Two guitars, one shared voice
Setlist threads and who shows up
The group formed when
Susan Tedeschi and
Derek Trucks joined bands and families, blending Southern soul, blues, and improv into a single large unit. After the passing of
Kofi Burbridge in 2019, the sound shifted as
Gabe Dixon brought more piano color and thick harmony parts. Expect a patient arc with likely anchors like
Midnight in Harlem,
Anyhow,
I Am The Moon, and
Made Up Mind, plus a rotating cover that lets the horns stretch. The room skews multi-generational, with denim jackets, well-loved boots, and a scattering of kids in ear protection near the aisles. You will notice quiet focus during ballads and a surge of cheers when the slide guitar hits a high, singing peak. They often record live to tape at their home studio
Swamp Raga, and Derek favors a glass bottle slide with open-E tuning while Susan holds down rhythm in standard. These notes on songs and staging draw from recent runs, but on the night your set and production could land differently.
The Living Room Vibe of Tedeschi Trucks Band
Soul crowd with jam-band patience
Traditions you notice
The scene feels like a friendly swap meet for music heads, with vintage tees, denim vests, and understated jewelry over comfortable shoes. You will see enamel pins, show posters in tubes, and a few hand-drawn setlist guesses shared at the bar. During slow tunes, the room goes still enough to hear a hush, then comes alive on drum breaks and when the slide climbs into the top of the neck. People sing harmony on big choruses, clap the backbeat on
Made Up Mind, and save a special cheer when Susan steps forward for a guitar solo. Merch leans classic: moon-and-desert motifs, soft-wash shirts, and caps that look broken-in on day one. Before the encore, neighbors trade favorite versions of
Midnight in Harlem and compare how the horns sounded in this hall versus last summer's amphitheater.
Under the Hood: Tedeschi Trucks Band's Live Build
Tone before spectacle
Slow burns, big payoffs
Susan Tedeschi's voice carries grit and warmth, and she shapes phrases so the consonants snap while the vowels bloom.
Derek Trucks's slide sings like a human voice, with no pick and smooth glides that let notes ring and lean into each other. Two drummers lock a deep pocket while bass and keys leave air, so the horns can stab or smear without crowding the guitars. The band favors slow builds and roomy tempos, then flips into brisk codas that lift the energy without racing. Arrangements often move solos around from the record, making space for call-and-response between vocals, slide, and sax. A lesser-known detail: Derek keeps an SG in open E for much of the night while Susan stays in standard, which gives their chords a wide, chiming blend. Lighting tends to stay warm and moody, using amber and cobalt to underline turns in the music rather than chase it.
Kinfolk and Kindred Spirits: Tedeschi Trucks Band Neighbors
Crossroads of soul and slide
Nearby roads to the same groove
If you connect with slide-forward soul-blues,
Bonnie Raitt hits a similar nerve with tasteful phrasing and song-first shows.
Marcus King brings big-voice Southern soul, brass-friendly arrangements, and jams that lean warm rather than flashy. Fans of groove-heavy blues rock often cross paths with
Gov't Mule, where long forms, organ swirl, and guitar tone are the draw. For rootsy harmonies and nimble dynamics,
The Wood Brothers share the same love of space, swing, and a human pulse. All four acts value feel, storytelling, and shows that breathe, which is why the overlap in fans at festival bills is so common.