for the fans. :59
“Farm Tour is just fun to me, and it’s something that anytime you can start something that starts small and grow it. We never want to make it this really ginormous thing that we can’t control, but we want to make sure it’s on our terms and we love doing it. And then we want to make sure that the communities that we partner up with from the sheriff’s office to the highway patrol guys to the colleges to the college kids, we want to make sure it’s a positive thing at the end of the day for the communities. Therefore, that’s why we do the scholarships and we hope that we leave these places better than we found ‘em, and we hope people continue to want us back. And we hope we feel like we’re a positive thing for the local economies for these small towns, which wouldn’t necessarily have 15, 20-thousand people converging on ‘em. I hope it’s a positive thing for ‘em and not a negative. I enjoy being out there [performing in] the field and playing for the fans.”