X Country - Kick'n Topless Revue Las Vegas Show
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From the team behind X Burlesque comes a show that trades feather boas for Daisy Dukes — X Country is where honky-tonk attitude meets Las Vegas showgirl heat, and the result is something you won't find anywhere else on the Strip.
There's a specific kind of electricity that moves through a room when country music collides with Las Vegas showmanship — boots hit the stage, the bass drops on a honky-tonk anthem you've heard a hundred times, and suddenly you're hearing it brand new. That's the X Country effect. This isn't a tribute act or a jukebox revue. It's a full-throttle, high-energy production that strips the genre down to its most visceral appeal and rebuilds it with sequins, swagger, and skin.
From the producers behind the long-running X Burlesque and the rock-infused X Rocks, X Country carries the same DNA — the confidence, the choreography, the intimate cabaret setting at Harrah's that puts every performer close enough to feel the performance rather than just watch it. The Harrah's Cabaret is not a stadium. It's a room with intention, where the difference between a good night and an unforgettable one often comes down to the performer making eye contact at exactly the right moment. The dancers here know that. They work it.
What makes X Country genuinely surprising is how the country music framework changes the texture of the show. The twang and drawl of both classic and current chart hits give the choreography a different rhythm than the polished pop of most Las Vegas revues — looser, more playful, more alive. Whether you grew up with country music or couldn't name a single Garth Brooks song, the show's personality cuts through. Bold, unapologetic, and just rowdy enough to feel like a real night out.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you actually need to like country music to enjoy X Country?
Not really. The show leans on recognizable country hits — both classic and current — but the appeal is less about genre loyalty and more about the energy in the room. The choreography has a looser, more playful rhythm than a typical Vegas revue, and the performers lean into that with real personality. If you enjoy a lively, high-energy burlesque-style show, the country soundtrack becomes part of the fun rather than a barrier.
How does X Country compare to X Burlesque — is it the same kind of show?
They share the same production pedigree and the intimate Harrah's Cabaret setting, but the feel is distinct. X Country trades the classic burlesque polish for something rougher and more playful — think Daisy Dukes and cowboy boots rather than feather-and-rhinestone glamour. The country music framework gives the choreography a different swagger, and the overall vibe is rowdier and more spontaneous-feeling than its predecessor.
What's the Harrah's Cabaret like — is it a big theater or something more intimate?
It's a deliberately small, close-quarters venue. There's no nosebleed section, no jumbotron — you're genuinely near the performers throughout. That proximity changes how the show lands; moments that might feel distant on a large stage hit differently when there's almost no separation between audience and dancer. For a show built on personality and physical performance, the room's scale is part of what makes it work.
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