Get ready for a new LIVE music experience in the town of Perinton, NY. Pack a blanket, or lawn chair, and enjoy a night full of incredible music paired with awesome food and beverage from Rochester’s most diverse food trucks. June 11th marks the beginning of these summer socials, but we are just getting started! Check back for additions in the series soon!
A portion of the ticket sales will benefit SOFI, a local organization that supports seniors living in the Town of Perinton.
Collective Soul, with frontman and chief songwriter Ed Roland, is on a roll after the release of their 2022 album Vibrating. “We’re not the normal rock and roll band, we really enjoy each other’s company,” Roland says with a chuckle, “to be able to say that we’re still able to go on the road 28 years later, I mean, come on, that’s like winning the lottery.”
The album and the band pulsate with the boundless energy that has been their trademark, electrifying audiences with classics like Shine and Heavy and new material like Right as Rain.
The band members are driven with uncompromising and unwavering excitement to create the music their audiences love with sets of old and new soaring hits, blending gritty hard rock with wholesome pop.
Collective Soul’s chemistry and deep grooves will indeed leave you positively vibrating
Spawned out of the rolling hills of Southern Ohio, vintage rock n’ rollers, The Summit, have become one of the country’s most sought out touring bands over the past three years. After consecutive invites to join legendary rock trio ZZ Top on tour in both 2017 and 2018, The Summit quickly became more than just a Midwest band from Cincinnati, OH; they became a relevant force on big stages all over America.
The Wood Brothers have learned to trust their hearts. For the better part of two decades, they’ve cemented their reputation as freethinking songwriters, road warriors, and community builders, creating a catalog of diverse music and a loyal audience who’ve grown alongside them through the years. That evolution continues with Heart is the Hero, the band’s eighth studio album. Recorded analog to 16-track tape, this latest effort finds its three creators embracing the chemistry of their acclaimed live shows by capturing their performances in real-time direct from the studio floor with nary a computer in sight. An acoustic-driven album that electrifies, Heart is the Hero is stocked with songs that target not only the heart, but the head and hips, too.
The Wood Brothers have partnered with American Friends of Canadian Conservation so that $1 per ticket will support The Nature Trust of British Columbia (NTBC) in their efforts to conserve ecologically-rich wetlands and protect irreplaceable land from development. Every $1 donated will be matched by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service with $2 so more endangered wetlands can be saved. If you’d like to learn more, please visit this link.
“It’s not heavy metal, but in our guts, it feels a bit like Heavy Metal,” says Michael Trent of the band’s new album, Manticore due Feb. 18. Next year, 2022, will mark ten years since Cary Ann
Hearst and Michael Trent released their debut album O’ Be Joyful, the first formally billed as
“Shovels & Rope.” That decade included the release of six full-length albums, three collaborative
covers albums (Busted Jukebox Volumes 1-3), a curated music festival in their hometown of
Charleston, SC (High Water), a musical film (Shovels & Rope: The Movie) and countless dynamic
live performances all over the planet. But it was in the rear courtyard suite of the Decatur St.
house belonging to the Preservation Hall Jazz Band in New Orleans where Michael and Cary Ann
began polishing up the songs that became Manticore. There was a piano in the room and a little
desk. There were piles of scattered and folded papers lying on the bed and copious digital ideas
in the form of voice memos. And despite the pounding parades in the surrounding streets, it was
quiet in the afternoon.
PLEASE BE READY TO HAVE YOUR MOBILE TICKET SCANNED AT THE GATE.
Patrons are permitted to bring in one sealed bottle of water. All other outside food, drinks and alcohol are not permitted. There are several food vendors and alcohol booths at the event.
General Admission attendees can park at 1350 Turk Hill Rd. Fairport, NY 14450. VIP attendees will have their own private parking at 1100 Ayrault Rd. Fairport, NY 14450.
This event is rain or shine. No refunds.
NO RE-ENTRY ALLOWED
The pathway from the North parking lot to the top of amphitheater seating area is ADA accessible.