THE MAN WHO TAUGHT AMERICA TO “FEELS SO RIGHT”… IS PREPARING TO SAY FAREWELL. It’s said that some nights are preordained, and June 27, 2026, could be one of those nights. Randy Owen, the voice and heart of Alabama, has revealed that his final concert will take place in Nashville — a farewell not just to the stage, but to a lifetime of songs, brotherhood, and faith. A night destined to echo with gratitude, courage, and the sound of home.

Some nights feel destined before they arrive — and June 27, 2026, may be one of them. In a moment that feels both inevitable and impossible, Randy Owen, the voice and heart of Alabama, has announced that his final concert will take place in Nashville, marking the close of a career that helped define the very sound of American country music.

For over fifty years, Randy’s voice has been more than just familiar — it’s been family. From “Feels So Right” to “Mountain Music”, from the dance halls of the South to the stadiums of the world, his songs carried the warmth of home and the honesty of heartland life. Now, after decades of touring, recording, and giving everything he had to the stage, he is preparing for a farewell that promises to be as intimate as it is monumental.

“This isn’t goodbye,” Randy shared in a quiet statement. “It’s just time to take that last ride home.”

The upcoming Nashville concert is being called A Night to Remember, a once-in-a-lifetime gathering that will bring together generations of fans, family, and fellow artists who were shaped by Alabama’s sound — that seamless blend of gospel soul, Southern rock, and small-town storytelling. Sources close to the production say the evening will be a living timeline of Randy’s journey: the early barroom harmonies, the breakout hits of the ’80s, and the songs that carried him through personal loss and enduring faith.

There will be tributes — to Jeff Cook, his late bandmate and brother in spirit, and to the fans who stood by the band from the very first note. There will be laughter, tears, and the kind of silence that only falls when thousands are remembering the same thing at once.

Randy Owen has always been more than a singer. He’s been a storyteller of the American South — a man whose voice could make you feel the scent of pine trees, the ache of goodbye, and the quiet comfort of coming home.

And so, when that final night comes in Nashville — when the lights dim, and that familiar baritone begins its last refrain — it won’t just mark the end of a concert.
It will mark the closing of a chapter written in faith, family, and melody — the kind that never really ends.

Because legends don’t fade; they just sing one last song and let the echoes do the rest.

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