Lineup reset, same songs in new hands
[The Guess Who] came out of Winnipeg's 60s scene, crafting radio-ready rock with soul and pop edges. Today the lineup features no founding members, with
Derek Sharp on vocals steering a respectful, modern take. Their identity now blends classic hits with newer material from
Plein D'Amour, keeping tempos sturdy and guitars bright.
Hooks you know, details you might miss
Expect anchors like
American Woman,
These Eyes,
No Time, and
No Sugar Tonight/New Mother Nature, plus a spotlight for a newer cut mid-set. Crowds skew multigenerational: denim jackets with old patches, couples sharing foam earplugs, and teens mouthing choruses they learned in the car. Deep-cut note: the hit
No Time was re-recorded for the
American Woman LP, trimmed and tightened from its first version. The signature American Woman riff reportedly came from an onstage tuning break that morphed into a jam at a Canadian gig. Note: the songs and staging discussed here are educated guesses based on recent shows and could shift by date. Between songs, [The Guess Who] often keep banter short and roll right into medleys, which suits the radio-hit crowd.
The Guess Who Scene: Polite Roar, Denim, and Harmony
Denim, patches, and maple leaf ink
The scene mixes legacy rock fans and younger crate-diggers, and the mood is neighborly rather than rowdy. You spot vintage
American Woman tees, jean jackets dotted with Canadian flags, and fresh tour shirts riffing on maple-leaf art.
Shared memories, new voices
People clap on twos and fours during
No Time, and a low cheer ripples the moment the American Woman riff snaps into place. Merch lines often include vinyl reissues and a couple of
Plein D'Amour items, with folks comparing pressings and pointing out liner credits. Between songs, you hear quick radio-station memories and road-trip stories, plus polite debates about classic members versus the current group that end with a shrug and a smile. After the encore, you hear low-voiced choruses on the way out, fingers tapping tempos on railings, and friends pulling up last year's setlists for comparison.
How The Guess Who Build the Sound, Live
Melody first, muscle second
Live, [The Guess Who] center everything on stacked melodies: lead voice up front, with two and three-part harmonies warming the edges. Guitars favor a crisp, mid-gain bite that lets the riffs cut without fuzzing out, while keys add B3 swirl and piano sparkle on the ballads.
Small tweaks that land big
They often nudge tempos a hair slower than the studio for sing-ability, then punch the choruses with extra drum accents and stop-start hits. A common move is to extend
No Time with a quiet bridge that drops to just voice and keys before the full band slams back in. On
No Sugar Tonight/New Mother Nature, the rhythm section pivots cleanly between the shuffle and the straighter back-half groove, keeping the hand claps steady. Less obvious: recent shows suggest down-tuning a half-step on several staples to give the guitars more weight and fit the current vocal range. Lighting stays tasteful and color-blocked, with warm ambers for legacy hits and cool blues for newer material, avoiding strobe-y distractions.
If You Like The Guess Who, You'll Likely Roam Here
Kindred choruses, shared radios
Fans of
Burton Cummings will recognize the piano-forward balladry and smooth tenor feel that shaped many of these songs.
Why these crowds intersect
Randy Bachman draws a similar crowd for crunchy, riff-first classic rock and storytelling between numbers.
Three Dog Night overlap thanks to harmony-heavy radio staples and a friendly, communal sing-along vibe. If you enjoy crisp grooves and road-honed vocals,
The Doobie Brothers hit a nearby lane, with layered guitars and tight backing singers. All four acts tour with seasoned bands, prize melody over flash, and aim sets at fans who value songs you can hum on the way out.