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Country Music Legend Michael Martin Murphey

7:00pm – 9:00pm
  • Jackson Auditorium
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TLU welcomes Grammy-Nominated Artist and American Country Music Award Winner Michael Martin Murphey on Thursday, October 21, at 7 p.m. in Jackson Auditorium. This special 35th Anniversary Performance also commemorates Murphey's return as one of the first guests to perform at Jackson Auditorium when it opened in 1986.

Tickets are NOT required for this event and general admission will be available on a first-come, first-served basis. As of August 2, 2021, TLU’s COVID-19 Policies and Protocols require all visitors, faculty, staff, and students to wear masks at indoor events, regardless of whether or not an individual has been vaccinated.

Michael Martin Murphey’s musical journey has taken many unpredictable paths over the past 50 years. Topping the Pop, Country, Western and Bluegrass charts, Murphey has never been one to rest on his laurels. A loyal American son from Texas, Murphey is best known for his chart-topping hits “Wildfire,” Carolina In The Pines,” “What’s Forever For,” “Long Line of Love,” “Geronimo’s Cadillac,” “Cowboy Logic,” and many more across his 35 albums released to date.

Murphey’s long-running incarnation as a purveyor of the music, lifestyle, and values of the American West is one of many musical mantles he has worn over the years. To track his career path is to span the country itself, from coming of age in the Texas folk music scene, to Los Angeles and Colorado to Nashville and then back to his native Texas.

Murphey’s original songs have been recorded by The Monkees, Kenny Rogers, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, John Denver, Hoyt Axton, Johnny Cash, Tracy Byrd, Lyle Lovett, Jerry Jeff Walker, Dolly Parton, Johnny Rivers, Billy Ray Cyrus, and many others.

During the early 1970s in Austin, TX along with artists like Jerry Jeff Walker and Gary P. Nunn, Murphey created the “Cosmic Cowboy” movement, which was pivotal in drawing artists like Willie Nelson to the scene and helped birth the “Outlaw” Country movement. In 1972, Murphey signed a major label deal. Discovered by renowned producer Bob Johnston (Simon & Garfunkel, Bob Dylan), Murphey released his pivotal debut, Geronimo’s Cadillac. “On the strength of his first album alone,” proclaimed Rolling Stone Magazine, “Michael Murphey is the best new songwriter in the country.” In 1975 he topped the pop charts with his hit singles, “Wildfire” and “Carolina In the Pines” from the RIAA Certified Gold album Blue Sky - Night Thunder.

Then, in the early 1980s, Murphey recorded a watershed country album for Capitol Records produced by Jim Ed Norman. He topped the country charts with the “Still Taking Chances” single, which solidified his relationship with country radio as a hit singer-songwriter and exposed him to an entirely new audience. Twelve years after his first hit in pop music, Murphey was awarded “Best New Artist” by the Academy of Country Music (beating out George Strait). He continued to top the country charts throughout the decade with hits like “What’s Forever For,” the Grammy-nominated “A Face In the Crowd,” (with Holly Dunn), the number one hit “A Long Line of Love”, “I’m Gonna Miss You Girl,” and many more.

In 1985, Murphey performed with the New Mexico Symphony in a concept he titled “A Night in the American West,” which was so well received, it led to hundreds of performances with American and Canadian symphonies, including the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D.C.

In 1990 he circled around to one of his first loves, cowboy music Cowboy Songs Vol.1, was wildly successful and became the first album of cowboy music to go gold since the heyday of Marty Robbins. Cowboy Songs was so popular and highly regarded that Warner Bros. created an entire imprint called Warner Western. Amid this country western success, he founded a cultural festival called “Westfest,” highlighting American West showmanship, culture, lifestyle, and scholarship.

Ever a genre-busting artist, Murphey refocused his attention again in 2009 with his Grammy nominated Buckaroo Blue Grass. That project — and two subsequent releases, Buckaroo Blue Grass II and Tall Grass & Cool Water — topped the Bluegrass charts.

Murphey has been awarded gold albums for Cowboy Songs, Vol. I, Blue Sky Night Thunder, and a Platinum single, “Wildfire.” He has been given the prestigious Charlie Russell Award for Western Heritage. He is a five-time recipient of the Wrangler Award from the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum and Cowboy Hall of Fame, and boasts awards from the Academy of Country Music, Rock Music Awards, Academy of Western Music Awards, Governor of New Mexico’s Outstanding Achievement Award, and the Outstanding Son of Texas Award by the Texas Legislature.

In 2009, he was inducted into the Texas Heritage Songwriters Association Hall of Fame, joining old friends Willie Nelson, Guy Clark and Allen Shamblin. In 2019 he received a lifetime achievement award from the Western Heritage Awards. In 2018, he released Austinology, celebrating his early days as a pioneer of the Austin music scene during the 1970s with guest artists like Steve Earle, Lyle Lovett, and many more.