POCO Songs and Stories, at Wildwood Springs Lodge, Sep. 21, 2024, Steelville MO
Rusty was a Very Dear friend, he taught me a lot about the Music business. He taught me to never produce the same show twice, alway mix things up, always use the best musicians and Always.. stop with the Crowd wanting more… Well… that’s what we are going to do..
Rusty’s and Poco music will never die.. Crazy Love is played in our local grocery store just like all the other grocery stores in the Country.. Yeah, I might not run into Rusty like I used to all the time at the Local Grocery store.. Rusty loved to Cook.. and drink his wine. The Music still needs to be heard.. we need to hear the Music.. So just as Rusty Taught me.. Mary and I wanted to use the Best.. This is NO cover band.. This is the Poco Band. Jack Sundrud, Michael Webb, Rick Lonow, Ronnie Guilbeau and with Special guest Michael Kelsh
The Marshall Tucker Band, Live at Wildwood Springs Lodge, Nov.9, 2024, Steelville MO
The Marshall Tucker Band came together as a young, hungry, and quite driven six-piece outfit in Spartanburg, South Carolina in 1972, having duly baptized themselves with the name of a blind piano tuner after they found it inscribed on a key to their original rehearsal space — and they’ve been in tune with tearing it up on live stages both big and small all across the globe ever since. Plus, the band’s mighty music catalog, consisting of more than 20 studio albums and a score of live releases, has racked up multi-platinum album sales many times over. A typically rich MTB setlist is bubbling over with a healthy dose of hits like the heartfelt singalong “Heard It in a Love Song,” the insistent pleading of “Can’t You See” (the signature tune of MTB’s late co-founding lead guitarist and then-principal songwriter Toy Caldwell), the testifying “Fire on the Mountain,” the wanderlust gallop of “Long Hard Ride,” and the explosive testimony of “Ramblin,’” to name but a few.