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Roll On, Alabama
Alabama came out of Fort Payne blending Southern rock drive with country harmony and gospel touches.
Roots, grit, and radio gold
They built their name as a hard-working bar band at The Bowery in Myrtle Beach before radio caught up. The group started as Wildcountry, changing to Alabama in 1977 as the sound tightened and the lineup solidified. Since Jeff Cook's passing in 2022, Randy Owen and Teddy Gentry carry the spirit with a sharp touring unit that honors those fiddle and lead guitar parts. Expect radio pillars like Mountain Music, Dixieland Delight, Song of the South, and Tennessee River to anchor the night.The songs that built the bonfire
The crowd skews multi-generation, from folks who wore out cassettes to newer fans who found the band on playlists, with denim, boots, and a calm, friendly buzz. A small nugget: those Bowery years often meant four-hour sets, which forged the clean stops and stacked harmonies that still define the show. Treat the song picks and production touches below as informed guesses from recent stops, not a promise.The Alabama Crowd, Up Close
The scene is neighborly and proud, with vintage shirts, worn denim, and fresh caps from co-ops and high school teams.
Denim, harmony, and hometown pride
You will see families across three generations, friends comparing favorite records, and couples two-stepping when the groove invites it. During Dixieland Delight, county and hometown shout-outs spring up as the band drops to a half-time coda and lets the room carry the chant. Merch trends classic: script logos, album-art tees, a simple nod to Jeff Cook, and maybe a tour book worth keeping.Traditions you can hear
Pre-show chatter often drifts to June Jam memories, long weekends in Myrtle Beach, and the first time they heard Mountain Music on the radio. When Song of the South lands, the chorus turns the room into a front-porch sway more than a scream-along, which fits the catalog. It is a respectful, easy culture that values harmony, stories, and the small-town roots that shaped Alabama.How Alabama Makes It Move Live
Randy Owen's warm lead sits front and center, with Teddy Gentry's harmony thickening choruses while the touring fiddler and guitarist trace Jeff Cook's signature lines.
Harmony first, pocket tight
The rhythm section favors straight, danceable tempos, letting bass and snare keep an easy pocket while acoustic guitar sets the strum. Hooks stay faithful to the records, but verses may be trimmed so the night moves fast and the favorites stack neatly. On a few classics they drop the key a notch to suit Owen's weathered range, which keeps tone and pitch steady.Small tweaks, big payoffs
A reliable live habit is stretching Tennessee River into a breakdown where fiddle and guitar trade short phrases before a crisp stop and chorus return. The electric guitar often uses a clean, lightly chorused tone that nods to 80s studio sheen, and the fiddle will double hooks an octave up for lift. Lighting leans warm and simple, punching accents on drum fills and opening chorus hits rather than chasing every bar. It all frames Alabama as a harmony-first band where parts fit like puzzle pieces and the story leads the sound.Kinfolk Sounds: Artists Alabama Fans Tend To Love
Fans of Brooks & Dunn will feel at home because both acts deliver big choruses and guitar-forward country made for loud sing-alongs.