Small-town roots, stadium polish
Dean Brody brings narrative grit from Jaffray, BC, while
The Reklaws deliver sibling harmonies and big-hook lift from Ontario. Their Hometown Heroes pairing leans into pride and place, sparked by their shared hit
Can't Help Myself. Expect a pacing that lets Brody's story songs breathe before the duo turns up the tempo. Likely anchors include
Canadian Girls,
Time, and a full-voice bounce on
Long Live the Night. You will notice mixed groups of friends, families in local team hoodies, and a few two-step circles near the bar keeping time without crowding others. Lesser-known notes: "Reklaws" is "Walker" spelled backward, and
Long Live the Night doubled as the CFL Thursday Night Football theme for a stretch. Their 2020 single
Can't Help Myself briefly set a Canadian country radio spins record the week it launched.
Note on guesses
Setlist picks and production touches here are inferred from recent patterns and could land differently in your city.
The Dean Brody & The Reklaws Crowd, Culture, and Little Rituals
Pride on sleeves, songs on lips
You will see denim jackets with hometown patches, ball caps from local rinks, and a few glittered trucker hats mixed in. Groups trade spots so kids can see during slower numbers, then slide back when the beat kicks up. Chant moments pop on the whoa-oh lines, and a soft hush often lands before Brody's last verse in a story song.
Merch, moments, and manners
Merch trends toward split-logo tees and simple black hoodies, plus a hat that nods to the tour theme. Fans tend to pocket their phones for one or two full songs to soak in the room, then pull them out for the big chorus drop. You may spot quick two-step lessons near the concourse and friends swapping koozies printed with small town names. The vibe is friendly and steady, more about singing together than pushing to the front.
How Dean Brody & The Reklaws Shape The Sound Live
Song-first choices, then lift
Brody's vocal sits warm and centered, with the band leaving space around his verses so the story lands before the chorus swells. Acoustic guitar, fiddle, and a clean Telecaster trade lines, while bass and kick stay simple to keep the pocket steady. On past dates he has slipped a quiet middle segment where
Time drops into a softer key and a single harmony blooms on the last hook.
Hooks built for the room
The Reklaws lean into call-and-response phrases, and the drummer bumps tempos a notch live so choruses move without rushing. Expect the fiddle or a second guitar to double the main melody on
Long Live the Night, making the hook feel bigger without getting louder. Lighting is about color and mood more than spectacle, with warm ambers on story songs and bright whites on the party runs. The band supports both acts by keeping transitions crisp, often pivoting via a short riff to hold energy between songs.
Fans of Dean Brody & The Reklaws Might Also Roll With These Acts
Neighboring sounds, shared crowds
If
Dallas Smith is on your playlist, you will recognize the rock-edged polish that
Dean Brody taps when the guitars open up.
Brett Kissel shares the same friendly stage talk and an ear for an easy-chant chorus.
James Barker Band lines up with the summer-night party feel that
The Reklaws bring when the kick drum goes four-on-the-floor. Fans of
Tenille Townes often gravitate to Brody's reflective side, where small details in the verses carry real weight. Smith and Kissel connect on the high-energy side of this bill, while Townes and James Barker Band mirror the mix of heart and release. All four acts tour rooms where crowd singalongs matter as much as the solos, so the overlap feels natural.