Author: Admin BHAB

  • A Few Things Worth Locking Into Your Calendar

    There’s a stretch of time where events aren’t tonight or this weekend, but they’re close enough that if you don’t plan for them now, you’ll miss them. These are a few things coming up around the Hills that we think are worth circling early. These shows that tend to sell out, sneak up, or just end up being better than expected. Lock them in now!

    in Custer

    Alex Massa w/ Black Hills All Stars

    Sat, Jul 4 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm Custer Beacon

    Alex Massa joins the Black Hills All Stars for a live jazz performance at the Custer Beacon. The evening performance brings together regional musicians for a collaborative Black Hills jazz set. [read more]

    Learn more about the artist
    Alex Massa
    Currently based in He Sapa (Black Hills) of South Dakota, trumpeter, composer, educator, and activist Alex Massa’s career has spanned geographies, genres,…
    in Spearfish

    Tyler Bills at Crow Peak Brewing

    Sat, Jul 4 9:00 pm - 11:00 pm Crow Peak Brewing Co.

    Tyler Bills performs live at Crow Peak Brewing in Spearfish. [read more]

    in Deadwood

    Johnny Hastings & Stillhouse Down

    Wed, Jul 8 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm Outlaw Square -Deadwood

    Outlaw Square’s Wednesday Night Summer Music Series returns to Deadwood with free outdoor concerts every Wednesday night throughout the summer. [read more]

    in Rapid City

    Flannel Unplugged • Acoustic Patio Series

    Thu, Jul 9 8:00 pm - 10:00 pm Murphy's Pub & Grill

    Murphy’s Pub & Grill hosts summer patio concerts throughout the season featuring regional bands, acoustic performances, drinks, and late-night live music in downtown Rapid City. [read more]

    Learn more about the artist

    Neutrino Day

    Sat, Jul 11 9:00 am Lead Main Street

    Neutrino Day JULY 11, 2026 Where Science & Fun Collide South Dakota’s largest FREE science festival features interactive hands-on science, art, speakers, entertainment, and virtual reality, along with hoist room and garden tours throughout... [read more]

  • This Week Belongs to the Kids

    This Week Belongs to the Kids

    “Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up.”
    ~Pablo Picasso

    Three different spaces this weekend are handing the spotlight to young artists and letting their work stand on its own.

    At the Dahl Arts Center, Mini Masters fills the Bruce H. Lien Cultural Café & Gallery with work from artists ages birth to five. It’s loose, direct, and honest, color on the page without hesitation. In the same building, The Basement Children Teen Art Studio Exhibition brings together 22 young artists who’ve been putting in real time, building pieces that hold up on the wall. The opening reception Thursday night gives you a chance to see both ends of that spectrum in one place.

    Across town at The Monument, South Dakota Kids That Rock moves it onto the stage. Young vocalists step into a full concert setting, competing for a scholarship and performing in front of a live audience and a panel of working musicians. It’s not a small setup, and they’re not treated like it is.

    Mini Masters

    Apr 8 • 5:00 pm
    Dahl Arts Center in Rapid City
    Featuring artists from across the Black Hills, ages birth to 5. This unique exhibit will showcase the amazing creativity and capabilities of...

    The Basement Children Teen Art Studio Exhibition

    Apr 9 • 5:00 pm
    Dahl Arts Center in Rapid City
    The Teen Art Studio Exhibition, The Basement Children, showcases the dedicated work of 22 talented young artists, the third cohort of RCAC’s...

    South Dakota Kids That Rock

    Apr 11 • 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
    The Monument in Rapid City
    South Dakota kids will compete in a vocal competition for an overall scholarship and the title of SD's Kid That Rocked 2026....

    Three vibes, three different showcases, three different ways to celebrate the next generation putting their art out into the world.

  • Field Notes: Off the Clock

    Field Notes: Off the Clock

    Black Hills Art Beat grew out of a familiar frustration: trying to figure out what’s happening meant bouncing between posts, flyers, scattered calendars, and word of mouth …and still missing things. The goal wasn’t to build just another calendar, it was to create something that actually works.

    More people are starting to use it each week, and that’s been the clearest signal that it’s heading in the right direction. At the same time, there are always things we can be doing to make it better. With a rare bit of downtime this felt like the right moment to walk through what makes BHAB different. Every part of the site has been built with intention to solve real problems that come up when trying to find or promote events. That approach makes it possible to create tools that are more useful than a standard calendar, even if they are not always obvious at first.


    1. BHAB’s Filter System

    Too much noise

    Community calendars get bloated with too many irrelevant events, and platforms like Facebook either show you things too late or not at all.

    BHAB’s Filter System

    The filter lets you shape the calendar into what you actually want to see. Search for your favorite artist, narrow it down by town or venue, or turn off what you’re not interested in.


    2. Add the events to your calendar

    I saw it too late / I forgot about it

    I hear about something after it’s already happened, or I meant to go and forgot about it.

    Stay on top of it

    You can add any event directly to your calendar so it’s there when you need it. And if you don’t want to keep checking, the Beat Drop shows up once a week with a clear look at what’s coming up.


    3. NEW! Artists Profile’s & Directory

    Who is this, and when can I see them again?

    I see a name I don’t recognize, or one I do, but I can’t make that show and want to know if they’re playing again soon.

    Artist Profiles

    Artist profiles bring everything into one place. You can learn more about the artist, see what they’re connected to, and when they have something coming up, find where to catch them next.


    4. NEW! Venue Pages & Directory

    What’s happening at my spots?

    I want to know who’s playing at a few different places this weekend, but I don’t want to dig through each one separately to figure it out.

    Stay on top of it

    Quickly check what’s happening at each venue without bouncing all over the internet. See what’s coming up at each venue and move between them easily, whether you’re checking your usual spots or exploring somewhere new.


    5. NEW! Festivals & Series

    Big events are hard to follow

    Big events like Summer Nights or Kool Deadwood Nights are spread out across multiple days and have separate event listings, and it’s hard to get a clear sense of what’s happening without piecing it together.

    Festivals/Series all in one place

    Multi-day events and series are grouped together now so you can see the full lineup and decide where you want to drop in without digging through separate listings.

    How you can help?

    BHAB only works if people use it, share it, and if we build it together.

    • Like, Share, Comment:
      Interact with posts. That’s how more people see what’s happening.
    • Spread the word:
      Word of mouth goes a long way around here. If it comes up, tell people about it.
    • Get it in front of people:
      Hang a poster or throw up a sticker somewhere people will actually see it. If you want materials, reach out and we’ll get you some.
    • Submit your events:
      Keep the calendar useful. If you’ve got something going on, put it on there.
    • Contribute:
      If you’ve got a story, reach out. The Pulse is there to highlight what’s happening, and there’s room for more voices.
    • Make connections:
      If you’re connected to artists or venues, help make introductions. The stronger the network gets, the better this works for everyone.

    Even just visiting the site regularly helps more than you think.


    If you do have the means to support it financially, that helps keep things moving too.

    You can donate, subscribe, or sponsor events on the calendar. Those sponsored spots help push events forward and support the platform at the same time.


    BHAB works when people use it to find things, promote what they’re doing, and show up for each other.

    Local Listening


    So that is a look at what makes BHAB different, and it is not stopping there. There is a growing backlog of ideas and improvements that are already in motion, all focused on making it easier to find what is happening and stay connected to it.

    If there is something that feels missing or a problem you keep running into, that kind of input is always welcome. A lot of what is here exists because those gaps were noticed and worked through, and there is always more to build.

    If you want to help push it forward, take a look at the “how can you help” section. Whether it is using the site, sharing it, or adding events to the calendar, it all helps make this a stronger and more useful resource for everyone.

  • BH Weekend – Rapid City

    BH Weekend – Rapid City

    Browse by location

    Looking for things to do in the Black Hills this weekend? Explore events happening across Rapid City, Deadwood, Spearfish, Custer, and the surrounding area. From live music and comedy to festivals, art exhibits, nightlife, and family-friendly events, this page shows what’s happening Friday through Sunday all in one place.

    This Weekend
    Jun 26 – 28
    76 events across the Black Hills
    Browse by city

    Live Music

    Theater & Stage

    FriJun26

    Sinsational Cabaret Deadwood

    Sinsational Cabaret: A Titillating Spectacle in Deadwood! Step into a world of sultry glamour and untamed allure at Sinsational Cabaret—Deadwood’s hottest, most tantalizing live show! This 75 minute extravaganza blends...
    Additional Showtimes:
    Fri Jun 26 9:00 pm, Sat Jun 27 7:00 pm, Sat Jun 27 9:00 pm

    Art Exhibitions

    Comedy

    FriJun26

    Sinsational Cabaret Deadwood

    Sinsational Cabaret: A Titillating Spectacle in Deadwood! Step into a world of sultry glamour and untamed allure at Sinsational Cabaret—Deadwood’s hottest, most tantalizing live show! This 75 minute extravaganza blends...
    Additional Showtimes:
    Fri Jun 26 9:00 pm, Sat Jun 27 7:00 pm, Sat Jun 27 9:00 pm

    Club & Nightlife

    Dance

    FriJun26

    Sinsational Cabaret Deadwood

    Sinsational Cabaret: A Titillating Spectacle in Deadwood! Step into a world of sultry glamour and untamed allure at Sinsational Cabaret—Deadwood’s hottest, most tantalizing live show! This 75 minute extravaganza blends...
    Additional Showtimes:
    Fri Jun 26 9:00 pm, Sat Jun 27 7:00 pm, Sat Jun 27 9:00 pm

    Seasonal & Special Events

    Bingo

    SatJun27

    Plant Bingo

    Time: 6:00 pm | @ Sally O'Malley's
    Plant Bingo is taking over Sallys in the Valley on Saturday, June 27th, at 6pm and trust us... you're gonna want to be there. 🌱 Plant prizes 🌸 Garden goodies 🪴 Tons of leafy loot 👑...
    Bingo | $10

    DJ

    Fundraiser/Benefit

    Listening Party

    Miscellaneous

    Music Festivals

    Open Jam

  • The Two Tracks are Back in the Hills

    The Two Tracks are Back in the Hills

    The Sheridan, Wyoming Americana band brings two nights to the Black Hills this weekend, with a new album not far behind.

    Ten years of long weekends on the road adds up. The Two Tracks out of Sheridan, Wyoming have been doing the math on that for a while now, and they are not close to done. They have full-time jobs and families back home, they tour in whatever windows they can find, and they have never really chased anything beyond making music that holds up. Led by husband-and-wife Dave and Julie Huebner, the quartet is rounded out by bassist Taylor Phillips and drummer Fernando Serna. Dave plays both guitar and cello, and it is the cello that sits at the center of the band’s sound, not as texture or accent, but as the thing the music is built around.

    “We’ve never had illusions of some sort of fame,” says Dave Huebner. “More we just wanted to create good music that people cared about.”

    That framing sounds modest until you think about how hard it is to hold onto. They tour in long weekends and the occasional week-long stretch, working their way through the West and back again. Their previous record, Cheers to Solitude, landed in the top 40 on Americana radio. They did not make a big thing of it. They just kept going.

    Their next studio album, Seasons Unknown, comes out June 5. The lead single, Mexico By Friday, drops April 24. They recorded it in Nashville with Grammy-nominated producer Will Kimbrough, five-time Grammy-winning engineer Sean Sullivan, and four-time Grammy-winning mixer Trina Shoemaker.

    Before any of that, they have two shows in the Black Hills this weekend. Friday, April 3, they play The Matthews Opera House in Spearfish at 7 p.m., with tickets available in advance. Saturday, April 4, they are at The Custer Beacon at 7 p.m., donation at the door.

    The two venues this weekend are genuinely different spaces, and the band pays attention to that. The Matthews gives the band room to pull the sound down, let the cello carry more of the weight. The Beacon is looser, more casual, the kind of room where the band and the crowd end up a lot closer together.

    “What’s fun about our music is that it’s always appropriate for any venue we play.”

    That is less a boast than an observation about what Americana can do when the writing is solid enough to carry different configurations.

    The Two Tracks have been coming to the Black Hills for years and have friends here. They are also playing some new material, so the setlists will have some things people have not heard yet alongside songs from a catalog they have been building since the beginning.

    When asked what sticks with them from the road, the answer is specific:
    Walking the Blue Ridge Parkway, catching a super bloom in the Nevada desert, a bad night of sleep in a humid Midwestern hotel room before an early departure. The songs come from the adventure along the way. Ten years of that, and they are still telling people the same thing: “Take a chance on bands you don’t know. Give it a try.”

    Friday, April 3 / Matthews Opera House
    in Spearfish / 7 p.m. / Tickets available in advance


    Saturday, April 4 / The Custer Beacon
    in Custer / 7 p.m. / Donation at the door


    NEW ALBUM:
    Seasons Unknown out June 5, 2026.
    Single Mexico By Friday available April 24.


    The Two Tracks: thetwotracks.com
    Facebook: @thetwotracks
    Instagram: @thetwotracks

  • Field Notes: Out like a Lion

    What started as an Emerging Artist showcase had to be moved into the main theater, with a full house turning out to see Johnny Hastings and Bob Fahey share the stage again. Over the course of the night, it turned into something a little bigger, with Deb Lux stepping in and the three of them rotating through sets, collaborations, and a final stretch that pulled the room to its feet.

    FRIDAY NIGHT

    Friday night at the Dahl we got to experience three Black Hills legends on stage together. Deb, Bobby and Johnny all shine brightly on their own, but there’s an extra spark when they’re performing together.

    The evening started off with Bobby playing a mix of his own material and tasty covers. Hearing him in such an intimate setting, we could really hear the beautiful tones and timbres of both his voice and his guitar.

    Before he ended his solo set, he was joined by Deb and Johnny for a couple of tunes and it was Deb‘s turn to shine with her beautiful, bluesy vocals.

    Johnny‘s set followed with another fantastic mix of his originals and great cover choices. My personal favorites were Johnny’s latest single written for his Dad, and Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain, the Willie Nelson classic. Johnny put his own sauce on it, of course.

    The evening ended with a super funky blues workout with Johnny and Bobby trading licks back-and-forth to bring the audience to their feet for the finale. The talent of these three is surpassed only by their hard work and humble hearts. I’m grateful to call them all my friend.

    707 Sports Bar & Nightlife — Michael Winslow

    Saturday night at 707 pulled a different kind of crowd.

    Michael Winslow is one of those names people already carry with them when they walk in. Most know him from Police Academy, or at least from clips that have been floating around for decades. The expectation is pretty fixed before he even steps on stage.

    What happens once he gets going doesn’t really match that.

    Instead of just running through familiar bits, he builds everything live. Sounds stack on top of each other, rhythms start to form, and before long it stops feeling like impressions and starts leaning closer to music. Not in a polished, produced way, but something assembled in real time, right in front of the room.

    You can feel the shift when people realize what he’s actually doing. It takes a minute. Then it clicks.

    The room settles in after that. Less about recognition, more about watching how far he can push it.

    Aby’s — Johnny Hastings & Band

    Later in the weekend, Johnny showed up again, this time at Aby’s.

    Different room, different pace. A ticketed show, a little more space to breathe, with his three-piece band behind him instead of a full crowd pressed into the seats.

    The night opened with Aaron Niehaus, a songwriter out of Fargo, North Dakota, making his first swing through the Hills.

    I ended up outside with him for a while, talking through what it actually takes to get into places like this. Travel, booking, trying to make the numbers work. He’s got a bluegrass band back home he’d love to bring out, but the cost of moving a full group makes that a harder jump than going solo.

    This trip was part of feeling things out. Finding rooms. Meeting people. Seeing what might be possible if he comes back through.

    Inside, Johnny and the band kept things steady, working through a set that felt a little looser than the night at the Dahl, but just as grounded.

  • Deadwood Blues Festival Announces Saturday Night Lineup at Outlaw Square

    Deadwood Blues Festival Announces Saturday Night Lineup at Outlaw Square

    Keb’ Mo’ to Headline with Ruthie Foster and Amani Burnham on
    Saturday, July 11, 2026

    DEADWOOD, S.D. — Deadwood Blues Festival 2026 is proud to announce the
    Saturday night lineup at Outlaw Square for July 11, 2026, featuring Amani Burnham,
    Ruthie Foster, and Keb’ Mo’.

    The evening will open with Amani Burnham, a young, up-and-coming blues-rock artist
    gaining momentum with a fresh sound and a growing profile. Burnham will be followed
    by Ruthie Foster, the acclaimed vocalist and songwriter whose powerful blend of blues,
    soul, and gospel has earned widespread recognition, including multiple GRAMMY
    nominations and a 2025 GRAMMY win for Best Contemporary Blues Album for Mileage.
    Headlining the night is Keb’ Mo’, one of the most respected and award-winning artists
    in modern blues. With five GRAMMY Awards and a career spanning blues, folk, soul,
    and Americana, Keb’ Mo’ brings a level of artistry and stage presence that makes him a
    standout headliner for the festival’s 2026 return.

    “This lineup reflects what we want Deadwood Blues Festival to be,” said festival organizers. “It brings together an exciting young artist, a powerful and celebrated performer in Ruthie Foster, and a living legend in Keb’ Mo’. It’s a strong Saturday night at Outlaw Square and a great example of the kind of experience we’re building in Deadwood.”

    Deadwood Blues Festival 2026 will take place July 10–12, 2026, with Saturday night at
    Outlaw Square serving as one of the weekend’s signature events. Additional regional
    artists and the full festival schedule will be announced later.


    Held in the heart of historic Deadwood, the festival brings together national and regional
    blues talent for a city-wide weekend of live music. The event continues to build on its
    early momentum by creating a destination experience for blues fans across the region.

    Tickets and festival packages will be available at
    10 am, Monday, March 30th, at

    Website and Tickets: www.deadwoodbluesfest.com

  • A Busy Weekend for Theater Across the Black Hills

    This weekend, there are more stage lights coming up than usual across the Black Hills.

    Not just one show or one company, but three different productions in three different towns, all opening at the same time and each taking a completely different approach to the stage.

    In Spearfish

    In Spearfish, The Matthews is pulling audiences into the center of Dancing at Lughnasa, Brian Friel’s acclaimed play about five sisters in 1930s Ireland. The staging places the audience inside the Mundy home, with actors moving through the aisles and across thrust platforms. It’s a smaller, close-range production where the focus stays on the family, how they talk to each other, what goes unsaid, and how the tension builds over time. Seating is limited, which keeps the whole thing tight from the start.


    Belle Fourche

    Belle Fourche Area Community Theater goes in a different direction with Curtain Call: A Night of One-Acts, a lineup of four short plays performed in a single evening.

    The show opens with a piece where two audience members realize they may be part of the performance. Another follows a bedtime story that keeps expanding past its original telling. There’s an absurd comedy about finding your perfect nemesis, and it closes with a woman returning home for her mother’s funeral.

    It’s a mix of tones by design, carried by a local cast and the kind of community energy that includes a bake sale in the lobby before the show even starts.


    In Rapid City

    And in Rapid City, Catalyst Theater Company brings us The Squirrels a comedy (?) by Robert Askins. A sharp, fast-moving comedy about territory, power, and survival, played out through a group of squirrels arguing over who gets to stay and who gets pushed out. It’s the kind of production that feels a little different depending on who you talk to afterward, which is usually a sign that it’s doing something right.


    What stands out isn’t just that these shows are happening, it’s how different they feel once they start.

    At The Matthews in Spearfish, the audience is pulled in close, almost inside the story, while in Belle Fourche, the evening jumps between styles, from absurd comedy to compelling drama, and at The Catalyst Theatre in Rapid City, The Squirrels keeps shifting tone, asking the audience to keep up.

    And for a weekend in the Black Hills, that’s a pretty full stage.

  • The Squirrels Opens at Catalyst Theater Company This Week

    The Squirrels Opens at Catalyst Theater Company This Week

    There are moments in The Squirrels where the room will be laughing, and moments where it won’t be.
    The show opens March 27 at Catalyst Theater Company’s space on 7th Street. It moves fast between absurd comedy and something sharper, without much warning, and the production doesn’t try to smooth those edges out.

    “It’s really funny when it’s funny and really dark when it’s dark,” said director Ryan Puffer.

    The story drops a group of squirrels into a tree heading into winter. Food is limited, territory matters, and the tension between them doesn’t stay quiet for long. What starts off strange settles into something more recognizable as the lines between them harden.

    On paper, actors playing squirrels could feel like a gimmick. It doesn’t. The cast plays it straight and commits fully to the physical world of the show, which is what makes it land.

    “We focused on movement and the physical nature of the squirrels,” Puffer said.

    That physical commitment was one of the harder parts of building the production. It takes a certain kind of actor to go all the way into something this strange and still keep it grounded.

    “The biggest challenge is finding actors who are game with being silly and inhabiting the world of squirrels… but also still find the heart and sincerity in the story,” he said.

    Underneath the surface, the show keeps circling questions about who belongs, who gets pushed out, and what happens when resources get tight. Those ideas are there, but they’re never spelled out for you.

    “Even though it’s a semi-serious story about class and race, the characters are still squirrels,” Puffer said.

    For audiences walking in without context, the shifts in tone can be abrupt, but there’s something in the characters that starts to feel familiar as it goes.

    “The play truly fluctuates between hilarious moments and shocking moments and sad moments… just come in with an open mind and be along for the ride,” Puffer said.

    The run also includes pay-what-you-can performances, supported by the Rapid City Arts Council, continuing Catalyst’s effort to keep their work accessible to the community.

    “Our entire community should get the opportunity to experience art,” Puffer said.

    The Squirrels runs March 27 through April 18 at Catalyst Theater Company, 513 7th Street in Rapid City.

    Photos courtesy of Catalyst Theater Company


    The Squirrels runs March 27 through April 18
    at Catalyst Theater Company,
    513 7th Street in Rapid City.

    CAST:

    Sciurus: Justin Kleiman
    Mammalia: Mandy Pheil
    Chordata: Lanaya Young
    Carolinensis: Kai Dwyer
    Rodentia: Angela Miller
    Sciuridae/The Scientist: Ryan Bozer
    Squirrel Ensemble: Matt Bertrand, Laura Savage

  • Field Notes: A Park Pavilion, Piano Loops, a Metal Pit, and a Sunday Jam

    Field Notes: A Park Pavilion, Piano Loops, a Metal Pit, and a Sunday Jam

    Felid Notes from the weekend of March 18-23th, 2026

    Over the weekend, notes started coming in from a few different corners of the Hills. A park show in Spearfish. A piano set at HayCamp. A Sunday jam tucked into the trees. Some of these we caught ourselves. Some came in from people who were there. If you end up somewhere we should know about, send us your notes and we’ll start working them into future Field Notes: info@blackhillsartbeat.com


    Eddie 9V @ Spearfish City Park Pavilion: March 19

    (credit: Grant Ekroth)

    By the time Eddie 9V took the stage at the Spearfish City Park Pavilion, the space had already filled in. Beers from Crow Peak in hand, food moving out of Pit 14, people spread across the grass and under the shelter, easing into it as the afternoon rolled on.

    Bodhi Linde opened the show earlier in the evening, though not everyone caught it. Grant was still at work and missed him, but the name kept coming up. Seventeen years old, playing anything with strings, already building a reputation for it. By the time Eddie stepped in, the tone had shifted into something looser, that mix of Southern soul and blues settling into a very unceremonious park setting.

    The whole thing doubled as a benefit for the D.C. Booth Fish Hatchery, with a percentage of sales going back, though no final numbers had surfaced by the end of the night. Still, the crowd stuck around. Kids running, people drifting between the music and the beer line, the kind of show where no one’s really checking the time.


    Phillip Daniel & Alex Massa @Hay Camp: March 20

    (credit: Orange Ficus)

    Sometime between 6:00 and 6:30, Phillip Daniel is already out of his seat. Not for show, just pulled up out of it for a split second before dropping back into the piano. The whole set moves like that. Loops, resets, small bursts of motion that never fully leave the ground.

    The stage fills up fast. Drum pads, melodicas, trumpet, keys, percussion scattered everywhere. Alex Massa moves between them while Daniel holds the center, the two of them shifting from tight, controlled passages into something looser. At times it feels precise. Other moments, it feels like they’re just seeing what happens if they push it a little further.

    They lean into that tension most when they let things drift. Strange tones, off-center rhythms, stretches that feel like they might fall apart before snapping back into something recognizable. And when they do come back, it’s quiet. Simple. The last song lands there, with Daniel easing into it and staying put this time.


    SuperPlex @ Lost Cabin: March 21

    It was a two-day slobberknocker of space grooves and pure rock power. From the first bite of Phat Bottom’s $2 tacos on Friday to the awarding of the championship belt to Continuum at Lost Cabin, fans of loud amps, unrelenting grooves, and pro wrestling had a lot to lock into this weekend in Rapid City.

    SuperPlex didn’t just play a weekend of shows, they ran it like a wrestling card. Friday night set the bracket. Three bands entered, with Howling Embers getting knocked out of the title picture before Saturday’s final at Lost Cabin. Between sets, the tone stayed in character. Bands traded jabs, called each other out, and kept the crowd in on the bit. By the time Saturday rolled around, it wasn’t just another lineup, it felt like a main event. Continuum closed it out and walked away with the belt.

    Photo Credit: Austin Kaus


    Brent Morris @The Gaslight: March 21

    Brent Morris kept things rooted at the Gaslight on Saturday night, working through a set of classic country and western with a few newer cuts mixed in. The room stayed with him, not much movement, just people settled in and listening.

    Kenny Rogers, Townes Van Zandt, Marty Robbins, The Eagles, Sonny James. The kind of set that doesn’t rush. Songs people already know, played straight and given time to breathe.

    It felt a little like sitting around a chuckwagon fire. Cozy, good food moving through the room, and an audience that stayed attentive from start to finish.


    Sunday Circle @Moonshine Gulch: March 22

    Sunday afternoons at Moonshine Gulch have a way of settling into themselves. By the time people arrive, the music is already going. Guitars passed around, names called out between songs, the same loose circle forming week after week.

    Roger Severson, Don A, Mike J, Marvin Jones moving through sets, trading songs more than performing them. It’s less about who’s up next and more about keeping it going. People drift in and out, some there for the whole afternoon, others just catching a few before heading back down the road.

    The building carries it all pretty easily. Dollar bills pinned overhead, notes and signatures covering the walls, the kind of place where no one’s trying to reset the room. Just adding to it.

    There’s always more happening than this can hold. Shows we missed, rooms we didn’t make it to, things that started and ended without much notice. This is just what crossed our path this weekend. A few stops, a few sets, a handful of moments that stuck long enough to write down before they slipped past. If you find yourself out at something that sticks with you, send us your notes and we’ll keep building this.