Ya got shows that swing and rock and kick it? (paired with spurs that jingle, jangle, jingle?) Accompanying rough-and-tumble Wrangler National Finals Rodeo action in the dirt, here’s hot-and-heavy performance action on our stages:

30th Annual Hoedown with Old Dominion and Sawyer Brown (Nov. 30, Fremont Street Experience) Tradition reigns once more on the stages of Fremont Street as this six-act country cornucopia--including Jackson Michelson, High Valley, Aaron Watson and Craig Campbell--culminates with twin firepower. Originally a country-pop band that deepened its repertoire with rich ballads, Sawyer Brown has placed more than 50 singles on the Billboard Hot Country charts, with three hitting No. 1, while 20 studio albums have yielded three certified gold. Specializing in contemporary country but utilizing rock instrumentation with pop and hip hop influences, Old Dominion released their first, self-titled EP in 2014, with their debut album, Meat and Candy dropping last year, including the hit single, “Break Up with Him.”

Reba, Brooks & Dunn (Nov. 30, Dec. 2-3, 7, 9, 10, Caesars Palace) Two acts, three legends, six nights—the math adds up for this superstar residency. Performing jointly (crooning the playful “Play Something Country”) and in solo sets, these country vets have front-loaded this production with hits, including Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn’s “Neon Moon” and the anthemic “Boot Scootin’ Boogie” and Reba McEntire’s “Why Haven’t I Heard From You” and a goose-bump-raising rendition of her signature song, “Fancy.”

Terri Clark (Dec. 1, Golden Nugget) A Canadian songbird with country in her gut, Clark has created a kind of girl-power niche--with hits including “Poor, Poor Pitiful Me,” “Emotional Girl,” “In My Next Life,” “Girls Lie Too,” “If I Were You” and “You’re Easy on the Eyes”—and is a leader of the “bra-country movement” to bring more female country artists to the airwaves. As one critic put it: “She's about the sort of wisecracking, in-your-face country-rockers that have traditionally been a male domain.”

Mark Willis (Dec. 2, Hard Rock Hotel) This dude’s got the goods—musically and statistically. Between 1996 and 2003, Willis landed—count ’em—16 singles on the Billboard country charts, all of which reached the top 40. Born in Cleveland, Tenn. and raised in Blue Ridge, Georgia, the prolific troubadour—who was originally inspired by Bon Jovi before U-turning into country-- has churned out hits including “19 Somethin,” “Jacob’s Ladder,” “Places I’ve Never Been,” “I Do,” “Don’t Laugh at Me” and “She’s in Love.”

Frankie Ballard: (Dec. 2, SLS Las Vegas) With singles including “Tell Me You Get Lonely,” “A Buncha Girls,” “Helluva Life” and “Young and Crazy,” Ballard’s sound has been described as “timeless and vintage.” Zeroing in on his persona, website savingcountrymusic.com singled out his authenticity: “There’s something about Frankie Ballard that even makes the jaded and distrusting country music fan want to like him. He’s got a swagger and style that’s not like the rest of those mainstream pretty boys. Frankie’s got a ’50s soul who holds himself more like a musician than an entertainer on stage.”

Bill Engvall (Dec. 2, Treasure Island) Kick back and chill with the veteran funnyman’s slow-burn delivery and storytelling style of humor as Engvall tackles such topics as aging, mothers-in-law and his 2013 run on Dancing with the Stars. Here’s a taste of Engvall on the war of the sexes, that apparently has been won: “I’d love to be a woman for one day of my life. I would be drunk with power.”

George Strait (Dec. 2-3, T-Mobile Arena) You can call him the “King of Country.” Everyone else does. Hailed as a country music neo-traditionalist and credited with turning country music back to its roots after its dance with a more pop sound, Strait’s honors include: being named Artist of the Decade by the Academy of Country Music; election into the Country Music Hall of Fame; winning the CMA Entertainer of the Year award three times—and racking up more CMA and ACM nominations and wins than any other artist in history.

Josh Turner (Dec. 2-3, the Orleans) Having grown up immersed in church music—he founded a gospel quartet called Thankful Hearts--Turner has authored a career that has made him, at age 38, the second youngest member of the Grand Ole Opry, after Carrie Underwood. Acclaimed for his emphasis on a traditional, hard country sound delivered with a rich baritone, Turner has hit big with songs including “Long Black Train,” “Your Man,” “Firecracker,” “Why Don’t We Just Dance,” “All Over Me” and “Time is Love”—the latter named by Billboard as the biggest country hit of 2012.

Ron White (Dec. 2-3, 9-10, The Mirage) You know him when you see him—sporting a stogie and lovingly cradling a glass of Black Grouse Scotch. And you know him when you hear him—that Ron White comedic oeuvre comes with a spicy edge and a distinctly grown-up sensibility. Having come to fame via the The Blue Collar Comedy Tour with Jeff Foxworthy, Bill Engvall and Larry the Cable Guy, White cracks wise like this: “I was once offered a three-way and I turned it down because it was one of those deals where it was two dudes and me. I don't even watch Two and a Half Men.”

Sam Riggs (Dec. 3, Hard Rock Hotel) Considered one of the rising talents in the Texas music scene poised to break out big-time across the country—and noted for his “fingerstyle” guitar-playing of plucking the strings directly with the fingertips or fingernails—Riggs is certainly an evocative composer. Take this lyric from “The Heartbreak Girl”: “Just one kiss from your novocaine lips and you take all my pain away.” Beyond being a favorite among dentists, Riggs’ music earned this praise from thedailycountry.com: “Sharp writing and memorable memories blend into songs you want to hear over and over again.”

Jennifer Nettles (Dec. 3, SLS Las Vegas) Known as half of the (on-hiatus) duo Sugarland with Kristian Bush, Nettles branched out as a solo artist in 2014 with her album That Girl, releasing the title track as a single. Earlier this year, Nettles headlined the “CMT Presents Jennifer Nettles with 2016 Next Women of Country Tour” and debuted her single, “Unlove You,” on The Tonight Show. Noting the come-hither vocals of her second solo album, Playing with Fire, the website soundslikenashville.com declared: “She has never sounded more sensual. To say it’s not for the faint of heart would be an understatement.”