Category: Backstage

Interviews, artist profiles, deep dives.

  • Hank Harris releases his fourteenth album, Hank Harris 2.0

    Hank Harris releases his fourteenth album, Hank Harris 2.0

    Hank Harris 2.0 releases online May 25, adding ten new songs to a catalog that has stretched across decades of Black Hills music. The ten-song record includes tracks titled “Breathe,” “Liar,” “Down on the Bottom,” “The Hard Way,” “Comes a Time,” “A Dangerous Sport,” “Once It’s Gone,” “Meds,” “What’s the Matter,” and a closing version of “Deportee.”

    Around the Black Hills, Harris has spent decades playing stages, theaters, museum projects, documentary work, and spent long stretches on the road. Over the years, he has performed with groups including The Red Willow Band and DD and the Fayrohs while continuing to maintain a steady stream of solo releases and collaborations. His work with the Adams Museum in Deadwood produced the Deadwood Songbook recordings and helped earn a South Dakota Public Broadcasting feature that was later nominated for a Midwest Emmy.

    Outside of music, Harris is also known among longtime friends and collaborators as a photographer, often carrying the same quiet, observant perspective from his songwriting into his visual work. The Black Hills landscape has remained a constant backdrop to both.

  • Take Me To Your Moon: Journeys into the World of Dementia

    Take Me To Your Moon: Journeys into the World of Dementia

    Works by Yoko “Tenyoh” Sugawara

    Voices rise and fall, a murmur from neighboring galleries, distant in every way. Here, in Yoko’s world, the silence flows deep, rings in the heart, and whispers an invitation to viewers willing to enter an entrancing domain of devastation and horror and to explore a deep well of care and understanding, of love, where we each enter alone and naked.

    Before entering the gallery, prepare yourself for an arduous yet deeply rewarding journey, where tears may well fall, yet the love pulsing in the room feels warm and welcoming.

    The stories, the faces, the looks, the staring eyes, sculpted by an artist, by one human’s hands, carry the essence of what it means to be human to all with eyes to see. This exhibition is an exquisite gift, freely given to all who open themselves to an odyssey of the soul.

    Everything about “Take Me to Your Moon” is profoundly human in an age when that is both a radical stance and a radical act.

    -Mark Zimmerman

    The exhibition is at the Dahl Arts Center through June 27, 2026.

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  • Black Hills Soul:  Album Releases at Murphy’s Pub

    Black Hills Soul: Album Releases at Murphy’s Pub

    “What is Peace?” drops May 1. The release show is Saturday night in downtown Rapid City.

    All four members of Black Hills Soul spent time chasing music somewhere else before settling in the Black Hills. James and William Sautter went to Los Angeles in the late 80s and played in a blues band out there for years. Todd Tetreault was in the Bay Area for decades and was inducted into the South Dakota Music Hall of Fame in 2015 before eventually returning to Rapid City. Doug Phillips arrived from the St. Louis area a little over a year ago, drawn here after a long career as a recording artist and touring musician. He has brought new energy to the songwriting and had a significant hand in shaping the new album.

    Their 2021 debut, Where It All Begins, came out of years of individual songwriting across all four members, landing somewhere between Allman Brothers grooves, Steely Dan chord sensibility, and southern rock. The band spent the pandemic finishing it while navigating shoulder surgeries, quarantine delays, and limited gig opportunities before finally releasing it on their own terms.

    What is Peace? is the follow-up, out May 1. The release show is Saturday, May 2 at Murphy’s Pub and Grill in downtown Rapid City, 9 p.m. The set draws from both albums alongside classic rock and blues covers, with new merch and giveaways on hand for the night.

    James Sautter said in an interview a few years back that the second album was mostly written before the first one even came out. That it finally has a release date, and a room full of people to hear it, is the part they have been working toward.

    Black Hills Soul Album Release Party. Murphy’s Pub and Grill, Rapid City. Saturday, May 2. 9 p.m.

  • Heart of the Rebellion (A Star Wars fan film 23 years in the making) premieres May the 4th at the Elks Theatre

    Heart of the Rebellion (A Star Wars fan film 23 years in the making) premieres May the 4th at the Elks Theatre

    In 2003, Marc Linn read a line in Entertainment Weekly that said no one could make a feature-length Star Wars fan film and actually keep an audience. He saw that as a challenge and immediately began to draft a screenplay. He had no idea that first draft was the beginning of a 23-year production.

    The film is called Heart of the Rebellion. It premieres May 4 at 7 p.m. at the Elks Theatre in downtown Rapid City. Admission is free, but there is only one showing. After that, the film gets released episodically on YouTube over the course of about a year. The only way to see Heart of the Rebellion as a complete film is to be at the Elks on May 4. For a film made entirely in the Black Hills by Rapid City filmmakers, there was really only one place it could open.

    Marc and his twin brother Michael, co-creator of the film, have been making films together since they got their first camera as kids. Their teenage films won awards on the festival circuit, including Best Narrative at the New York Trinity Film Festival. Both brothers went on to work as news reporters, videographers, and film critics at KOTA before founding Linn Productions.

    Their films include the drama Imprint, the faith-based feature Until Forever, and the documentary Rocket Man, made with fellow filmaker and creative collaborator Toby Brusseau. Michael’s short comedy Market 175 screened at the Los Angeles Short Film Festival. Filmmaking has always been a family operation for the Linns. Their younger brother Nick Linn has appeared in many of their productions, and Heart of the Rebellion gives him his first lead role.

    On the bigger shoot days he bussed nearly 60 extras out to the Badlands at 6 a.m. Some days it was just Marc with a camera and a boom mic tucked under his arm, calling up an actor or two and heading out to grab a shot or two. Jon Thompson, who plays Thad in the film, was in that mix for the better part of two to three years, and he’ll tell you the worst day on set was still better than the best day at his regular job. He was young, he wanted to act, and every shoot felt like practice. When Marc needed a set built, someone built it. Somebody always knew somebody who could solve the next impossible problem. Nearly 300 people have contributed something to this production over the years.

    Some of the locations where they filmed early on are inaccessible now, gated off or privately owned. The technology to render certain effects didn’t exist when they started. They had to wait for the industry to catch up. Jon was 23 when they started shooting. His daughter was born that same year and she is 23 today. He says he’s looking forward to seeing how many familiar faces turn up at the Elks on May 4, people he hasn’t seen in years, some he hasn’t thought about in just as long.

    Marc expects that nearly everyone he sees at the Elks on May 4 will have had a hand in this film somewhere along the way. Jon will be in attendance, curious about how much he’ll actually remember once he’s sitting in the dark. He takes his kids to the Elks every chance he gets. It’s his favorite place to give his money to in Rapid City. “As long as Rapid City has the Elks Theatre,” he said, “we will be a gem of the Midwest.”

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    “Everything that was significant in my life happened while I was filming this film,” Marc said. The hard years are in there. So is the humor. The film they wanted to make in 2003 wasn’t possible in 2003. The effects weren’t there. The experience wasn’t there. It took all of it to get here.

    Marc has loved Star Wars since he was small enough that his dad built him a paper mache storm trooper suit for Halloween. On long road trips as a kid he would stare out the back window and pretend the highway lights were TIE Fighters. What fascinated him wasn’t just the world George Lucas built, but how Lucas told a story inside it. The way Return of the Jedi cuts between three battles simultaneously, everyone failing at once, all hope apparently lost, and then somehow it turns.

    The anti-Luke is the story he wanted to tell. Where Luke Skywalker grew up sheltered on a farm with little real reason to turn toward darkness, Marc wanted to explorethe narritive of a boy who carried that darkness in him from the beginning, raised by good people but never quite free of what he was born into. When the Empire discovers him, he can no longer stay hidden. Marc wrote the original screenplay, then sat down with Michael and actor Keith Davenport, who plays the lead Jedi, to flesh the story out. Writing inside someone else’s universe comes with rules you can’t break. The arc is already written, and any story set inside that world has to respect where it’s all heading. Marc knew that going in and wrote the ending accordingly, his characters couldn’t simply rise up and win, and he never wanted them to.

    Having the Black Hills at his doorstep was one of the biggest inspirations behind the film, and it shows. The variety alone makes it easy to forget you’re in South Dakota. The Badlands stretch out like a desolate moon. The granite ridgelines around Black Elk Peak look like somewhere a Jedi might train. Roughlock Falls could belong to any world in the galaxy, and Marc had the eye to shoot it that way. He grew up here, moved away after high school, and missed the Hills immediately. Getting back was always the goal. Looking at what they captured on screen, it’s hard to imagine this film being made anywhere else.

    Michael has composed original music for Linn Productions films for years, and Heart of the Rebellion was always going to need its own sound. The brothers spent entire stretches of production focused on nothing but the score, working toward something that felt like Star Wars without borrowing from it. They wanted the music to be as original as the story.

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    As for why now, after all these years, Marc said he simply felt it was time. He had been telling people next summer for two decades. He recalled Michael putting it plainly: they owed it to their younger selves. Those two guys in their twenties who thought they could pull this off started something, and it was time to finish it.

    Two weeks before the premiere, Marc was still at it, still editing, still finessing, still not quite satisfied. He wasn’t doing it alone. In the final stretch, Marc and Michael have been joined by Tristan Barnard, a fellow filmmaker and longtime collaborator, all of them pulling all nighters to get the edit done.

    There were a hundred reasons to walk away and the brothers never took any of them. Marc has said it simply: none of it happens without the people who showed up. Family, friends, cast, crew, and a community that kept saying yes to one man’s crazy idea for twenty-three years.

    Some of the locations they filmed at are gone now, gated off or privately owned. The people who made it are older, scattered, some no longer here. The technology they needed didn’t exist when they started, and yet on May the Fourth, at the Elks Theatre in downtown Rapid City, the film Marc Linn saw in his head in 2003 is finally going to be on the screen.

    Heart of the Rebellion – Film Preview

    May 4 • 7:00 pm
    Elks Theatre in Rapid City
    Rapid City filmmakers Marc and Michael Linn bring their feature-length Star Wars fan film to the Elks Theatre for its world premiere…

  • The Scene Shows Up for Joel Adams

    The Scene Shows Up for Joel Adams

    Local musicians gather Saturday afternoon
    to support one of their own

    Spearfish Public House / Saturday, April 25 / 3:00–6:00 p.m.

    Joel Adams has spent years holding down the low end for Black Hills musicians, most recognizably as the bassist for Camp Comfort and High Rise, where his funk and jazz influences have been getting people moving for years. When Camp Comfort announced last week that Joel had suffered a stroke and spent several days in the ICU, the response from the community was immediate.

    Saturday afternoon at the Spearfish Public House, local players are invited to bring their gear and rotate through an informal acoustic session from 3:00 to 6:00. A silent auction runs alongside the music, and everything collected goes directly to Adams and his family. He is recovering, but it will be a while before he is back on a stage, and the bills do not pause for that.

    This scene has always moved quickly when one of its own needs something. Saturday afternoon in Spearfish is the proof. If you have ever caught yourself moving and shaking to Joel’s bassline, you know he’s given so much of himself to the music, Saturday is a good afternoon to return the favor.

    Benefit for Joel Adams

    Apr 25 • 3:00 pm to 6:00 pm
    Spearfish Public House in Spearfish
    A benefit show at Spearfish Public House brings together local musicians for an afternoon of acoustic sets in support of Joel Adams….

  • Nerds Assemble: Fandom, Fun, and Film Come Together in Lead this Weekend.

    Nerds Assemble: Fandom, Fun, and Film Come Together in Lead this Weekend.

    LeadCON is setting up inside the Homestake Opera House this weekend, filling the space with tabletop games, cosplay, tournaments, and a full day of panels and screenings.

    The event is being put on by the Lead Chamber of Commerce, in partnership with Lookout Games in Spearfish and Henry’s Books. It’s the first time they’ve built this, and the goal is pretty straightforward: give people a place to show up, hang out, and lean into the things they’re usually doing in smaller circles or at home.

    It started with an idea from Tyler Tillman, owner of Lookout Games, who brought it to the chamber. From there, chamber board president Levi Wilson and executive director Jami Grangaard helped shape it and carry it through planning. Henry’s Books is also involved as a partner, contributing to the writing panel, contest prizes, and an afternoon session of Blood on the Clocktower.

    The Homestake Opera House, under executive director Todd Jones, is hosting the event, and Sean Covel is part of the lineup for the midday screening and Q&A.

    What to expect…

    The first year goal is pretty straightforward:
    Give people a place to show up, hang out, and lean into the things they’re usually doing in smaller circles or at home.

    A lot of the day is structured around participation, not just watching. There are two Dungeons & Dragons sessions specifically set up for people who have never played before, with short “one-shot” campaigns that start and finish in a single sitting. You don’t need to bring anything or know the rules going in. Characters are assigned, and you jump in.

    At the same time, there’s a Warhammer 40K tournament, a Magic: The Gathering tournament, and Smash Bros matches happening throughout the day, alongside a board game gallery upstairs where people can step out of the noise and sit down with something slower.

    Panels run through the theater space, starting with a DnD discussion with local dungeon masters and players, followed by a writers panel that includes Sean Covel, producer of Napoleon Dynamite. That leads into a midday screening of the film with a Q&A, before the afternoon shifts into cosplay, including a panel and a contest.

    There’s also a vendor and art alley set up throughout the Opera House, along with a tattoo flash session running during the day, built around quick, nerd-themed designs. Outside, food trucks will be parked along Main Street, with the expectation that people move in and out of the building instead of staying in one place the entire time.

    The whole thing starts Friday night with a trivia event at Lewie’s Burgers & Brews, then runs from 9 a.m. through the evening on Saturday, closing out with a screening of The Princess Bride inside the theater.

    Costumes are encouraged, as long as they follow the event guidelines. No real weapons, nothing dangerous, and keep it family-friendly. The rest is open.

    Organizers say they’ve already seen strong early ticket numbers for a first-year event, with people coming in from Lead, Spearfish, Rapid City, and likely beyond.

    By mid-afternoon Saturday, the Opera House will be running multiple tournaments, panels, games, and conversations all at once, with people in costume moving between rooms, checking brackets, sitting down at tables, and figuring out where to go next.rnaments, panels, games, and conversations all at once, with people in costume moving between rooms, checking brackets, sitting down at tables, and figuring out where to go next.

    Lead Con – Friday

    Multiple Times: Apr 10 to Apr 11
    Fri 6:30 pm • Sat 9:00 am
    Homestake Opera House in Lead
    Get ready for an all-ages Con that brings fandom, fun, and film together in one unforgettable day! Enjoy games of all kinds,…

    Friday · April 10

    6:30–9:00 PM
    Nerd Trivia Night
    @ Lewie’s Burgers & Brews


    Saturday · April 11

    (All events at Homestake Opera House unless noted)

    9:00 AM
    Doors Open

    9:00 AM – 4:00 PM
    Vendors & Art Alley
    Board Game Gallery

    10:00 AM
    Warhammer Tournament
    Magic: The Gathering
    Smash Bros Tournament
    DnD One-Shot Sessions (new players welcome)

    10:00 AM
    DnD Panel

    11:00 AM
    Writers Panel

    12:00–2:00 PM
    Napoleon Dynamite + Q&A (Sean Covel)

    1:00 PM
    Blood on the Clocktower
    DnD Session (Round 2)

    2:00 PM
    Cosplay Panel

    3:00 PM
    Smash Bros Championship

    4:00 PM
    Cosplay Contest

    5:30 PM
    Closing Ceremony

    6:30 PM
    The Princess Bride (Screening)

    Schedule subject to change**

  • Michael Winslow: the Human Jukebox

    Michael Winslow: the Human Jukebox

    Michael Winslow & Friends @ the 707 Sports Bar & Nightlife, March 27, 2026

    By Bonny Fleming

    Think about the movie Police Academy for a second. What’s the first thing that comes to mind? For most people, it’s that sound effects guy. That guy who could turn his voice into a helicopter or machine gun. We all watched that movie, and somehow that’s the part that stuck out the most.

    The same thing happens with Spaceballs. Michael Winslow is on screen for a little over a minute, and still, you know exactly who he is and what he does.

    Winslow is coming back to the Black Hills. What he’s doing on stage now has moved well beyond those early impressions. The show isn’t constructed around a single bit or a recognizable trick. It’s been developed over time and carefully crafted into what it is now.

    I had the chance to speak with Michael ahead of his return to Rapid City, and the conversation moved like his work does. One idea bent into another, and the conversation was fluid, filled with stories from a different era.

    I came prepared with some pretty well-crafted questions. It didn’t take long to realize I wasn’t going to be able to follow them down the page. What I got instead was a glimpse into how he thinks, how he tells stories, what shaped him into the person he is, and how he uses his abilities to craft a truly unique experience. After our brief chat, I started to understand how what once felt like a novelty had etched itself into our collective consciousness all these years later.

    What he’s bringing on stage now isn’t quite what those of us who know him from those earlier films might have in mind. When I asked what people could expect, he said, with a hint of a grin, “it’s a surprise.”

    Long before any of that, before the stages and the films, he was already playing with different ways to compose sound.

    When cassette tapes came, he started experimenting with recording his own sound effects. He described it almost like a system. One recorder playing back while he added another layer on top, then feeding that into a second recorder, adding more, and sending it back again. He described it as a fight scene assembled out of nothing but sound.  Layer by layer, passing it back and forth until it felt full, like a room filled with people who weren’t actually there. The method hasn’t really changed. Only the scale has.

    Winslow’s biggest asset is still his voice. The sounds are still there, but the performance has grown into something closer to a concert. Only, he is the band, creating the instruments himself, recording and looping them in real time until the song comes together. Along the way, he threads in stories that become part of the entire experience.

    His rise didn’t come from nowhere. Early on he was living out of his car, bouncing between opportunities, eventually landing at a radio station in Pasadena, KROQ. At the time, it was a strange mix of surf, punk, and new wave, the kind of place where things weren’t fully defined yet. Even then, he didn’t arrive there in any traditional sense. Someone needed a voice on air, and he stepped in. There, he’d layer his sounds over songs live on the air, adding effects and bending the music as it played.

    He was cast in Cheech and Chong’s Next Movie after a casting director saw him in the San Francisco Big Laugh Off, where he made the finals. The production ran on improvisation, and they found a way to work him in. Not long after, while opening for Count Basie, the sound cut out mid-set. Without much hesitation, he pushed a small orange amp and microphone into Basie’s piano and kept it going. Moments like that seemed to lead him to his next adventure. From ther it was on to Police Academy, where most people first remember him.The work kept building, and to date he has more than seventy film and television credits. He appeared in all seven Police Academy films as well as Spaceballs, where he first worked with the legendary Mel Brooks. Now, he’s returning to that world, and to Brooks, with Spaceballs 2.

    When I asked about influences, he didn’t list the names I had in mind. He talked instead about the people he’d been around.

    “There were a lot of folks,” he said. “I don’t even know where to begin. So many people helped me along the way.”

    He talked about watching careers unfold in real time, Kim Cattrall moving into bigger roles, Steve Guttenberg into Cocoon and Three Men and a Baby. In Back to the Future Part III, he became Michael J. Fox’s footsteps for a scene. It wasn’t framed as influence so much as exposure. He was in the room while things were happening, taking what he could from it each time. “They weren’t all gems,” he said. “But that’s life.”

    Over time, you can see that instinct in how he works. Winslow talked about sound like someone might talk about dialects; learned, and slightly different for everyone. One sound leads to another. You might start chasing a guitar tone and end up somewhere else entirely, closer to percussion, in a place you wouldn’t imagine things to go.

    “It’s a language,” he said. “Some sounds stay fixed, recognizable, tied to a specific place or identity, but most of it is in motion.”

    That same instinct carries into how he approaches a room. Every space has its own personality, and each experience is crafted for that moment. It doesn’t seem to matter whether it’s a few hundred people or tens of thousands, what matters is whether the connection happens. He recalled seeing Tracy Chapman for the first time, just her and a guitar on a massive stage, and the whole place settled, like the heartbeat slowed down together. That’s the standard for him, not scale or production, but connection, and the ability to customize each performance for the space you’re in rather than bringing the same set from place to place.

    Right before we wrapped up the conversation, I asked if there was anything I had missed, anything he wanted people to know that we hadn’t covered.

    “no, but I do have some music for you.”

     He told me to listen to two songs.
    Romantic Warrior by Return to Forever.
    The Seduction of Claude Debussy by The Art of Noise.

    I took that seriously. When someone gives you a song, it’s usually for a reason.

    I put the songs on as I started going through my notes, and it didn’t take long to feel like he wasn’t just sharing music, he was inviting me to follow it somewhere. Romantic Warrior builds and shifts constantly, never settling into a single idea for long, while The Seduction of Claude Debussy takes what you think you know and blends it into something else entirely.

    After a while, it clicked. The songs moved like our conversation did. He crafted that conversation just as he creates his sound, bending it, and letting it unfold until everything came together.

    Throughout the interview, he stayed just out of reach of the obvious answers. Questions like what the audience can expect or whether he has a favorite sound never really landed cleanly. He moved around them, letting the idea drift instead of pinning it down. But at the very end, he gave me two songs, and suddenly the answers were there, just not how I was asking for them.

    And that’s the point. It isn’t meant to be explained. It’s meant to be experienced. The songs were a way in, but the real thing happens in the room, in real time. If you want to understand what he does, you’ll have to be there when it happens.

    ______________________________________________________________

    Michael Winslow returns to Rapid City on March 27 at 707 Sports Bar & Nightlife, with a show that starts at 7:30 PM. The performance leans more toward a live concert than a traditional comedy set, with Winslow creating and layering sound in real time, shaping each piece as it unfolds in the room.
    The night also features host Morgan Preston and a lineup of local Black Hills comedians, with a social hour beginning at 6:30 PM.
    General admission tickets are $25, with VIP available for $45.
    Tickets are transferable but non-refundable. This is a 21 and over event.
    Tickets and additional details are available here:
    https://thepark.ticketspice.com/michael-winslow-2026


    Michael Winslow & Friends

    707 Sports Bar & Nightlife,
    March 27, 2026
    Social Hour 6:30 PM. Show starts at 7:30

    TICKETS:
    General admission:$25,
    VIP: $45.
    Tickets are transferable but non-refundable.
    This is a 21 and over event.
    Tickets and additional details are available here

  • Prairie Dog Taproom Kicks Off Year Two with a party

    Prairie Dog Taproom Kicks Off Year Two with a party

    First anniversary Bash Featuring MoonCats and Dakota Shivers Brewing

    March 28, 2026 • 2:00 pm @ The Prairie Dog Taproom

    The whole thing started over bourbon in Spearfish. A buddy asked Michael Chidiac what he planned to do with his retirement. Four drinks in, they were talking about hot dogs. Five years later, they’re throwing a party.

    That conversation eventually produced a pop-up tent in Custer, a food truck that blew over in one of those Black Hills thunderstorms, two seasons at Miner Brewing, and eventually a home alongside a lazy creek outside of Hill City. Along the way, Michael and his brother Jimmy were cataloguing everything that drives people crazy about going out. They called it the “eight waits.” The table, the order, the drinks, the check. The problem was never the food or the beer. It was all the time in between that nobody was giving back to you.

    When Miner sold, they started looking for a permanent place to call home. Jimmy pushed Michael toward a former Smokejumper Station on 1.6 acres in Hill City. Michael wasn’t sold until Jimmy took him out back. There was a creek, and a natural cove between two structures that framed a stage almost perfectly. The sun set behind it. The audience would look in. He saw the vision immediately.

    The Prairie Dog Taproom opened in the spring of 2025 and was built around the idea that your time there is yours. The taps are self-pour, the food is ordered by QR code, and the menu features hand-stretched pizzas, bison burgers, and artisan hot dogs. The conversation doesn’t have to stop for a refill or a check-in from a server. You stay as long as you want and leave when you’re ready. On busy nights, that difference shows up in small ways. People settle in instead of hovering. Groups spread out instead of lining up. It’s not unusual to look around and realize no one’s paying attention to their phone.

    The music side took shape the same way. Michael and Jimmy brought in production engineer Nate Moon, who has spent 15 years running sound and lights for major regional acts. Nate turned a 30-day outdoor build into something that stopped them cold on opening night. Camp Comfort played under the lights, and the three of them sat in the back and watched the shadows move with the performers, the sun dropping behind the stage, the whole yard glowing in a way nobody had planned for. They had been drawing up a permanent covered structure. They scrapped it that night.

    In year one, the Prairie Dog hosted 70 shows. They brought in five Nashville acts, a patriotic series featuring the 147th Army Band, local Rapid City staples, and regional acts nobody in the southern hills had seen before. When a show didn’t fill the way they’d hoped, the venue gave people their ticket money back. Not because they had to, but because the kind of place they were building was worth the patience it required to grow the audience.

    As they round the calendar into year two, acts are calling to get booked based on what they heard from artists who played there. The crowds are getting bigger, and the brothers already have 40 shows booked before the first anniversary party has even happened.

    They’re continuing to bring in stronger regional acts while keeping space open for local performers who are part of the fabric of the Black Hills scene.

    It’s less about building something new and more about understanding what’s already there. A year in, Prairie Dog Taproom has started to settle into its role. A place where the experience of a show still feels personal, even as the crowd grows.

    At the end of the month, they’ll mark that first year with a full-day bash on the creek. Dakota Shivers Brewing out of Lead takes over the taps at 2 p.m. Buckskin Cult from Spearfish follows at 4. MoonCats, the North Dakota Americana act that became one of the venue’s defining bookings in year one, closes the night. A special Irish-inspired menu runs through the day.

    As the sun drops behind the stage and the lights come up, The MoonCats will take the stage the yard alongside the creek will fill up in the same way it did that first night.No one in a hurry to leave, no one waiting on anything, just folks there for a good time and one heck of a party!

    First anniversary Bash Featuring MoonCats and Dakota Shivers Brewing

    March 28, 2026 

    2:00 PM
    Dakota Shivers Brewing (Lead) tap takeover

    4:00 PM
    Buckskin Cult (Spearfish)

    Evening / Headliner
    MoonCats (North Dakota Americana)

    All Day
    Irish-inspired menu available

  • MoonCats Bring Their “Americonscious Campfire Folk” Back to Lost Cabin in the Black Hills

    MoonCats Bring Their “Americonscious Campfire Folk” Back to Lost Cabin in the Black Hills

    March 12, 2026 • 5:00 pm @Lost Cabin Beer Co

    Some touring bands pass through the Black Hills once and move on, while others thers keep finding their way back. For the North Dakota trio MoonCats, the Hills have slowly become something closer to a second home. The band returns to Lost Cabin Beer Co. this Thursday, continuing a relationship with the region that has grown steadily over the past seven years.

    “We’ve built some really strong relationships in the Black Hills,” said Scott Balliet, the band’s manager. “The crowds show up and make us feel accepted. Not just like visitors, but almost like locals.”

    That connection grew through the kinds of friendships that form on the road. Time spent with the Camp Comfort crew and legendary host Dana Nordquist helped turn the Black Hills into a place the band now circles back to again and again.

    “The Black Hills is like a home away from home,” Balliet said. “The vibe here just fits with what we do.”

    MoonCats aren’t really folk, bluegrass, or Americana. Their sound doesn’t sit neatly into any one genre, so they made up their own: Americonscious Campfire Folk.”

    “We all grew up sitting around campfires playing music,” Balliet explained. “Our songs try to capture that feeling. You don’t need a big stage. You just need something that pulls people together.”

    That idea shapes their live shows. Banjo, upright bass, guitar, mandolin, harmonica, and washboard all rotate through the set as the band mixes original songs with the occasional cover. The goal is about creating a shared moment in the room.

    “We want people to leave the burdens of the outside world behind for a while. Detach, unplug, be present, connect… and get lost in the joy.”

    Since forming in 2018, MoonCats have released four full-length albums and toured across a dozen states, building a following through the same kind of small venues and tight-knit communities that make nights like this possible. Their current run of shows reflects that momentum. The band is on a short tour that will take them to their first-ever performance in Denver, part of an effort to share their sound with new communities along the road.

    Even as they branch out into new territory, the Black Hills remain a regular stop on the map. Lost Cabin this Thursday likely won’t be the last visit this year. The band hinted that they expect to roll back through the region again soon, continuing a relationship that keeps growing each time they pass through.

    If their past visits are any indication, Thursday night at Lost Cabin will feel less like a tour stop and more like a gathering of old friends.

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    The Moon Cats will be featured on Prairie Musicians, a Prairie Public television series that highlights artists from across the northern plains. Their episode premieres March 19 at 9 p.m.

    Learn more about the program:
    https://www.prairiepublic.org/television/prairie-musicians-2026/