In The Round with Justin Klump, Austin Jenckes, Regan Stewart & Jacob Rice

Fri Jan 10 2025

6:00 PM (Doors 5:00 PM)

The Bluebird Cafe

4104 Hillsboro Pike Nashville, TN 37215

$12 / $12 food/bev minimum

All Ages

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THIS IS A PREPAID SHOW, REFUNDS ARE NOT AVAILABLE.

There are 18 tables, 8 bar seats and 8 church pew seats available for reservation. The remaining pew seats for this show are not reserved in advance. These seats are available on a first come/first served basis when doors open.

Ticket reservations at The Bluebird Cafe are an agreement to pay the non-refundable cover charge and applicable taxes/fees and to meet the $12.00 per seat food and/or drink minimum.

Note: When making reservations, choose the table you would like and then add the number of seats you need to your cart by using the + button. You are NOT reserving an entire table if you choose 1 (by choosing 1, you are reserving 1 seat). We reserve ALL seats at each table. If you are a smaller party at a larger table, you will be seated with guests outside your party.

In The Round with Justin Klump, Austin Jenckes, Regan Stewart & Jacob Rice

  • SOLD OUT! There will be a few walk-up seats that are first come, first served when doors open.
  • Justin Klump

    Justin Klump

    Music

    Justin Klump is an American singer, songwriter, and producer from Vancouver, Wash. whose accessible americana-pop music shines a light on the everyday struggle of a life spent both on- and offstage. Justin’s music has been featured by NBC Sports, Rolling Stone Country, Sirius XM’s The Pulse and The Coffee House, American Songwriter, FOX Sports, Apple Music, Lightning 100, Kings of A&R, SongPickr, BBC One’s “Don’t Tell the Bride”, and on screen throughout the world, from Mexico, to Romania, to Slovakia and the Czech Republic. 
     
    Justin currently resides in Nashville, Tenn. and is writing, producing, and recording new music daily.
  • Austin Jenckes

    Austin Jenckes

    Country

    Ask Austin Jenckes about his unwavering need to write and perform music, and as he pauses to gather his thoughts, you can practically see a montage of the country singer-songwriter’s life playing before him: a childhood spent watching his father play guitar in the park; high school talent shows; dingy bar gigs; televised singing competitions; publishing deals; Nashville writing rooms; a forthcoming debut album. “But at the root, it’s always been me trying to move somebody enough emotionally to pay attention to what I’m singing about,” Jenckes says. “Music’s always been a way for me to observe and process the world around me.”
     
    Melody. Message. That moment in a song when a listener sees his or her life reflected back at them like a mirror—Jenckes lives in service of the song, and it’s why he spends every day tirelessly perfecting his craft. The endlessly humble Jenckes will tell you, “I’m just a guy with a guitar singing songs.” But his work tells a far more nuanced tale. To hear Jenckes perform is to hear the roots of country music brought into the modern age: all soul and blues and that brand of lyrical honesty and palpable emotion that’s long defined the genre’s most celebrated artists.  From the serene send-off “In My Head” to the rearview reflection “Fat Kid,” Jenckes’ best songs are direct dispatches from the never easy but unquestionably rich life he’s lived.
     

    “I’ve always been the type to pay attention to what other people are doing and learn from their lives and my own,” Jenckes offers of his songwriting inspiration, “Take in not only the successes but more importantly the mistakes.”

    “But I feel really fortunate right now,” adds Jenckes, whose long-awaited debut album is set for release in 2019. He smiles and adds, “This is what I’ve always wanted for my life.
     

    If Jenckes appears ever appreciative it’s because, like so many supreme songwriters with wisdom gained from hardship, he’s lived a lot of life. Growing up in small-town Washington, Jenckes’ parents divorced when he was 13, and three years later his father took his own life. Much as he’d always done, Jenckes turned to music as his principal refuge. “I really felt I had everybody in that town supporting me,” he says of staking out a reputation early on as a supremely skilled singer with a powerful and passionate voice that combined his equal-parts love of Southern rock and folk music. “It was always really important to me that my music felt emotional and felt like it was telling a story,” he notes, and upon graduating from college the musician doubled down on his dream and moved to Nashville to pursue a career in music.
     

    “I was struggling in a lot of ways because I just felt lost,” he recalls of that time period. “I still was this kid that wanted this big unattainable thing but I was putting a lot of my self worth in that. It felt like I wasn’t going to be happy or successful unless I could be a full-time musician.” There were detours, to be sure, from short-lived publishing deals to landing a sport on the hit TV show The Voice. And he admits, for a time, he figured he’d just be a songwriter for other artists. But Jenckes forever made it his mission to continuing evolving as both musician and songwriter. Looking back, he admits, “That whole time I was trying to figure out what kind of music I wanted to put out. I didn’t know if it was pop, rock, country or soul. So I was just writing a ton.”
     

    But after getting married and then becoming a father, Jenckes says he realized, “I wasn’t going to be happy unless I was putting my whole heart into putting my own music out and performing.” Looking back now, he adds, “Any previous uncertainty about my future was me just being afraid to do anything at all. At the end of the day I just needed to commit. I remember telling my wife, “I’m going in all the way.”

    His ever-growing fanbase speaks to the wisdom behind that decision. Whether playing headline or opening shows, touring with a six-piece band or stage-center, just the man and his guitar, Jenckes is reminded daily of how many people have and continue to be inspired by his music. “I still don’t feel like I know how to do it completely on purpose,” he says with a laugh of his innate ability to pen authentic, sincere and supremely hooky songs. “But all I can do is focus on telling my story.”

  • Regan Stewart

    Regan Stewart

    Country

    Regan Stewart is the epitome of the music she grew up on. With a recently released Debut EP, titled “r.,” produced by Brandon Hood, Regan brings a classic, feminine twist to a modern country sound today. Regan says, “This EP is just the beginning and a piece of a larger puzzle of who I am. I can’t wait for you to hear what’s next!”

    Auburn, Alabama native, Regan Stewart, began writing songs at 8-years-old and has quickly made a name for herself in Nashville. Stewart has been featured on Rolling Stone, Cowgirl Magazine, NPR, Taste of Country, CMT, Cowboys & Indians, and many others. In 2018, she was asked to join Jake Owen’s team on USA Network’s Real Country.
  • Jacob Rice

    Jacob Rice

    Country Pop

    Listening to country radio today, it’s not uncommon to find an artist challenging the norms, and recording music for the love of the lyric. But in a genre currently dominated by flat brims and ball caps, you’ll find Jacob Rice strumming on your heart strings. 

    Coming from the town of Wallingford, Vermont with a mere 2000 residents, Rice was raised stacking the wood stove, enjoying the great outdoors, and writing his songs by the river. Like the sap from the maple trees, his sweet songs are taken straight from the heart. Rice’s hybrid country sound transcends genre to deliver an authentic experience driven by heartfelt lyrics and a soulful, passionate vocal. His current release, Way You Were Loving Me, brings a timeless, refreshing take on the current country sound. 

    He has had the honor of being produced by Chad Cromwell (Anders Osbourne, Joe Walsh, Neil Young) and Paul Worley (Lady A, The Chicks, Martina McBride) for an upcoming project. Rice was also chosen by the prestigious Bluebird Cafe and Taylor Guitars as their January 2021 Golden Pick. Rice has been featured on Spotify’s “New Music Nashville”, Vermont Public Radio, and 101.5 WEXP Vermont Community Radio. All of these accomplishments are a testament to Rice’s hard work and dedication to making great, lasting music.

    Grounded by a love for his home state, Rice is ready to show the world who he is - one song at a time.

In The Round with Justin Klump, Austin Jenckes, Regan Stewart & Jacob Rice

Fri Jan 10 2025 6:00 PM

(Doors 5:00 PM)

The Bluebird Cafe Nashville TN
In The Round with Justin Klump, Austin Jenckes, Regan Stewart & Jacob Rice
  • SOLD OUT! There will be a few walk-up seats that are first come, first served when doors open.

$12 / $12 food/bev minimum All Ages

THIS IS A PREPAID SHOW, REFUNDS ARE NOT AVAILABLE.

There are 18 tables, 8 bar seats and 8 church pew seats available for reservation. The remaining pew seats for this show are not reserved in advance. These seats are available on a first come/first served basis when doors open.

Ticket reservations at The Bluebird Cafe are an agreement to pay the non-refundable cover charge and applicable taxes/fees and to meet the $12.00 per seat food and/or drink minimum.

Note: When making reservations, choose the table you would like and then add the number of seats you need to your cart by using the + button. You are NOT reserving an entire table if you choose 1 (by choosing 1, you are reserving 1 seat). We reserve ALL seats at each table. If you are a smaller party at a larger table, you will be seated with guests outside your party.