Ashley McBryde will close out 2025 with four nights at a venue that’s become something of a second home to her.
On Monday (Aug. 4), the singer announced The Redemption Residency, a four-night stand at Eric Church’s downtown Nashville bar, Chief’s.
Her shows will be at the Neon Steeple, the bar’s ticketed venue, which features a church-like aesthetic including pew seating and stained glass windows featuring the faces of country music’s royalty.
It’s an appropriate setting for what promises to be unique, personally curated show.
“We’ve been making our own kind of church wherever we go for years, from dive bars to back porches, Dahlonega to Lindeville,” McBryde points out in a press release statement. “It’s something special to bring it all to the only Steeple on Lower Broadway.”
All the Details About Ashley McBryde’s Redemption Residency
The first two shows will take place October 14 and 15, and two more will follow on December 11 and 12.
Tickets for the shows go on sale Friday (Aug. 8.) A pre-sale is available for members of McBryde’s Trybe fan club.
The 400-person capacity venue will provide an intimate stage for McBryde to host personally curated, unique performances. A press release teases connection, storytelling and maybe even a surprise pop-up or two from the singer at a stage downstairs at her own freshly-announced Redemption Bar.
Ashley McBryde Unveils One-of-a-Kind Bar Inside Chiefs
McBryde’s residency announcement comes on the heels of some other, Chief’s-related news from the singer.
She announced last week that she’s opening her very own Redemption Bar, with a non-alcoholic menu, inside Church’s space. The hot spot will offer alcohol, too, but virgin drinks will be its backbone.
The spot will open on Aug. 28.
Is Ashley McBryde Sober?
McBryde quietly stopped drinking alcohol in the summer of 2022.
She didn’t share the news with fans until over a year later. Though she’s kept some of the details of her journey private, McBryde has become a champion for sober living.
Read More: Ashley McBryde Celebrates Three Years of Sobriety With a Different Kind of Party
In June, the singer celebrated her three-year sober anniversary, which she spent on a hike around a waterfall. “Gratitude is the guiding light today,” she wrote in that post.
“Grief is okay,” she continued. “A version of me had to die off so I could become myself. I have love for her and every other version of me that had to exist so I could stand by this waterfall today. Thank you for the ability to stand here.”
18 Country Artists Who Are Sober
Although country music is known for its raucous drinking songs, several artists have sworn off the stuff completely. Be it a lifestyle change or a life-saving decision, each one of these artists can say that that their lives have changed for the better since giving up the bottle. They are sober and proud.