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Slide Right In with The Bros. Landreth
The Bros. Landreth rose out of Winnipeg with a warm blend of roots rock, soul touches, and road-dusted country. Brothers Joey and David build songs around slide guitar glow, patient bass lines, and close harmonies.
Prairie roots, open roads
After Let It Lie earned a JUNO, Bonnie Raitt turned their Made Up Mind into a calling card that broadened their reach. Expect a set that leans on Made Up Mind, Let It Lie, Corduroy, and Stay, with a tender ballad tucked mid-show.Songs fans lean in for
The crowd mixes guitar tinkerers up front, longtime Americana fans, and younger songwriters trading notes on phrasing, not volume. Lesser-known note: parts of Let It Lie were cut live in the room, and Joey often favors open C variants that let chords ring like a small choir. Another quirk is how they might slip a short nod to a favorite standard before gliding into a closer. Treat these song picks and production touches as informed guesses from recent gigs rather than a fixed blueprint.Prairie Choir: The Bros. Landreth Fan Lore
This crowd treats songs like conversation, so you hear cheers between solos and quiet focus during tender lines. Clothes lean practical and vintage, with denim jackets, well-worn boots, and band tees from earlier runs. You may see guitar fans watching the fretting hand while couples sway on the slower tunes rather than shout.
Quiet respect, loud appreciation
Sing-alongs rise on the last chorus of Made Up Mind, and people clap the backbeat on big shuffles without drowning the mix. Merch runs simple and useful, with soft tees, lyric posters, and colored vinyl for Come Morning and Let It Lie.Little rituals, shared roots
Pre-show chatter trades gear tips and favorite cover nods, but it stays friendly and low-key. The mood is community over spectacle, where a sharp bridge gets the same respect as a high note.Slide Rules: The Bros. Landreth, Music First
The Bros. Landreth build the night around Joey's singing slide and the brothers' tight vocal blend. Tempos breathe, so verses feel conversational and choruses land with a friendly push. Arrangements keep guitar and keys in dialogue, while the rhythm section holds a soft pocket that lets notes hang.
Tone before tricks
Live, they often stretch mid-song, turning a three-minute tune into a five-minute arc that rises, exhales, and returns to the hook. A neat detail is Joey's use of open C style tunings on several songs, which adds bright drone notes that color the chords without clutter. They sometimes reframe Made Up Mind with a slower intro and a call-and-response tag that makes the last chorus hit harder.Small moves, big feel
Lighting tracks the music, warmer on the ballads and cooler on bluesy shuffles, always keeping focus on the playing. It stays music-first, with chops serving the story rather than the other way around.Kinfolk on the Road with The Bros. Landreth
Fans of Tedeschi Trucks Band will hear a similar slow-burn groove and slide-forward dynamics that reward patience.