Time Jumpers Band Schedule

The Time Jumpers' sound is primarily swing-based, but band's level of. At 4 p.m., and the Time Jumpers are scheduled to perform at 5 p.m.

Announce Additional Dates at 3rd & LindsleyNASHVILLE – The Time Jumpers, a Nashville treasure, is celebrating its’ 20th anniversary this year. As part of that celebration, the super-group will be adding a handful of dates to their standing Monday night shows at 3rd & Lindsley. The first additional show has been announced as Friday, June 1 at 8:00pm. Tickets are on sale now and can be purchased online.The Time Jumpers’ Monday night shows are historic and sell out quickly. For two decades the show has been the destination in Nashville on a Monday night—joining the tradition of other historic Monday night shows—the late Les Paul’s regular gig at the Iridium in New York, and Woody Allen’s weekly jazz performance at the now shuttered Michael’s Pub, also in New York.The current edition of the Grammy-winning band includes 10 members, each a master of his instrument. They are Vince Gill (vocals, electric and acoustic guitars), “Ranger Doug” Green (vocals, acoustic rhythm guitar), Paul Franklin (steel guitar), Brad Albin (upright bass), Larry Franklin (fiddle, vocals), Andy Reiss (electric guitar), Kenny Sears (vocals, fiddle), Joe Spivey (fiddle, vocals) Jeff Taylor (accordion, piano) and Billy Thomas (drums, vocals).Over the last 20 years, The Time Jumpers has had a slowly revolving door of remarkable musicians including Aubrey Haynie, Dennis Crouch, Hoot Hester, Dawn Sears and John Hughey. One of the remaining original members, Jeff Taylor commented, “The longevity and acceptance of this band has been one of the nicest surprises of my career.”The Time Jumpers was established in Nashville in May 1998 by an assemblage of high-dollar studio musicians who wanted to spend some spare time jamming with their sonically gifted buddies.

Schedule

The notion of building a rabidly devoted following was the last thing on their minds. But that’s what happened.The band’s original home was at the historic Station Inn. Roundabout brewery pop-up. As word spread along Music Row that something special was happening at their shows, big stars began dropping by, some to sit in with the band, others just to enjoy the vast array of country, swing, jazz and pop standards The Time Jumpers rejoiced in playing. Among those drop-bys were Bonnie Raitt, Reba McEntire, Norah Jones, Robert Plant, The White Stripes, Kings Of Leon, Jimmy Buffet, Joe Walsh, Diana Krall, Elvis Costello, Chris Isaak and Kelly Clarkson. McEntire once commented, “One of my favorite memories of music in Nashville is going to listen to The Time Jumpers play live. They are all incredible musicians and singers and they remind me of what I love so much about music. The times they have asked me to come on stage and sing with them has been a total blast.”Eventually, the lines to get in grew so long that in 2012 the band relocated the Monday night shows to one of Nashville’s hottest clubs for music, 3rd & Lindsley.

Club owner Ron Brice comments, “We’re very proud to be presenting The Time Jumpers and to be a part of their 20th anniversary show celebrations and residency.”Often requested as special guests, their individual recording and performing credits cover virtually the entire history of country music, ranging from Slim Whitman to Carrie Underwood, and their members have recorded extensively with artists in other genres as well, from Barbra Streisand to Megadeth. The Time Jumpers have three albums, Jumpin’ Time, The Time Jumpers and their most recent Kid Sister, a tribute to the late Dawn Sears.

Though they carry on a comedic tradition that harkens back to Grand Ole Opry humorists of the 1930s including the Duke of Paducah, Riders In The Sky’s four members are also masterful musicians who became the first Opry cast members to fully represent the cowboy stylings that helped to put the “Western” in “Country & Western.”The group got their start in late 1977, when guitarist Doug “Ranger Doug” Green, a one-time member of Bill Monroe’s Blue Grass Boys and country music journalist and historian, invited bassist Fred “Too Slim” Labour to join him for a gig at a Nashville nightclub. With Paul “Woody Paul” Chrisman on fiddle, the trio dubbed themselves Riders In The Sky.

Their recorded debut, Three on the Trail (1979), showcased impeccable vocal and instrumental work in the mold of such Western music heroes — and Country Music Hall of Fame members — as Gene Autry, Roy Rogers and the Sons of the Pioneers, while their live shows added a strong dose of broad, quick-witted humor that had them poking gentle fun at one another and at aspects of the movie cowboy image. This combination led to their induction into the Opry’s cast in 1982.“Zeke Clements had a cowboy routine, the Willis Brothers sang some cowboy songs, and, of course, Marty Robbins sang some cowboy songs, too, but we’re the group that deliberately set about to preserve the Western tradition on this show,” notes Ranger Doug.