The Travelin' McCourys

Thurs. Nov 20th 7:30 PM
$47.20 ($40 ticket + $7.20 taxes and fee)
The Travelin’ McCourys didn’t begin as an idea. They began as momentum.
For Ronnie McCoury (mandolin) and Rob McCoury (banjo), bluegrass was never abstract. It was lived. They grew up on the road, on stage and inside the Del McCoury Band, learning the music the only way it truly gets learned – by playing it in front of real audiences, night after night, with no safety net.
For years, their role was clear: help carry one of the most respected bands in American music forward. But history doesn’t stand still. And neither did they.
Ronnie and Rob saw how extended solos, unexpected covers and risk-taking created a different kind of electricity. And they began asking: Where does this music go when the rules loosen?
The band’s self-titled debut album captured what audiences already understood: this wasn’t a side chapter or a satellite project. It was a fully formed band with a clear voice that draws from Bill Monroe and Del McCoury, and also from rock dynamics, jazz instincts and the freedom of improvisational music.
“A good song is a good song,” Ronnie says. “We just like finding new ways to play them.”
That philosophy defines the Travelin’ McCourys on stage. Tight harmonies. Fearless solos. Setlists that breathe. A sense that each night is singular and unrepeatable.
Placed alongside the Del McCoury Band, the relationship becomes clear. It’s not a succession, not a shadow, but an expansion. One band built the architecture. The other explores its outer edges.
thetravelinmccourys.com
$47.20 ($40 ticket + $7.20 taxes and fee)
The Travelin’ McCourys didn’t begin as an idea. They began as momentum.
For Ronnie McCoury (mandolin) and Rob McCoury (banjo), bluegrass was never abstract. It was lived. They grew up on the road, on stage and inside the Del McCoury Band, learning the music the only way it truly gets learned – by playing it in front of real audiences, night after night, with no safety net.
For years, their role was clear: help carry one of the most respected bands in American music forward. But history doesn’t stand still. And neither did they.
Ronnie and Rob saw how extended solos, unexpected covers and risk-taking created a different kind of electricity. And they began asking: Where does this music go when the rules loosen?
The band’s self-titled debut album captured what audiences already understood: this wasn’t a side chapter or a satellite project. It was a fully formed band with a clear voice that draws from Bill Monroe and Del McCoury, and also from rock dynamics, jazz instincts and the freedom of improvisational music.
“A good song is a good song,” Ronnie says. “We just like finding new ways to play them.”
That philosophy defines the Travelin’ McCourys on stage. Tight harmonies. Fearless solos. Setlists that breathe. A sense that each night is singular and unrepeatable.
Placed alongside the Del McCoury Band, the relationship becomes clear. It’s not a succession, not a shadow, but an expansion. One band built the architecture. The other explores its outer edges.
thetravelinmccourys.com