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Road-Tested Roots: Tim Hicks
Tim Hicks comes out of St. Catharines, where years of pub sets shaped a tough, singalong country-rock style.
Pubs to big rooms
His records lean on big drums and loud guitars, but the hooks stay clean and friendly. Expect a set that swings from rowdy to warm, with Stronger Beer, No Truck Song, Here Comes the Thunder, and Get By likely in the mix. The crowd usually spans college friends, long-time radio fans, and families who know the choruses by heart.Likely songs and who shows up
Many first met him through a cheeky online clip for Stronger Beer, which matched his bar-room humor and quick timing. He spent years self-booking southern Ontario gigs, which is why his shows flow like tight bar sets that never stall. You will also hear small hometown nods between songs, delivered with the pacing of a veteran host. All setlist and production mentions here are informed guesses from recent shows, not a guarantee.The Tim Hicks Crowd, Up Close
The scene feels like a hometown night out scaled up, with ball caps, clean denim, and worn boots mixing with tour tees from past runs.
Denim and details
Groups show up in twos and fours, trading set bets and lining up for koozies and caps that nod to maple leaf pride. During Here Comes the Thunder, fans punch the air on the word thunder, then laugh it off with neighbors. Stronger Beer becomes a toast line, with people lifting cups on the final chorus and waiting for the false stop.Shared rituals
You will see a few line-dance pockets form near the aisles, especially when the tempo lands in that mid-140 space. Between songs, chatter is more friendly than rowdy, and first-timers pick up the cues fast from folks who have seen the show before. It all reads like a traveling pub community, tuned for hooks and small gestures rather than spectacle.How Tim Hicks Builds The Sound, Not Just The Show
On stage, Tim Hicks sings in a steady bark-turned-melody that cuts through the drums without losing warmth.
Grit and shine
The band stacks crunchy rhythm guitars against a clean lead line, so choruses jump when the harmony vocals enter. He often bumps tempos slightly above the studio to keep the floor moving, then drops to half-time before the last chorus for impact. Mid-set, he likes to strip down to acoustic, bass, and a light kit, which resets ears before the heavier back end.Small tweaks that hit bigger
A small but telling habit is lowering certain songs a half-step live, which makes the hook sit easier when the night runs long. You may also hear shifted intros, like building a verse on palm-muted guitar before the drums crash in to widen the stage. Lighting tends to favor warm ambers and cold blues that match the swing between bar stompers and reflective tracks.If You Like Tim Hicks, You Might Roll With These Acts
If you enjoy how Tim Hicks blends grit with radio polish, Dallas Smith hits a similar lane with rock edges and crowd-shout hooks.