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UID:155362@kingstonhappenings.org
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260228T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260228T190000
DTSTAMP:20260223T152205Z
URL:https://kingstonhappenings.org/events/india-ramey-the-slide-stops-dj-m
 oonshine-dj-prison-rodeo/
SUMMARY:India Ramey\, The Slide Stops\, DJ Moonshine & DJ Prison Rodeo
DESCRIPTION:Honky Tonkin’ in Queens is coming to Kingston on February 28t
 h! &#x1f525\; India Ramey is headlining straight from Nashville\, Tennesse
 e with special guests The Slide Stops from Brooklyn\, New York. Be ready t
 o set that wooden dance floor on fire! Bring your dancing partner and boot
 s that are ready to scoot across the floor. It’s going to be a night of 
 great music\, great dancing\, and even better vibes. We can’t wait to se
 e all y’all’s faces out there!\n\nINDIA RAMEY\nAfter the success of he
 r fiery 2024 LP\, Baptized By The Blaze\, Nashville outlaw siren India Ram
 ey is back with Villain Era\, set for release on May 8\, 2026\, via Copaco
  Records/Blue Élan. Baptized By The Blaze was the story of Ramey’s jour
 ney through the fire\, a harrowing passage toward healing and empowerment.
  Villain Era is firmly rooted in her own reckoning\; it doesn’t ask for 
 permission\, it kicks the door wide open.\n\n“This album is the ‘heale
 d’ me\,” Ramey says. “I didn’t know how to have boundaries because
  I was such a people pleaser. When you live your life that way\, you lose 
 sight of who you really are. I’ve spent the last few years finding my au
 thentic self\, reclaiming my identity. The title track\, ‘Welcome To My 
 Villain Era\,’ is me saying I’m not going to suffer fools anymore. I
 ’m not compromising anymore. If my boundaries offend you\, I’ll happil
 y play the villain in that story.”\n\nArmed with that conviction and a n
 ew batch of songs\, Ramey left the South for the first time to record in L
 os Angeles with two-time Grammy-nominated producer Eric Corne. Together\, 
 they built a soundscape as cinematic as it is cathartic. Ramey\, whose fan
 s have taken to calling her “The Woman In Black” and “the Wednesday 
 Addams of country music\,” told Corne she wanted the album to sound like
  Johnny Cash and Loretta Lynn had risen from the grave to score a Quentin 
 Tarantino film. Corne assembled a powerhouse band to help her pull it off\
 , including Ted Russell Kamp (Shooter Jennings) on bass\, Eugene Edwards (
 Dwight Yoakam) and Chris Masterson (Steve Earle\, The Mastersons\, The Wal
 lflowers) on guitar\, Eleanor Whitmore (Steve Earle &amp\; The Dukes\, The
  Mastersons) on fiddle\, Kevin Brown on drums\, Boo Bernstein (Emmylou Har
 ris\, Dwight Yoakam) on pedal steel\, and Haley Spence Brown (The Doohicke
 ys) on backing vocals.\n\n“He didn’t just listen to me\, he heard me\,
 ” Ramey says of Corne. “The musicians were equally respectful of what 
 my vision was\, and they went above and beyond. It was the most collaborat
 ive\, emboldening recording experience I've ever had.”\n\nThe result is 
 Villain Era: ten spaghetti western–meets–honky tonk vignettes\, penned
  solely by Ramey\, laced with grit\, gallows humor\, and emotional precisi
 on.\n\nWith the first notes of opener “We Ride at Dawn\,” Ramey puts h
 er boots on the ground and reclaims her territory. A callback to “King o
 f the Ashes” from her 2020 LP Shallow Graves\, the song rises from the r
 ubble with reverb\, ghostly pedal steel\, and the promise of revenge from 
 the women who survived. On “Scattered and Smothered\,” Ramey trades th
 e battlefield for a Waffle House booth at 2 a.m.\, where heartbreak meets 
 hangover in a haze of regret. “Well I’m a hot mess\, I must confess / 
 Ever since he brought up takin’ next steps / And my drunk ass needs some
  hash browns and scrambled eggs\,” she sings\, As patrons fight\, chairs
  fly\, and late-night shenanigans ensue in the background\, our heroine is
  lost in thought\, hoping the grease soaks up the memories of the night sh
 e’s attempting to put in her rearview.\n\nThe tone turns bittersweet on 
 “Crying in My Lingerie\,” a deceptively upbeat breakup song that captu
 res the loneliness of a woman who’s realizing her marriage is over. Doin
 g her best to fan the flames of something long since gone\, she drowns her
  sorrows in boxed wine. Dressed in the now-meaningless symbols of desire a
 nd devotion\, she realizes she’s become a divorcee in waiting.\n\nThroug
 hout Villain Era\, Ramey explores what it means to step fully into oneself
  after years of just trying to survive. “There’s a lot of freedom in k
 nowing yourself\,” she says. “It makes you feral. But in these times\,
  joy is resistance. We should be having some fun\, too.”\n\nSaving Count
 ry Music once wrote\, “Many of the women in country music these days lov
 e to sing about lighting stuff on fire to symbolically tease their empower
 ment. With India Ramey\, you think she’ll actually haul off and do it.
 ” It’s an apt description for an artist who doesn’t just tell storie
 s of strength\, she lives them out loud.\n\nWith five studio albums under 
 her belt\, Ramey continues to be one of country music’s fiercest truth-t
 ellers. Her 2017 breakout Snake Handler landed her on Rolling Stone’s 
 “10 New Country Artists You Need to Know.” Her 2020 “post-apocalypti
 c western” album\, Shallow Graves\, earned international recognition\, d
 ebuting at #6 on the Euro Americana Chart. Then came 2024’s Baptized By 
 The Blaze\, a searing chronicle of her battle with a dependence on prescri
 bed medication and PTSD stemming from childhood trauma. Like a phoenix ris
 ing from the ashes\, she sang on the title track\, “Yesterday I set myse
 lf on fire / With my own hands I built that funeral pyre / I built it so h
 igh the flames touched the sky / And now I am alive because I died.”\n\n
 Now\, with Villain Era\, India Ramey stands unapologetically in her power\
 , delivering songs that cut deep and laugh loudly\, songs that balance the
  weight of lived experience with the freedom of release.
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://kingstonhappenings.org/wp-content/upload
 s/2026/02/eefe0f52-7704-401c-9f2a-b06c45c8f701.jpg
CATEGORIES:@Featured,@Newsletter
LOCATION:Assembly\, 236 Wall St. 3rd Floor\, KINGSTON\, NY\, 12401\, United
  States
GEO:41.931738;-74.018648
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