June 6, 2022

The Indigo Girls

TICKETS ON SALE FRIDAY, JUNE 10 AT 10AM!

Ticket Prices: $27.73 and up
(Additional fees may apply.)

 

Presented by AEG Presents

 

WATCH FOR PRE-SALE OPPORTUNITIES ON THE SAENGER THEATRE SOCIAL MEDIA CHANNELS!

 

Tickets can be purchased online at https://bit.ly/igmob22. Purchase in person at the Saenger Theatre Box Office (6 South Joachim Street; open Monday – Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; 251-208-5600) or the Mobile Civic Center Box Office (401 Civic Center Drive; open Monday – Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; 251-208-7906).  For information regarding accessible seating tickets, call 251-208-7381. The historic Saenger Theatre building is not elevator equipped.  (Additional fees, service charges and/or taxes may be added to ticket prices. All dates, acts and ticket prices subject to change without notice.)



About The Indigo Girls

 

Released in 1989, Indigo Girls' eponymous major label debut sold over two million copies under the power of singles “Closer to Fine” and “Kid Fears” and turned Indigo Girls into one of the most successful folk duos in history. Over a thirty-five-year career that began in clubs around their native Atlanta, Georgia, the Grammy-winning duo has recorded sixteen studio albums (seven gold, four platinum, one double platinum), sold over 15 million records, and built a dedicated, enduring following across the globe.

 

Their latest record, Look Long is a stirring and eclectic collection of songs that finds the duo of Amy Ray and Emily Saliers reunited in the studio with their strongest backing band to date. “We joke about being old, but what is old when it comes to music? We’re still a bar band at heart,” says Saliers. “While our lyrics and writing approach may change, our passion for music feels the same as it did when we were 25-years-old.”

 

About Rickie Lee Jones

 

There are few careers that come close to mirroring Rickie Lee Jones’ emancipated and starry flight across our musical skies.  The two-time Grammy winner first appeared on the scene in Los Angeles in the mid-1970s, and in her wake came such a wide scope of women, from country, pop and punk.   It’s hard to believe she collected and released so many wild icons, but she did.

 

For she was the first of her kind, crooning “My Funny Valentine” in lounge singer heels.  She rocked like Mick Jagger and ground her hips like Tina Turner. She was the beginning of the nebulous, ethereal personality-driven voices of women who dominate music today.

 

Her acclaimed memoir Last Chance Texaco, released in the spring of 2021, is “as rich and colorful as Jones’s best lyrics,” writes The New York Times.  “It’s a classically American picaresque tale, a recounting of a life in which she “lived volumes…””  Jones sets the record straight and illuminates her journey far beyond any music memoir.   Her story is an American story.   As The New Yorker describes, “she reads as a modern Huck Finn.”

 

At 66 years of age, Rickie Lee Jones has staked her claim as an American songwriter who helped shape the language of music we all call our own.

 


 

More Info for Indigo Girls
Oct. 16th
Saenger Theatre

Indigo Girls

with special guest Rickie Lee Jones