Blackberry Smoke came up in Atlanta bar rooms, blending Southern rock crunch, country melody, and a jam-band patience.
Atlanta roots, new chapter
This holiday homecoming lands in a tender moment as the band carries on after the passing of founding drummer Brit Turner, shaping shows around heart and grit. Expect a sturdy groove from the current touring drummer with guitars stacked in threes and keys filling the corners. A likely arc pulls from
One Horse Town,
Ain't Much Left of Me, and
Waiting for the Thunder, with a seasonal nod or a Georgia cover sneaking in near the encore.
Setlist shape and room feel
The room often mixes longtime vinyl diggers, younger players clocking pedal choices, and families trading earplugs and smiles between songs. You hear friendly chatter up front about old Capricorn Records heroes while folks in the back lean into the swing of the shuffles. Trivia worth knowing:
Holding All the Roses made them the first independent act to top the Billboard Country Albums chart, and
You Hear Georgia was cut at RCA Studio A with Dave Cobb producing. Treat the notes about songs and staging here as informed hunches from recent runs, not a guarantee for your night.
The Smoke Family, Up Close
Denim, patches, and chorus lines
You see denim jackets with tour patch mosaics, well-loved boots, and trucker caps from small Georgia towns. Many fans sing the first lines of
One Horse Town like a toast, with phones down and heads up. Between songs, you catch quiet gear talk, folks swapping koozies or stickers, and a few parents teaching kids how to clap on two and four.
Traditions that stick
Merch skews toward classic fonts, blaze-orange caps, and album art tees, and the table often sells out of vinyl before the encore. A friendly 'Smoke! Smoke!' chant sometimes rises before the band returns, more grateful than rowdy. After the show, the lobby buzz is about favorite deep cuts, who caught the slide moments, and how
Blackberry Smoke keeps honoring Brit while still moving forward. It feels less like cosplay of the 70s and more like a living scene where songs, stories, and small rituals matter.
Guitars First, Then Fireworks
Tone, space, and the slow burn
Blackberry Smoke centers songs on Charlie Starr's clear tenor, which cuts through even when three guitars crowd the lane. Arrangements favor tight intros, a verse that breathes, then a chorus that lands with stacked harmonies and a Hammond B3 shimmer. Live, the band often drops the tempo a hair to make the backbeat heavier, letting bass and kick carry that porch-swing sway. Guitarists trade lines rather than race, and the keys double melodies on the top end to keep things singing even when the gain comes up.
Little choices that matter
Charlie pulls out open-G and drop-tuned parts on a few staples, which gives the riffs more bark without turning the mix harsh. They like to expand
Sleeping Dogs with an organ-led detour before the final verse, a move that feels like a wink to classic rock church. Lights usually track the dynamics instead of dazzling, so the loud-soft moves in the music do the main storytelling. When a solo arrives, the rhythm guitar stays chunky and dry, keeping the pocket steady while the lead climbs and then resolves cleanly.
Kindred Roads and Shared Fans
If you vibe with these, you will fit right in
Fans of
The Black Crowes will recognize the lean riffs, gospel-tinged keys, and a Georgia lineage that prizes feel over flash.
Whiskey Myers brings a tougher country edge and a similar love for big choruses that crack live.
Gov't Mule appeals to the jam-minded crowd that enjoys stretched solos and patient grooves without losing song shape. If you lean story-first rock,
Drive-By Truckers share the Southern storytelling streak and a road-dog work ethic. All four acts draw listeners who like guitar conversations, Hammond swells, and a communal sway rather than mosh energy.
Why it clicks
The overlap is simple to hear in the pocket, the head-nod tempos, and the way each band leaves room for crowd voices on the hooks.