How do you want to listen?

Picking a plan can be tricky and we're here to help.

Tell us how you want to listen to SiriusXM, and any hardware details you know. We'll show you to the best plans and pricing for you.

You can listen on your connected device, on the app, or with our web player

  • Browse Content
  • Channel Guide
  • Howard Stern
  • News & Issues
  • Talk & Entertainment
  • Hear & Now Blog
  • Ways to Listen
  • Compare Plans
  • Inside the Car
  • On the SiriusXM App
  • Returning Listener Offers
  • Shop Radios
  • Traffic, Weather & More
  • For Business
  • Auto & Truck Fleets
  • Listen on the SiriusXM App
  • Transfer My Subscription
  • Refresh My Radio
  • Help Center
  • Do Not Call Policy
  • Browse Plans and Pricing
  • Subscribe Now
  • Get a Free Trial
  • Pay My Bill

Page content follows

Yacht Rock 311

Channel 311 Yacht Rock Radio celebrates the smooth-sailing soft rock from the late '70s and early '80s. You’ll hear artists like Michael McDonald, Christopher Cross, Steely Dan and other titans of smooth music. It's the kind of rock that doesn’t rock the boat!

Daryl Hall/John Oates

yacht rock radio review

Channel 311

Yacht rock radio.

SiriusXM’s tribute to Yacht Rock celebrates the smooth-sailing soft rock from the late 70s and early 80s. You’ll hear artis … more

SiriusXM’s tribute to Yacht Rock celebrates the smooth-sailing soft rock from the late 70s and early 80s. You’ll hear artists like Michael McDonald, Christopher Cross, Hall & Oates and other titans of smooth music. It’s the kind of rock that doesn’t rock the boat!

I'm The Captain Now

I'm The Captain Now

Each week, we let a new celebrity takes the yacht for a spin around the marina and pick out their favorite Yacht Rock songs. … more

Each week, we let a new celebrity takes the yacht for a spin around the marina and pick out their favorite Yacht Rock songs. Because ... they're the captain now!

Now Playing

Set Your Listening Preferences

We’ve got plans for every kind of listener

Exclusive channels, sports play-by-play, A-list hosts. The variety you want, where you choose to listen.

Discover More

All music genres.

  • Newsletters
  • Help Center

Things to Do

  • Arts & Culture
  • Events in Atlanta
  • Georgia Entertainment Scene
  • 50 Years of Atlanta Hip Hop
  • Black History Month

Yacht Rock Revue not a fad but a phenomenon

Yacht Rock Revue at their annual Turkey Eve concert on Nov. 24, 2021 at their concert venue Venkman's in Old Fourth Ward. (L-R) Mark "Monkeyboy" Dannells, Nick Niespodziani and Greg Lee. RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com

Credit: RODNEY HO/[email protected]

In the fall of 2007, the Atlanta power pop trio Y-O-U was on life support. They never got their big break despite building a decent local following. The lead singer had entered law school. The bassist, a fitness instructor at an independent living facility, was pondering a move to Denver.

But the Y-O-U musicians weren’t ready to mothball their amps just yet. Inspired by a Time/Life CD infomercial, Y-O-U drummer Mark Cobb created a kitschy compilation CD he dubbed “The Dentist Office Mix” featuring 19 soft rock hits from the 1970s by the likes of Little River Band, Firefall and 10cc. He figured: why not turn that into a theme night?

In 2006, Mark Cobb created the "Dentist Office Mix," a collection of soft rock hits that inspired the first "Yacht Rock" night at 10 High in Virginia-Highland in 2007.  MARK COBB

Credit: MARK COBB

icon to expand image

10 High Club, a lovably grungy venue downstairs from the Dark Horse Tavern in Virginia Highland, green lit the show called yacht rock after Cobb saw a YouTube web series by that name.

For the Y-O-U musicians, Yacht Rock night was meant as a fun diversion, a one-time jam to laugh about later. They met up at Cobb’s basement with other musician friends and rotating lead singers to learn each song. “Kiss You All Over” by Exile. “Baker Street” by Gerry Rafferty. “Still the One” by Orleans. “Love Will Keep Us Together” by Captain & Tennille. These were largely songs that had been left in the dustbin of rock history by that time, too soft and light for classic rock stations and too old for pop radio stations to play.

With tongue firmly in cheek, guitarist Mark “Monkeyboy” Dannells Photoshopped a promo poster with five of their heads superimposed on the heads of the band members for Orleans from its 1976 “Waking and Dreaming” LP. For the concert, Y-O-U lead singer Nicholas NIespodziani chose a floral shirt and plaid vest top. Monkeyboy opted for a beret, aviator sunglasses, bell bottoms and an “I’m With Stupid” T-shirt. Cobb wore his grandfather’s plaid leisure suit and a wig.

The promotional poster for the first Yacht Rock show in 2007 superimposed the heads of Mark Bencuya (from left), Mark Dannells, Nick Niespodziani, Greg Lee and Mark Cobb on the heads of the band Orleans LP. RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com

Credit: RODNEY HO

Something clicked that Friday evening at 10 High for the 150 inebriated, sweaty audience members and the band members on stage. Nicole Jurovics, a former 10 High talent booker, recalled feeling both bemused and oddly taken by the show. “I knew every word to every song, and I had no idea why because I never owned any of those records,” she said.

Glen Pridgen, who sang Rupert Holmes’ cheesy 1979 hit “Escape (”The Piña Colada Song)” that night, had a blast: “Even as an outsider, I sensed something special was happening, a chemistry among the band members.”

But nobody on stage had any idea this was the genesis of what would become Yacht Rock Revue, and that 14 years later, seven of the musicians from that 10 High gig (three of whom are named Mark) would play many of those same songs in front of 6,000 cheering fans at Cadence Bank Amphitheatre at Chastain Park.

Nick Niespodziani, the future lead singer of Yacht Rock Revue, on the first night he performed yacht rock music on October 5, 2007, at 10 High. CONTRIBUTED

Credit: CON

Mark Cobb, the Yacht Rock Revue drummer, saved the original set list from October 5, 2007, the night that ultimately beget the band that lives on 14 years later. CONTRIBUTED

Credit: CONTRIBUTED

The rise of Yacht Rock Revue

In the summer of 2008, after a second yacht rock night packed 10 High, the venue’s booker Curtis Clark offered the core musicians, including former Y-O-U members and childhood friends Niespodziani and Peter Olson, a residency every Thursday night as long as they did yacht rock. They soon became proficient at songs by Boz Scaggs, Christopher Cross and Ambrosia, drawing a surprisingly wide swath of fans.

In those early days, they saw this as a side hustle that would soon die out. And Niespodziani was clearly conflicted about the band’s growing success.

Yacht Rock Revue performing at the Dunwoody Beer Festival in May 16, 2009. RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com

After performing Elton John’s “Little Jeannie” while dressed in yacht-friendly outfits at the Dunwoody Beer Festival in 2009, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that Niespodziani told the audience, “We appreciate your tepid response. Tepid is good. Too much reaction and you’ll rock the boat. And that’s bad.”

At the time, Niespodziani wasn’t a fan of a lot of the songs. The indie rock part of him felt “a little evil” making money off this type of music: “Sometimes I feel like I’m part of the problem, not the solution.

“I’m surprised how few people snicker at us,” he added in 2009. “If I weren’t in this band, I think I’d be a hater.”

For four years, Yacht Rock Revue kept the weekly 10 High gig, each member pocketing $100 a night, but their popularity led them to bigger venues, first Buckhead’s Andrews Upstairs, then the larger Park Tavern by Piedmont Park. People began asking them to perform at weddings, corporate events and private parties.

By 2011, they were all able to quit their day jobs and focus solely on Yacht Rock Revue.

Around that time, Andy Levine, founder of the Atlanta-based, music-themed cruise company Sixthman , placed the band on two of his Rock Boat cruise ships with Sister Hazel and multiple cruises with the group Train. They also jumped on cruises themed around KISS, Kid Rock and even “Star Trek.”

The exposure seeded their fan base nationwide, resulting in bookings to play shows in Denver, Boston and Indianapolis, Indiana.

Yacht Rock Revue also drew the attention of the acts they covered. Musicians from Looking Glass (”Brandy (You’re a Fine Girl”), Player (”Baby Come Back”), Orleans (”Dance With Me”) and Starbuck (”Moonlight Feels Right”) began joining them on stage for their annual Yacht Rock Revival all-star concerts at Park Tavern, the Tabernacle and Chastain.

Robbie Dupree, who had two yacht rock-friendly hits in 1980, “Steal Away” and “Hot Rod Hearts,” saw them play at the Canal Room in New York City and joined them on stage.

“They just have a great heart for the music,” said Dupree. “They dig the music. They are really responsible for making this a more legitimate category.”

Copycats have proliferated nationwide, with puns firmly attached. There’s. Yachty By Nature based in Orange County, California; New England’s Hall & Boats ; Nashville’s Monsters of Yacht ; the Los Angeles-based Yächtley Crew ; and a female-fronted group out of Chicago called Yacht Rock-ettes .

“I call them the yachtfathers,” said Carl Nelson, lead singer of Yachty By Nature who has seen Yacht Rock Revue twice. “They got there first and are totally cool bros.”

Even with the praise from peers and fans, Olson and Niespodziani, childhood friends going back to Indiana, sought diversification, awaiting for Yacht Rock Revue to start sinking. They opened the music venue Venkman’s in the Old Fourth Ward. They started a Beatles cover band called Please PleaseRock Me . They performed theme nights covering the “Thriller” album or Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side of the Moon” LP. For a time, they fronted a more traditional wedding band called The Tupperware Party.

But the fan base for Yacht Rock Revue kept growing, imbibing the polyester, the cutesy choreography, the entire vibe.

Greg Prato, the author of “The Yacht Rock Book” (Jawbone Press, 2018) , credits part of their success to pure musicianship, providing fans the opportunity to hear songs by artists who no longer perform or are no longer around. He specifically recalled the band’s rendition of “Baker Street,” noting that Dave Freeman’s “sax bit gives you the goosiest of goose bumps.”

In 2016, the band added two female singers, mother-daughter team Keisha and Kourtney Jackson, providing the band deeper vocal depth and the ability to do songs by the likes of Tina Turner and Captain & Tennille with more credibility. Over the years, they have played at least 600 different songs, and the setlist changes constantly.

To prove they weren’t just a pure cover band, Yacht Rock Revue recorded an original album in 2019 called “Hot Dads in Tight Jeans” and released it in early 2020. Rolling Stone magazine last year compared their new tunes to that of the respected psychedelic pop band Tame Impala .

The yacht kept on sailing ― until it hit the pandemic shoals.

Founders of the Yacht Rock Revue fan club the Anchorheads at an April 2021 concert at Frederick Brown Amphitheatre in Peachtree City include, from left, Ella Leitner from New York City, Will Fisher from Knoxville, Tennessee. and Michelle and Cody Painter from Burlington, Kentucky. CONTRIBUTED

The Pandemic and the Anchorheads

In 2017, Ella Leitner, a 48-year-old Manhattan marketing executive, entered the Wellmont Theatre in Montclair, New Jersey, to see Yacht Rock Revue for the first time. She was super cranky. The traffic had been awful. It was raining. She and her husband were late.

But her mood lifted as soon as she heard the band’s version of Toto’s “Africa.”

“They captured our hearts,” she said. “They captured the essence of yacht rock. It was about having a good time, feeling carefree and taking away whatever was bothering you that day.”

Seeking to recapture that joyful feeling, she saw the band every time they came into town and was looking forward to celebrating her 47th birthday with them at Webster Hall a few blocks from her home in March 2020.

But there would be no concert that day. Instead, for weeks, she only heard the sad sounds of wailing sirens and the daily clanging of pots and pans to honor essential workers treating COVID-19 patients. Individual members of Yacht Rock Revue began holding livestream concerts on Facebook from their basements and seeking donations from fans. Leitner would Venmo money to the band on occasion.

She also got to know the band members as they showed off their homes, their families and their quirky interests, interacting directly with fans. Keyboardist Mark Bencuya revealed his love for alt rock and punk. Cobb did an entire livestream about 1980s TV theme songs. Olson and his wife Alyssa played duets and brought in the kids for fun.

“I was pretty transparent emotionally” on the livestreams, Niespodziani said. Viewers “could tell when I was feeling bummed or stressed and they’d send me stuff in the mail. It was so sweet.”

He received bottles of whiskey, masks with the Yacht Rock album cover on it and earnest letters from people trying to convert him to Christianity.

Leitner began corresponding with other Yacht Rock Revue lovers, and they created a fan group called the Anchorheads with their own logos and T-shirts. The private Facebook page now has more than 1,200 members .

“We were all isolated in our homes,” Leitner said. “This was a shared experience, a way for us to build an active community. The anchor was the natural symbol. It’s in their logo. The symbolism works. We are now anchored to the band.”

For more than a year, PleaseRock , the corporate entity that oversees the band and provides health insurance and a 401(K), couldn’t pay its employee salaries when touring was not an option. But financial support from the Anchorheads enabled them to maintain health insurance for everybody until they got back on the road in April.

“It speaks to the heart of who they are,” Leitner said. “They treat their staff well. They aren’t a novelty act. They’re consummate professionals.”

To honor them, Leitner and many of her fellow Anchorheads nationwide flew to Peachtree City for two nights to see them play at Frederick Brown Jr. Amphitheatre in late April.

“It was like a family reunion,” Leitner said, “family you actually want to spend time with.”

Since then, despite the uncertainties regarding the virus, Yacht Rock Revue has been able to perform dozens of shows again including two at Chastain Park, selling more than 10,000 tickets combined in August and October. They also held two shows at Venkman’s, before and after Thanksgiving, celebrating the venue’s reopening after 20 months.

Mark "Monkeyboy" Dannells (left) during the Turkey Eve concert Yacht Rock Revue held at Venkman's in Atlanta Nov. 24, 2021. RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com

Credit: RODNEY HO/rh

Robin McCannon, a 51-year-old teacher from St. Simon’s Island, stood in the front during the Turkey Eve show with a look of rapt wonder on her face during the 27-song set that began with “Believe It or Not (Theme to ‘Greatest American Hero’)” and ended with “More Than a Feeling.”

“This matters,” she told Niespodziani after the show,” even more than just the music.”

“Spreading love and positive energy is what we’re about,” he said.

The seven original members are now in their 40s and 50s. Most have kids and own homes. They appreciate the steady paychecks, the ability to pursue creative side projects and the Anchorheads.

The week after the Venkman’s reopening, Niespodziani and other Yacht Rock Revue members spent a few days working with John Driskell Hopkins of the Zac Brown Band on a Christmas album for 2022. They are planning another original album next year.

And in February, the band will host its first four-day yacht rock “Steal Away” extravaganza at Runaway Bay in Jamaica with Robbie Dupree and the band Ambrosia and hundreds of fans. “The Anchorheads get to hang with us at the pool and hike with us to a waterfall,” Niespodziani said.

“We started out as a pure party cover band,” he mused, “and have become respected as artists.”

Every year for the past 14 years, he has asked the same questions: “How big are we going to get? How far is this going to go?”

He smiled and shrugged his shoulders: “We still can’t really tell.”

October 23, 2021 - Atlanta - Atlanta band the Yacht Rock Revue, guitarist Mark “monkey boy” Dannells, and saxaphonist David Freeman perform at the Cadence Bank Amphitheatre at Chastain in Atlanta, Saturday, October 23, 2021. The popular cover band relies primarily on the music of Rupert Holmes, Toto, and Kenny Loggins for its success. (Akili-Casundria Ramsess for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

Credit: Akili-Casundria Ramsess

Bassist Greg Lee of Yacht Rock Revue moments after ending a concert at Cadence Amphitheatre at Chastain Park Oct. 23, 2021. RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com

Origins of yacht rock

The Yacht Rock Revue did not invent yacht rock. In 2005, a group of friends taped a series of mockumentary video shorts for a monthly Los Angeles comedy festival called Channel 101. Scanning the liner notes of 1970s vinyl they had purchased for $1 apiece at Amoeba Music , they noticed many studio musicians in L.A. overlapped with acts such as Kenny Loggins, Toto, Steely Dan and the Doobie Brothers.

This observation led to them to create a fake “origin” story and sub-genre of music they dubbed “yacht rock.”

“We had no idea this would ever go beyond the 300 people who saw it in that room,” said “Hollywood” Steve Huey , a music critic and narrator of the series.

But the 12 short episodes were loaded onto YouTube, at the time a new video content service thirsty for content. Soon, it went viral.

Music historian Chris Molanphy, on a recent episode of his podcast “Hit Parade,” said the name stuck in part because prior attempts to categorize the music such as “Revlon rock” or “Jazz rock” had failed to stick.

“Yacht rock is just so evocative,” Molanphy said. “Smooth music, relaxing, ‘70s when yachts were hot. I get it!”

The kitschy wardrobe that goes along with it is easy and accessible as well. A captain’s hat is $10, he said, and you can dig a Hawaiian shirt out of your closet. “Very thrift store friendly,” he said.

Molanphy noted that people often get into the music with an ironic wink and nod but ultimately end up just enjoying it.

Greg Prato, author of the 2018 oral history “ The Yacht Rock Book,” said the genre’s enduring appeal is multi-faceted, noting the “Impeccable song craft, instrumentation and vocal harmonies that are spotlighted in most yacht rock songs. For most older music fans, it takes us back to a time that was seemingly more carefree and jolly, and it serves as the perfect soundtrack for a summertime backyard barbecue.”

Yacht Rock Revue taking their bows Nov. 24, 2021 at the reopening of Venkman's, the venue their company owns. Peter Olson was out because of a breakthrough case of COVID-19. RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com

Concert Preview

Yacht Rock Revue Holiday Spectacular. 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 18. $37.50-$203. Coca-Cola Roxy,

800 Battery Ave. SE, Atlanta. www.livenation.com

About the Author

ajc.com

Rodney Ho writes about entertainment for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution including TV, radio, film, comedy and all things in between. A native New Yorker, he has covered education at The Virginian-Pilot, small business for The Wall Street Journal and a host of beats at the AJC over 20-plus years. He loves tennis, pop culture & seeing live events.

Georgia running back Trevor Etienne (1) during Georgia’s practice session in Athens, Ga., on Tuesday, March 19, 2024. (Tony Walsh/UGAAA)

Credit: Courtesy photo

A man was shot by Alabama and Georgia law enforcement on I-20 Saturday in Tallapoosa after a chase crossed state lines, the GBI said. It was one of three officer-involved shootings on Saturday.

Credit: GBI

Atlanta Braves left fielder Jarred Kelenic (24) swings during the fifth inning of a spring training baseball game at Charlotte Sports Park, Saturday, Feb. 24, 2024, in Port Charlotte, Fla. (Hyosub Shin / Hyosub.Shin@ajc.com)

Credit: HYOSUB SHIN / AJC

March 31,  2017 - Atlanta - A portion of I-85 remains closed because of Thursday's fire and bridge collapse. Aerial photos shot March 31, 2017.   BOB ANDRES  /BANDRES@AJC.COM

Credit: Bob Andres

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens presents singer Frankie Beverly with the Phoenix Award on Friday, March 22, 2024, during his farewell tour at State Farm Arena in Atlanta. (Kymani Culmer for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

Credit: [Insomnia Cured, CC BY-SA 2.0]

Macon's new Atrium Health Amphitheater, one of the largest amphitheaters in Georgia, is set to open Sunday on a tract adjacent to the Macon Mall. (Hyosub Shin / Hyosub.Shin@ajc.com)

  • Arts & Events
  • Great Reads
  • Atlanta 500
  • Block by Block: Stories from the streets that connect us
  • Women Making a Mark
  • Pride Guide 2022
  • Restaurant Reviews
  • 75 Best Restaurants in Atlanta
  • Best Barbecue
  • 50 Best Tacos
  • 123 Things to Eat on Buford Highway
  • 50 Best Bars
  • Best Breakfast
  • The TOUR Championship Cocktail Contest
  • Atlanta Magazine’s HOME Digital Editions
  • Artists & Galleries
  • Design Advice
  • Design News
  • Real Estate
  • Neighborhoods
  • Real Estate All-Stars
  • Sponsored: Preferred HOME Partner
  • Kitchens for a Cause
  • Georgia Design Awards 2023
  • School Guide
  • Health & Wellness
  • Top Doctors
  • Top Dentists
  • Sponsored: Physician & Dentist Profiles
  • Buckhead Guidebook
  • Southbound Magazine
  • Southbound Digital Editions
  • Southbound Newsletter
  • 50 Best Things to Do in Georgia
  • Hidden Georgia
  • North Georgia Mountains
  • Great Georgia Hikes
  • Jekyll Island
  • Georgia Travel Guide
  • Gilmer: Ellijay Visitors Guide 2022
  • Alabama Vacation Guide 2023
  • Readers’ Choice
  • Subscription Center
  • Newsletters
  • Digital Editions
  • Custom Media
  • Give Atlanta
  • Internships
  • Where to Find
  • Georgia Design Awards 2024
  • GrillFest 2024
  • Whiskey Festival 2023
  • Upcoming Events
  • Atlanta Magazine Whiskey Festival 2022
  • 2020 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Designer Showhouse
  • Atlanta Baby and Beyond
  • Atlanta Magazine Whiskey Festival 2019
  • DINES: A Taste of the City’s Best Restaurants
  • 2019 Modern Style Showhome
  • Best Burger Battle
  • Pinewood Forest Idea Home
  • 2018 Modern Style Showhouses
  • Event Photos
  • Issue Archive
  • GaBiz Magazine
  • Vote for the Best of Atlanta Reader’s Choice 2023

Atlanta Magazine

Confessions of a Cover Band: Yacht Rock Revue croons the hits you love to hate

yacht rock radio review

"I never would've guessed I'd be doing what I'm doing now. The 23-year-old me would punch me in the face."

One night in 2012, a man in a Ronald Reagan mask paused beneath a stop sign in the Old Fourth Ward. Armed with a stencil and a can of white spray paint, he transformed the sign into a tribute to a 1978 hit by a mostly forgotten Canadian pop crooner named Gino Vannelli: “I just wanna STOP & tell you what I feel about you, babe.”

“I Just Wanna Stop” is the kind of song whose words most Americans over 40 know despite never consciously choosing to listen to it. After peaking at no. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1978, the tune never quite disappeared, becoming the aural equivalent of a recurring wart. The song found a second life—an endless one, as it turns out—in the musical nether region where the smooth, soft-rock hits of yesteryear remain in heavy rotation. Yes, that’s “Africa” you’re hearing in the dentist’s office. And “What a Fool Believes” in line at CVS. And that faint melody burrowing into your brain while on hold for the next available customer service agent? That’s “Steal Away.” Songs like these, disparaged by critics in their time then jokingly christened “yacht rock” by a comedy web series in 2005, are now the soundtrack to American tedium.

They’ve also become the source of a very good—if conflicted—living for the man who defaced the stop sign: Nick Niespodziani, the singer, guitarist, and de facto leader of the wildly popular cover band Yacht Rock Revue , which tours the country, headlines 1,000-plus capacity venues, and occasionally even plays with the original artists behind these hits.

At the time of the Vannelli vandalism, Yacht Rock Revue had begun to graduate from a local curiosity to a national one. Niespodziani’s sister videotaped the incident and posted it on YouTube. They then printed T-shirts of the sign and, when Vannelli performed at the Variety Playhouse, they got one to him.

On a gray Monday afternoon not long ago, Niespodziani was standing at this crossroads, looking at the sign, trying to explain the motivation behind the prank. “We had this idea, so we videotaped,” he said. “It was definitely guerrilla marketing.” Also, he was pretty drunk.

The episode seems to capture something ineffable about Yacht Rock Revue—part fandom, part joke, part self-promotion, each element infused with irony. When YRR takes the stage at Venkman’s, an Old Fourth Ward restaurant and nightclub co-owned by Niespodziani and bandmate Pete Olson, the band is fully in character, complete with gaudy shirts and sunglasses. They crack jokes about each other’s moms and theatrically highlight multi-instrumentalist Dave Freeman’s one-note triangle solo during America’s “You Can Do Magic.”

“This music isn’t easy to perform,” Olson says. Yacht rock songs tend to be filled with complicated chord changes. All seven band members are accomplished musicians, and Niespodziani, who trained for a spell as an opera singer, is a rangy vocalist, capable of gliding through the high notes in Hall & Oates’s “Rich Girl,” Michael McDonald’s gruff tenor in “I Keep Forgetting,” and Dolly Parton’s amiable twang in “Islands in the Stream,” without seeming to strain. He, Olson, and drummer Mark Cobb first played together in Y-O-U, a band they formed at Indiana University in the late ’90s. They found scant support for original music there, so they relocated to Atlanta in 2002.

Photograph by Mike Colletta

Y-O-U built a buzz in Atlanta, thanks to Niespodziani’s catchy, Beatles-esque songs and the group’s playful gimmicks. They performed, straight-faced, as Three Dog Stevens, a sad-sack trio playing what they called “sandal-rock” (a made-up, synth-heavy genre defined by its purveyors’ predilection for wearing sandals with socks); they covered Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” entirely on keyboards while dressed as the Royal Tenenbaums; they created a YouTube mockumentary series about a competitive jump-roping team. “Comedy has always been part of what we do,” Niespodziani said. “We were doing anything to get noticed because we felt we had good songs but just couldn’t break through with them.”

“I said, ‘That sounds like hell on Earth.’ He was like, ‘But you’re going to make a lot of money.’ So we did it.”

In 2008, Y-O-U was booked every Thursday at the 10 High club in Virginia-Highland. They’d stage “Rock Fights,” playing dueling sets of covers by artists like Bob Seger, John Mellencamp, and INXS, or rejigger Y-O-U songs as soul rave-ups with horns and backing singers, or do a standup comedy night. Yacht Rock Revue was just another of these goofs: Put on silly clothes, and play songs everybody knows but nobody really likes—or claims not to. It was Cobb and guitarist Mark Dannells who came up with the idea. Dannells thought about calling it “A.M. Gold” but Cobb had recently seen a viral web series called Yacht Rock and felt like the term would resonate. Niespodziani went along because his friends needed his vocals. Two band members wore wigs to that first show, and, at one point, Niespodziani stripped off his shirt. People loved it. The club’s booker invited them back the next Thursday. The gig sold out. He asked them to do it every Thursday.

“I said, ‘That sounds like hell on Earth,’” Niespodziani recalls. “He was like, ‘But you’re going to make a lot of money.’ So we did it.”

Most cover bands are awful. But because they play well-known songs, they often secure regular, paying gigs that bands playing original music can’t. Even for the good ones, there’s a ceiling. Few ever perform further than 20 miles from wherever they played their first gig. What’s more, performing other people’s music for a living carries a degree of shame. Cobb has heard the mutterings about Yacht Rock Revue: “Why are these guys playing covers? They could write their own songs. They don’t need to hide behind a gimmick.”

Most of the guys in Yacht Rock Revue—which also includes bassist/vocalist Greg Lee and keyboardist/vocalist Mark Bencuya—had already spent half a lifetime dragging gear into dank basement bars to play for a few bucks and even fewer people. They did this in an era when the music business was cratering. The rise of the internet taught a generation of consumers that music is free, devaluing the dream to which musicians dedicate their lives.

When Yacht Rock Revue started in 2008, Dannells was nearly 40. “It’s not like the world is beating down the door of 40-year-old rock stars,” he says. Today, Yacht Rock is a business, owing its success partially to the corners of the business that haven’t collapsed: live music and merchandising. Besides their public shows, Yacht Rock Revue plays a steady stream of well-paying corporate gigs. They also sell lots of captain’s hats, T-shirts, and other swag. The success of the franchise means it’s been more than five years since any of them had a day job. Niespodziani and Olson created a company, Please Rock , that provides the bandmembers and their families with health insurance, 401Ks, and all the other trappings of comfortable, upper-middle-class stability few musicians ever achieve. All this grants bandmembers some real creative freedoms. “I just released a whole record of orchestral music,” Dannells says. “I don’t care if it sells. I just do it for enjoyment.”

Niespodziani shuttered Y-O-U years ago but still writes elegant power-pop songs for his other band, Indianapolis Jones . But the difference between his two bands’ profiles is stark. Troy Bieser, who has been working on a documentary about Yacht Rock Revue, says he’s seen this in the juxtaposition of the footage he’s compiled. “I’ve seen Nick going through the journey of being thankful for the success but it also feeling ill-fitting,” Bieser says. “That existential dilemma has followed him.”

Niespodziani knows whenever Yacht Rock plays anywhere, that’s a slot a band like Indianapolis Jones can’t get. “We’re a big part of the problem,” he says. As a 39-year-old father of one, who’s worked hard to get what he has, he isn’t about to give it up, but he’s also honest about the compromises he’s made and doesn’t hide from the question that is a natural byproduct of his own success: When a joke becomes your life, how do you keep your life from becoming a joke?

“I never would’ve guessed I’d be doing what I’m doing now,” he says. “The 23-year-old me would punch me in the face and leave me for dead.”

Yacht rock was mostly made in the late ’70s and early ’80s, but the genre wasn’t named until 2005 when JD Ryznar, a writer and actor, created the Yacht Rock web series with a few friends. The video shorts imagined the origins of songs like the Doobie Brothers’ “What a Fool Believes,” Toto’s “Rosanna,” and Steely Dan’s “FM.” The music, Ryznar says, was well-crafted, like a yacht, and recurring nautical imagery in songs like Christopher Cross’s “Sailing” or on Loggins and Messina’s album Full Sail made the term fit. According to Ryznar, true yacht rock has jazz and R&B influences, is usually produced in California, and frequently involves a rotating group of interconnected studio musicians. The term was never intended to be a pejorative—“we never thought it was silly music,” Ryznar says—but the web series is most definitely comedy, and feelings about the music itself tend to be buried under layers of hipster irony, warm nostalgia, and veiled contempt. Yacht rock songs are finely constructed: They’ve got indelible pop hooks, but they’re decidedly professional, not ragged and cool like punk or early hip-hop, which were canonized among the music of that era.

For the first Yacht Rock Revue gig, much of the set list came from a compilation CD that Cobb had burned titled The Dentist’s Office Mix. It included songs like Player’s “Baby Come Back,” Ambrosia’s “The Biggest Part of Me,” and Rupert Holmes’s “Escape (The Piña Colada Song).” “I’d put it on at parties and just see what the reactions would be,” Cobb says. “It was a weird, guilty pleasure.”

Niespodziani’s initial feelings about the music were uncomplicated. “I wasn’t a fan,” he says. “I was really into music that made people feel something, that had some grit and humanity to it. The ethos I thought was important in rock ’n’ roll was rebellious fun crossed with a heart-on-your-sleeve kind of thing. Yacht rock doesn’t do any of that. It doesn’t rebel.” He found a lot of yacht rock to be technical, clinical, and sterile. “Sophisticated for the sake of being sophisticated.”

Onstage, Niespodziani is the picture of unapproachable retro cool. Tall, with shaggy hair and an angular face, he hides behind large, dark sunglasses and frequently surrenders a thin half-smile. In other words, he personifies the classic, arrogant, coked-up, late-’70s rock frontman. In person, he gives off nearly the opposite impression. Over coffee, he’s thoughtful, earnest, and self-deprecating. His sharp facial features are accentuated by wide-lensed prescription glasses, and, having traded the polyester shirts he favors onstage for a camouflage green hoodie, the vibe Niespodziani exudes is hardcore music geek. Olson, who has known Niespodziani since they were in fourth grade in Columbus, Indiana, says when they met, “Nick was the nerdy kid who was good at math and jump-roping.”

Photograph by Emily Butler

Yacht Rock Revue, for Niespodziani, is a part he plays: “I’m almost more an actor than a musician.” He and his bandmates spend hours prowling vintage stores looking for the retro leisure wear that they don onstage—and then a not inconsiderable amount of money getting those old clothes tailored to fit. “It’s a war of attrition,” he says. “You find something that might work, and then it’s itchy or it smells or holes develop because the shirt is older than I am. You have to be shopping at all times.” They once did a gig in street clothes, but it felt wrong. “Polyester,” he says, “is our armor.”

Sometimes that armor hasn’t been enough for Niespodziani. During the band’s first few years, they played weekly at the 10 High. “I would drink a lot and almost sabotage myself, sometimes onstage, and make fun of it,” he says. “People would ask me about the band, and I’d talk down about it and act like I was too cool. I didn’t lash out at people, but it was strange to get well-known for something that didn’t make me feel good about myself. I’d get drunk onstage to deal with it.”

His bandmates certainly noticed, but, for the most part, they let their friend work through it. “He’s been the moodiest about it,” Cobb says. “He just hates Rupert Holmes’s ‘Escape (The Piña Colada Song).’ Hates it. But he knows it goes over well.” So when Niespodziani’s got to play it, he’ll often deadpan an introduction comparing Holmes to da Vinci and Picasso. “By talking about how great it is, it helps me shed that song’s terribleness.”

Niespodziani believes the ironic distance he puts between the guy he is onstage and the guy drinking coffee at Ponce City Market is fundamental to the band’s success. “Because we thought—or at least I thought—I was too cool to be doing this, everything has keyed off what the audience reacts to, whether it’s the clothes we wear, the sidestep dance we do, whatever. The audience has been the head of the snake. We’ve just been following it.” It helps that with more than 500 songs in their repertoire, the band doesn ’ t burn out too badly on any tune. “The only song we have to play is ‘Africa.’” The 1982 hit by Toto, by a band made up of talented but largely anonymous studio musicians, has become something of an Internet meme itself, with multiple think pieces devoted to untangling its allure. “Part of it may be the audacity of the synthesizer sound,” Niespodziani says. “They’re just so cheesy. The chords are fairly complex and pretty unexpected. The way it goes to the minor key in the chorus is kind of a cognitive disconnect. And when you listen to the words, it’s not really about anything. Maybe that’s why it’s so quintessentially yacht rock. It’s not so much what the words are saying, it’s how they make you feel, this combination of pure joy crossed with reminiscing.”

Despite his ambivalence about the music, Niespodziani is first among equals within the band. He sings lead on more songs than anyone else, and it’s his judgment they trust when adding songs to their catalog. He has a system: “Generally, the more a song annoys me, the more likely it makes sorority girls want to eat each other’s brains. Also, almost every song would be an encore for the band we’re covering. So, those are the basics: Does it annoy me? Are girls going to like it? Would it be an encore for the band we’re covering?”

“I’m almost more an actor than a musician.”

Others in the band are more unabashed about the music. “I’ve always loved all this stuff,” says Lee, the bassist. “You have to love it before you can play with it in that comedy sense and do it right.” This ability to walk that line between having fun with the music and making fun of the music has won over many of the original artists. When the band first reached out to guys like Dupree, Gary Wright (“Dream Weaver”), and Player’s Peter Beckett, some artists disdained the term “yacht rock” and feared being treated as a joke. Dupree was an early convert and evangelized about the band to his peers, touting their musicianship and enthusiasm. He says those who eventually performed with Yacht Rock Revue were “staggered that they were playing in front of 4,000 people who knew every word to their songs.”

The genre’s rise as a cultural touchstone—Jimmy Fallon has been a big booster, inviting Dupree, Cross, McDonald, and others to perform on TV, and there’s now a SiriusXM station devoted to it—has benefited these artists. Their Spotify and YouTube streaming numbers have risen noticeably. “It’s made a big impact financially,” Dupree says. “Even the skeptics have seen the power of it.”

For a while, the band had a bit of a good-natured Twitter beef with the creators of the Yacht Rock web series. Ryznar admits he initially felt like the band had hijacked his idea, but now his only real gripe is Yacht Rock Revue’s liberal definition of yacht rock. “Half their set is incredible yacht rock,” Ryznar says. “The other half, they play way too much Eagles, America, and Fleetwood Mac. Those aren’t yacht rock bands.”

The band makes no apologies. As Niespodziani puts it, “Yacht rock is what we say it is now.” That’s not just bravado. Yacht Rock Revue trademarked the term “yacht rock” for live performances, so other acts can’t use it without permission. The maneuver helped snuff out competition from other cover bands but occasionally puts them in conflict with some of the genre’s originators. When Cross’s manager tried to assemble a “Yacht Rock” tour featuring Cross, Orleans, and Firefall, it ran afoul of the trademark.

“We said, ‘If you want to call it Yacht Rock, we’ve got to be the [backing] band,’” Olson says. That compromise collapsed when Cross’s manager “wanted a piece of the trademark and of all our earnings over three years.” Yacht Rock Revue sent a cease-and-desist letter instead.

The band’s set list is anchored in the classic late ’70s, early ’80s yacht-rock era but can stretch to include songs as old as the late ’60s or as recent as the early ’90s. Of course, there’s a balance to be struck: If they go too far afield, they risk becoming just another cover band, but there are other considerations to take into account, too. As Cobb explains, “Nothing about Whitney Houston is in the genre, but when we play ‘I Wanna Dance with Somebody,’ the chicks go crazy, everybody orders another round, the bar sells out of Tito’s and Red Bull, and they’re like, ‘When can you come back? You broke alcohol records.’”

The band’s audiences have evolved over time. The earliest shows were heavy on hipsters and fellow musicians. Then, those fans brought their parents. At a Buckhead Theatre gig in March, the crowd leaned toward balding guys in button-down shirts and platinum-blond women wearing expensive-looking jewelry. Niespodziani once called yacht rock “the music of the overprivileged,” which was a joke, but also not. Getting older, wealthier fans out to shows is an impressive accomplishment most artists would envy, but it has changed something fundamental about Yacht Rock’s appeal. “When we started, it was people elbowing each other, laughing at this music,” Niespodziani says. “Now, there’s no irony.”

On a night off during a Vegas stand in 2015, the entire band went to see Ringo Starr and his All-Starr Band perform at the Pearl Theater in the Palms Casino. Starr began doing these tours in 1989, fronting a band of aging rockers like Gary Wright, Steve Lukather (Toto), and Gregg Rolie (Santana, Journey), whose names and faces you might not recognize but whose songs you certainly would. Just past the midway point in the show at the Pearl, Lukather stepped to the mic, and Starr began beating out a familiar rhythm on the drums. As Lukather picked out the first few notes on the guitar and the synths pumped out the insistent melody, the song was instantly recognizable: “Africa.” In the theater balcony, Cobb recalls looking across at Niespodziani and seeing something change in his friend. “I just watched Nick’s face and, all of a sudden, it was as if this weight lifted off him.”

The Beatles had always been Niespodziani’s favorite band. “Now, I’m watching Ringo Starr, and he has to play fucking ‘Africa’ every night, too,” Niespodziani says. “He was in the Beatles! That was a life-changing moment for me.” Starr and his band were touching many of the same nerves in the audience at the Pearl Theater that Yacht Rock Revue touches all the time. “When we started Yacht Rock, I didn’t like the music we were playing. I didn’t like myself for being in a cover band. I had some dark times. It’s been a journey for me to get okay with it. That was a pretty key moment. Once you get to a certain point in the music business, everybody’s hustling. I’m not going to look down my nose at anybody for doing anything that makes it possible to feed their family by singing songs.”

Seeing Starr go yacht rock was a significant step that’s made enjoying Yacht Rock Revue’s triumphs a little easier. For years, Olson and Niespodziani waited for interest in yacht rock—and their band—to fade. Opening Venkman’s was a hedge against that. But Yacht Rock Revue’s stock continues to rise. Their touring business has grown 375 percent since 2014. “It’s not a fad,” Niespodziani says. “This is going to be our biggest year by far.” They play increasingly larger venues and have recently started booking dates overseas, including this summer in London.

The question is, where else can they take this, literally and figuratively? Back in 2013, the band quietly released a five-song EP: four original songs and a cover of—what else?—“Africa.” They used to occasionally drop an original tune into their shows, sometimes announcing it as a “Hall & Oates B-side.” The crowds were amenable, kind of. “It’s hard when they know every word to every song,” Niespodziani says. “They don’t come for discovery; they come for familiarity.” That’s a truism any band who has ever had a hit knows all too well. The essential appeal of Yacht Rock Revue—and yacht rock—is a combination of nostalgia and escape, a yearning for the simpler, easier time these songs evoke. Yet Niespodziani has been wondering lately if it’s possible to pivot fans to his own songs, either with Yacht Rock Revue or Indianapolis Jones.

“That’s still my dream,” he says, “to have one song that matters to somebody the way ‘Steal Away’ matters to people. No matter what else I do in life, if I don’t ever get over that bar, part of me will feel like I failed at the one thing I wanted. I don’t know if I can ever let go of that. I don’t know if I’m ready to face that darkness.”

In 2013, during a commencement speech at Syracuse University, the author George Saunders told graduates, “Success is like a mountain that keeps growing as you hike up it.” Niespodziani brought this quote up to me while we were having coffee. He knows his life is nothing to complain about. He lives a rarefied existence where he gets paid a lot of money to play music. But clearly, the mountain grows in front of him, and the hike up isn’t always easy. He’s still prone to self-deprecating asides about his band, he still kinda envies the Robbie Duprees of the world—but, hey, he doesn’t need to get drunk onstage anymore, and he doesn’t lose sleep wondering if he’s a force for good or evil in the world. That stop sign at the crossroads in the Old Fourth Ward isn’t an omen or a cautionary tale. It’s simply a funny story that makes people smile. He’s just working on becoming one of them.

“The way I really made peace with it is, it occurred to me that everywhere we went, everyone was so happy to see me,” he says. “These people, it’s the highlight of their week to come sing along with these tunes. If your job is making people happy, that’s a pretty good calling.” He leans back in his chair and smiles. “My job is to make it okay for everybody else to have fun. That’s kind of cool.” He gets quiet for a moment and shrugs.

This article appears in our  July 2018 issue .

RELATED ARTICLES MORE FROM AUTHOR

Yacht Rock Revue

The accidental success of Yacht Rock Revue

Newsletters.

yacht rock radio review

Most recent

Christiane Lauterbach 40 years as Atlanta magazine critic

The Dining Diva: Christiane Lauterbach dishes on her 40 years as Atlanta magazine’s dining critic

Pendolino

Kevin Maxey’s new Italian restaurant, Pendolino, opens near Chastain Park

yacht rock radio review

Well Served: Chef Brody Olive on oysters and a favorite sailboat outing

Great reads.

Nettie Washington Douglass

The ancestors of Nettie Washington Douglass still have stories to teach us. She just hopes we are ready to listen.

The Fox Brothers redefined Atlanta barbecue—and it all started with a humble backyard cookout

The Fox Brothers redefined Atlanta barbecue—and it all started with a humble backyard cookout

  • Business Forum
  • Privacy and Cookies Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • General Contest Rules
  • Environment
  • Coronavirus
  • Real Estate
  • Beer & Wine
  • Cocktails & Spirits
  • Openings & Closings
  • Restaurant Guide
  • Restaurant Reviews
  • Top 100 Restaurants
  • Top 100 Bars
  • Concert Calendar

Local Music

  • Music Festivals
  • New Times Out to Brunch
  • New Times Pizza Week
  • New Times Tacolandia
  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Eat & Drink
  • Shopping & Services
  • Sports & Recreation
  • Readers' Choice
  • Best of Miami Party
  • Newsletters
  • Advertise with Us
  • Flipbook Archive
  • Promotions & Free Stuff
  • Where To Find New Times In Print
  • Sign Up/Sign In

Yacht Rock Revue as Stunned as Anyone With Its Crazy Success

Yacht Rock Revue is set to release Hot Dads in Tight Jeans on February 21.

New Times Broward-Palm Beach

Newsletter Sign Up

Enter your name, zip code, and email, sign up for our newsletters.

Decades Later, the Mavericks Still Make Music Gumbo

Decades Later, the Mavericks Still Make Music Gumbo

By David Rolland

Jennifer Lopez Adds Second Date to This Is Me...Now Miami Tour Stop in June, Cancels Performances in Other Cities

Jennifer Lopez Adds Second Date to This Is Me...Now Miami Tour Stop in June, Cancels Performances in Other Cities

By Douglas Markowitz

Shortly Before the County Terminated Its Lease, We Visited the Seaquarium, Miami's Saddest Attraction

Shortly Before the County Terminated Its Lease, We Visited the Seaquarium, Miami's Saddest Attraction

By Francisco Alvarado

Everything You Need to Know About the 2024 Miami Open

Everything You Need to Know About the 2024 Miami Open

By Jesse Scott

yacht rock radio review

  • View This Week's Print Issue
  • Food & Drink
  • Arts & Culture
  • Advertise With Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Voice Media Group
  • Dallas Observer
  • Denver Westword
  • Miami New Times
  • Phoenix New Times
  • V Digital Services
  • Skip to content
  • Accessibility
  • Buy Tickets

Sirius XM Presents - Yacht Rock Revue

Reverse sunset tour.

Sirius XM Presents - Yacht Rock Revue

  • Date May 20 , 2023
  • Event Starts 7:30 PM
  • Doors Open 6:00 PM
  • Ticket Prices $40.00 - $67.00
  • On Sale On Sale Now
  • Pit Type General Admission Standing

Event Details

What is left for Yacht Rock Revue to prove? This top-notch group of musicians has already rocked onstage with John Oates, Eddie Money (RIP), and both versions of the band Player. They’ve trademarked the term “yacht rock,” both metaphorically and literally (U.S. Registration Number 3834195). From humble beginnings in a basement, touring in partnership with Live Nation and Sirius XM, they now headline sold-out shows across the country, from Webster Hall in New York to the Wiltern in L.A. While rising from bars to amphitheaters, they’ve ticked every box on the Rock Star Accomplishments bingo card. Except for one: Writing and singing their own songs.

Yacht Rock Revue’s first original record is ten songs inspired by the smoooooth sounds of the Seventies and Eighties. They’ve brazenly titled it Hot Dads In Tight Jeans – forgive them for bragging, but that’s what they are – and it returns Yacht Rock Revue to their roots in original music.

“I had a midlife crisis. That’s why we made this album,” says Nick Niespodziani, the group’s singer, guitarist, and spiritual leader. “Everyone in the band is a dad now, so we needed to make this happen, before we become grandpas. I’ve sung ‘Escape’ by Rupert Holmes at least a thousand times, and if that isn’t paying your dues, I don’t know what is.”

It’s rare that musicians in their 40s chase their rock star dreams. You’d have to be crazy to try. YRR knew they were underdogs, but resolved to take one more shot at the Top 40, and maybe even become a Cinderella story of midlife fulfillment.

Yacht Rock Revue began in the least-yachtiest of states, 2,000 miles from breezy Marina del Rey. Niespodziani and Pete Olson met in the fourth grade in suburban Indiana, went on to Indiana University in the late Nineties, formed the band Y-O-U, then escaped – Rupert Holmes reference intended – to Atlanta. One night, Y-O-U tucked their tongues deep in their cheeks and played a show of Yacht Rock songs. The rowdy (a nice way of saying drunk), sold-out crowd loved it.

When the club owner asked them to do it again, Niespodziani didn’t want to. But the club owner had an ace up his sleeve: money. Over the years, YRR (there’s also a Dave, a Greg, and literally three guys named Mark) have turned themselves into human wine spritzers, playing 120 to 150 shows a year, mastering Yacht Rock’s slick chords and mellow grooves, and partying like it’s 1979.

What began as a joke among friends soon put a ripple in the zeitgeist, starting a national trend through YRR’s concerts, lauded as “unabashedly joyous affairs” by Entertainment Weekly. They accumulated an extensive wardrobe of white belts and polyester shirts. Yacht Rock Revue were revered and well-compensated! Their life was a tenor sax solo! This is what every musician wants. But even as YRR was sailing the smooth seas of tribute-band superstardom, and the band members all became dads, Niespodziani was still writing original songs.

These  new tunes had the spirit of Yacht Rock, but were more modern – akin to Phoenix or Air, the hip bands that adapted Yacht for a younger audience. They brought the songs to a hot producer, Ben Allen, who’s worked with Gnarls Barkley, Animal Collective, and Neon Indian. Allen gave the songsa lustrous shine, for both new audiences and their ever-loyal fans, the Nation of Smooth. Niespodziani and Olson even co-wrote a song, “Big Bang,” with Yacht Rock master Matthew Wilder, famous for his massive 1983 hit “Break My Stride.”

“Step,” the record’s first single, is a peppy number replete with falsetto and bumping bass, a cross between the Bee Gees and Steely Dan’s “Peg.” It’s also the mission statement for the album in a way, because it’s about deciding who you want to be, and making space for that in your life. The seven-piece band display tight chops, and the songs incorporate Yacht Rock Revue’s sense of humor, especially on the funky, pro-margarita “Bad Tequila,” the flute-fired “Another Song About California,” and opening track “The Doobie Bounce,” where Niespodziani brags, “I used to sleep on couches/Now I sleep on nicer couches.”

Hot Dads In Tight Jeans is as plush and shiny as Kenny Loggins’ beard. And YRR are already dropping these new songs into their sets, to great response from longtime fans who are thrilled to hear new smooth. While others in YRR’s position stick with the tried-and-true, Niespodziani hopes the album will let them welcome aboard new fans, too. To paraphrase a notable mariner… they’re gonna need a bigger yacht.

“Here’s how I see it,” Niespodziani concludes, sliding into a waiting limousine. “We have only one fewer hit than Player did, and Player is immortal. We built this Yacht Rock thing on the power of memories and good vibes. None of that is changing; we're just gonna make a few new memories as well."

Related Links

  • Artist Website
  • FB Event Page

Column: Your endless summer is brought to you by yacht rock and Yachtley Crew

Singer Philly Ocean, upper left, and Yachtley Crew bring yacht-rock hits to the Music Box in Little Italy on Sept. 10.

Yachtley Crew plays a sold-out show at the Music Box on Sept. 10

  • Show more sharing options
  • Copy Link URL Copied!

If you believe in calendars, summer is almost over. But if you believe in yacht rock, summer is never over.

“It’s kind of a made-up genre. But even if you don’t know what it is, if you hear it, you already get it,” said vocalist Philly Ocean (real name, Phillip Daniel) of the Los Angeles-based yacht-rock band Yachtley Crëw , which is playing a sold-out show at the Music Box in Little Italy on Sept. 10.

“It’s all of these easy-listening, feel-good tunes that go well with a piña colada on the deck of a yacht with the horizon off in the distance. Summer vibes are encapsulated in these songs.”

It will never be recognized by the Grammys, but yacht rock has become a pop-culturally accepted category for the semi-fizzy, sorta-jazzy soft-pop songs that ruled the charts in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s. Songs like Christopher Cross’ “Ride Like the Wind,” the Doobie Brothers’ “What a Fool Believes,” and every track on Steely Dan’s “Aja” album.

Donald Fagen, left, and Walter Becker of Steely Dan

But before it became a streaming-radio format, a brunch inspiration and the genesis of tribute bands with names like Yachty by Nature and Monsters of Yacht, yacht rock was a web series.

Created in 2005 by actors J.D. Ryznar and Hunter Stair, “Yacht Rock” was a deliberately cheesy, yet totally appreciative “mockumentary” series following the fictional lives and careers of such future yacht-rock heroes as Hall & Oates, Kenny Loggins and the Michael McDonald-era Doobie Brothers.

Once the series made its way to YouTube, it tickled the fancies of industry types who realized that re-branding soft rock as yacht rock could give these oldies new, hipster-approved life. Satellite- and streaming-radio stations began adding yacht-rock channels, and by 2016, these smooth tunes had made their way to the musicians who formed Yachtley Crëw.

According to Yachtley lore, the two veteran Los Angeles musicians who would go by the names of Sailor Hawkins (drums) and Baba Buoy (bass) were hanging out in a hot tub with their wives (“Probably drinking,” Ocean surmised), when they heard a satellite-radio yacht-rock station and had an epiphany.

One year later, they had a band.

“They thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be great to have a band and play just this music?,’” Ocean said. “When we would go around pitching to venues, club owners would look at us sideways like, ‘You play Christopher Cross? Who is going to listen to that on a Friday night?’ We would always say, ‘Just give us a shot.’”

Veteran soul and rock singer Michael McDonald is photographed at the Rose Cafe in Santa Barbara on April 19, 2017.

Four years and many Christopher Cross tunes later, Yachtley Crëw is playing sold-out shows in venues all over California and beyond; Ocean is singing to passionate crowds who know every word to Boz Scaggs’ “Lido Shuffle” and Jackson Browne’s “Somebody’s Baby”; and the genre started out as a goof has turned out to be a real happy thing.

And that is no joke.

“I think these songs have lasted because they are of the highest quality. The musicianship, the melodies, the lyrics, that is what has given them a long life and caused them to come back around,” Ocean said. “There is a zest for life that you can experience in every single one of these songs. They just make you feel good.”

Yachtley Crëw’s Sept. 10 show at the Music Box is sold out, but there are plenty of other ways to get your yacht-rock fix. Fire up the blender, crank up the tunes, and it will be smooth summer sailing all year long.

Streaming and satellite radio: Whether it’s Spotify’s 11-hour playlist or the stations curated by SiriusXM satellite radio and the LiveXLive streaming service, yacht rock’s non-stop happy hour is just a click away. Because they have a lot of digital space to fill, programmers have expanded the yacht universe to include such genre-questionable crew members as Van Morrison, Tommy Tutone and Eddie Money, but after a few umbrella drinks and a nap, it’s all good, matey.

Slate’s “Hit Parade” podcast: On his two-part “What a Fool Believes” episode, chart analyst and “Hit Parade” host Chris Molanphy gives the yacht-rock genre the thorough, musically astute analysis it deserves. We hear how its shiny roots stretch back to the legendary group of L.A. studio musicians known as the Wrecking Crew; how the sessions for Boz Scaggs’ “Silk Degrees” album are responsible for the existence of Toto; how Toto shaped Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” (It’s true!); and why the aforementioned “Aja” album set the itinerary for the stylish radio adventures that followed. Enlightenment, ahoy!

“Classic Albums: Steely Dan’s ‘Aja’”: Without this landmark 1977 album, there might be no yacht rock today. And without this 1999 episode of VH1’s essential “Classic Albums” series , we wouldn’t know the control-freaky lengths Steely Dan masterminds Walter Becker and Donald Fagen went to in their effort to achieve such glossy, effortless perfection. We also wouldn’t get to see guitarist Jay Graydon unfurl that classically casual “Peg” solo or watch Michael McDonald nailing those sweet, sweet layer-cake harmonies. You can stream it on IMDb TV with irritating, randomly placed commercials, or you can purchase the DVD and immerse yourself as yacht-rock nature intended. Don’t forget your snorkel.

Get U-T Arts & Culture on Thursdays

A San Diego insider’s look at what talented artists are bringing to the stage, screen, galleries and more.

You may occasionally receive promotional content from the San Diego Union-Tribune.

yacht rock radio review

More from this Author

Collage of celebrities for Karla's Arts story on Nov. 27, 2022

Entertainment

Column: Tops of the pop: Retiring critic remembers the best from 37 years of pop-culture watching

Nov. 27, 2022

In this photo from 2016, Karla Peterson gets a wet peck on the cheek from Jake the sea lion while reporting on the 100th anniversary of the San Diego Zoo.

Column: From giant pandas to big-hearted readers, retiring columnist says thanks for the San Diego memories

Nov. 26, 2022

Paul Reiser and Rachel Bloom co-star in "Reboot," a new Hulu comedy series about a streaming-cable update of a popular family sitcom from the early 2000s.

From sly sitcoms to music-nerd podcasts, a big pop-culture thanks for a cornucopia of entertainment treats

Nov. 25, 2022

San Diego, CA - November 18: La Playa Books staff member Marianne Reiner, far left, and manager Amy Hesselink, far right, help Marilyn Daniels, of San Diego, with a purchase at the store on Friday, Nov. 18, 2022 in San Diego, CA. (Meg McLaughlin / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Column: On Thanksgiving, a toast to the community comforts of San Diego’s independent bookstores

Nov. 24, 2022

This camera-trap photo from professional wildlife photographer Roy Toft captures a bobcat taking a water break in Toft's back yard in Ramona. The photo is included in "Caught on Camera: Wildlife When No One's Watching," a new exhibit of camera-trap photography at the San Diego Natural History Museum in Balboa Park.

Column: Gotcha! A new San Diego Natural History Museum photo exhibit explores our backyard wild animal kingdoms

Nov. 22, 2022

Jesse Eisenberg (left) and Lizzy Caplan star in FX's "Fleishman is in Trouble," a series about New Yorkers in conflict debuting Nov. 17 on Hulu.

Column: The FX adaptation of ‘Fleishman is in Trouble’ will test your patience and reward it, too

Nov. 18, 2022

More in this section

Armored Saint performs March 27 in Anaheim.

42 years into touring, heavy metal rock band considers its legacy

Armored Saint bassist Joey Vera talks about changes in the music industry, worries about AI and the next album

March 24, 2024

English composer and conductor Thomas Ades

‘British Invasion’ headed to La Jolla Music Society’s 2024 SummerFest, led by triple-threat Thomas Ades

This year’s lineup features nearly 20 artists from England, along with such acclaimed non-Brits as cellist Alisa Weilerstein, pianist Conrad Tao, clarinetist Anthony McGill, violinist Augustin Hadelich and jazz harpist Brandee Younger

Bruce Springsteen plays his guitar on stage during his concert of Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band World Tour 2024 performance Tuesday, March 19, 2024, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

Bruce Springsteen’s tour, delayed by illness, arrives in San Diego on Monday

The tour, which “The Boss” postponed due to a peptic ulcer, kicked off Tuesday in Arizona with the singer-guitarist in high spirits and fit shape

March 22, 2024

Bob Boss is shown at a 20o9 concert. He died Feb. 18, 2024

Obituary: Bob Boss was a leading San Diego guitarist in many genres: ‘The joy he brought to people was epic’

During a career that began in the late 1970s, he distinguished himself as a versatile musician equally skilled playing, jazz, blues, pop, rock, classical and more. He also taught guitar at SDSU, UC San Diego, Palomar College and the Young Lions Jazz Academy

Mojo Nixon

Mojo Nixon to be honored with free posthumous screening of ‘The Mojo Manifesto’ and concert

The April 20 event will include a Q&A with the film’s director and several San Diego rock-music mainstays, followed by a concert by The Farmers that will likely include such Nixon classics as ‘Elvis is Everywhere’ and ‘Are You Drinking With Me Jesus?’

Larry Goldings is shown during the 59th Monterey Jazz Festival, California.

The three San Diego concerts you absolutely should hear this weekend

Our picks include Goldings/Bernstein/Stewart at the Athenaeum, the San Diego Rock Icons show with The Farmers, Blitz Brothers and Joey Harris & The Mentals at Quartyard, and the propulsive Red Baraat at UCSD’s Epstein Family Amphitheater

March 21, 2024

THIRTEEN PBS

Use one of the services below to sign in to PBS:

You've just tried to add this video to My List . But first, we need you to sign in to PBS using one of the services below.

You've just tried to add this show to My List . But first, we need you to sign in to PBS using one of the services below.

  • Sign in with Google
  • Sign in with Facebook
  • Sign in with Apple

By creating an account, you acknowledge that PBS may share your information with our member stations and our respective service providers, and that you have read and understand the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use .

Get extended access to 1600+ episodes, binge watch your favorite shows, and stream anytime - online or in the PBS app.

  • Become a Member

Already a THIRTEEN PBS member?

You may have an unactivated THIRTEEN PBS Passport member benefit. Check to see .

You have the maximum of 100 videos in My List.

We can remove the first video in the list to add this one.

You have the maximum of 100 shows in My List.

We can remove the first show in the list to add this one.

Yacht Rock Revue: 70s & 80s Hits, Live from New York

Set sail on a nostalgic, soft rock musical journey through the late 70s and early 80s. More More

Set sail on the shimmering seas for a nostalgic musical journey through the late 70s and early 80s, where soft rock and smooth grooves rule the waves. This talented group with exceptional musicianship and tight harmonies pays homage to the golden era of yacht rock and takes audiences back in time, encouraging everyone to sing and dance the night away.

Collections

More arts and music shows.

Shop PBS: Buy More Save More on Select Kids DVDs. Buy 5 for $20 at Shop PBS.

setlist.fm logo

  • Statistics Stats
  • You are here:

Yacht Rock Revue

Yacht rock revue concert setlists & tour dates, reverse sunset tour, yacht rock revue at hard rock live at the etess arena, atlantic city, nj, usa.

  • Edit setlist songs
  • Edit venue & date
  • Edit set times
  • Add to festival
  • Report setlist

Yacht Rock Revue at Brown County Music Center, Nashville, IN, USA

Yacht rock revue at clyde theatre, fort wayne, in, usa, yacht rock revue at ruth eckerd hall, clearwater, fl, usa, yacht rock revue at coral springs center for the arts, coral springs, fl, usa.

  • It Keeps You Runnin'
  • Escape (The Piña Colada Song)
  • Somebody's Baby
  • Breezin'
  • Sister Golden Hair
  • Southern Cross
  • Thunder Island

Yacht Rock Revue at Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall, Sarasota, FL, USA

Yacht rock revue at florida theatre, jacksonville, fl, usa.

  • Breezin' / Guilty
  • Give a Little Bit

Yacht Rock Revue at Columbia County Performing Arts Center, Evans, GA, USA

  • Your Smiling Face

Yacht Rock Revue at House of Blues, Lake Buena Vista, FL, USA

  • Dancing in the Moonlight
  • Do It Again
  • Lonesome Loser
  • Heart to Heart

Yacht Rock Revue at Coca-Cola Roxy, Atlanta, GA, USA

  • Deck the Halls
  • What a Fool Believes
  • You Make My Dreams
  • Jingle Bell Rock
  • Frosty the Snowman
  • Sleigh Ride

Yacht Rock Revue setlists

More from this Artist

  • Artist Statistics
  • Add setlist

Most played songs

  • Baker Street ( 130 )
  • Africa ( 128 )
  • Somebody's Baby ( 106 )
  • Escape (The Piña Colada Song) ( 104 )
  • Heart to Heart ( 104 )

More Yacht Rock Revue statistics

Nobody has covered a song of Yacht Rock Revue yet. Have you seen someone covering Yacht Rock Revue? Add or edit the setlist and help improving our statistics!

Artists covered

10cc 38 Special ABBA Ace Air Supply Ambrosia America Leroy Anderson & His Pops Orchestra Gene Autry Russ Ballard Band Aid Bessie Banks The Beatles Bee Gees The Bellamy Brothers George Benson Elvin Bishop Blue Öyster Cult Blues Image Boffalongo Boston David Bowie Jackson Browne Jimmy Buffett Bobby Caldwell Chicago Climax Blues Band Phil Collins Commodores Crosby, Stills & Nash Christopher Cross Daft Punk Jackie DeShannon The Doobie Brothers Robbie Dupree Eagles Earth, Wind & Fire Dave Edmunds Walter Egan Electric Light Orchestra Exile José Feliciano Jay Ferguson Firefall Fleetwood Mac Dan Fogelberg Foreigner Peter Frampton Dallas Frazier Peter Gabriel

Showing only 50 most recent

View artists covered statistics

Gigs seen live by

337 people have seen Yacht Rock Revue live.

ksgman therealjohnoc McQueen5150 topcatjet capnpen TimKennedy donbarclay Sshammet carroll00 bigsexy hitking Zambonisc mjh13 jbc410 sternie drknite12 Nicklbag28 vonorati xraydoc201 Bobbyb98 plucente echoofwhomever jaldec Cadilks cjf128 SnowDude rickyr1969 Ginaaaaa sabatoogie sdw03547 OrlandoSGM Marinello gkubrick jschoenwald hoopsmccann Lowbacca Nurse_Tina Gunner1717 AlanGreenPhD spcon1 brianalvey Grtmagnet Stanchen lovesundevils Theoriginalpol Doricchi1 bls94001 speaktommy DTFOR909 jmikew1964

Yacht Rock Revue on the web

Music links.

  • Yacht Rock Revue Lyrics (de)

Tour Update

Setlist insider: royal blood.

  • Royal Blood
  • Mar 22, 2024
  • Mar 21, 2024
  • Mar 20, 2024
  • Mar 19, 2024
  • Mar 18, 2024
  • Mar 17, 2024
  • FAQ | Help | About
  • Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices | Privacy Policy
  • Feature requests
  • Songtexte.com

yacht rock radio review

Stream Top Podcasts

Popular podcasts.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations.

Math & Magic: Stories from the Frontiers of Marketing with Bob Pittman

Math & Magic: Stories from the Frontiers of Marketing with Bob Pittman

How do the smartest marketers and business entrepreneurs cut through the noise? And how do they manage to do it again and again? It's a combination of math—the strategy and analytics—and magic, the creative spark. Join iHeartMedia Chairman and CEO Bob Pittman as he analyzes the Math and Magic of marketing—sitting down with today's most gifted disruptors and compelling storytellers.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people.

Featured Podcasts

The Bright Side

The Bright Side

Start your day with The Bright Side, a new daily podcast from Hello Sunshine. Co-hosted by journalist, TV host, and podcaster, Danielle Robay and Emmy-nominated journalist, host, and producer, Simone Boyce, The Bright Side brings your daily dose of culture and inspiration – with the latest trends, celebrity interviews, and real conversations with women doing amazing things while navigating life’s transitions, big and small. The Bright Side is a talk show created to inspire, educate, and empower women as they tackle life each day and add joy to their morning routines. Join Danielle and Simone and the Hello Sunshine community every weekday for entertainment, culture, wellness, books, and more.

Paper Ghosts

Paper Ghosts

It’s the dead of summer, 1989, in the heart of the Ozarks. An 18-year-old woman goes missing from Bella Vista, Arkansas. As the search moves forward, several suspects emerge. Then… a body is found not far from the Missouri border, and a homicide investigation begins. Soon, a second body is discovered nearby. What was a mystery transforms into the hunt for a possible serial killer stalking young women throughout the Ozarks. M. William Phelps digs in nearly 35 years later and begins to understand that things aren’t always what they seem.

Mind the Game with LeBron James and JJ Redick

Mind the Game with LeBron James and JJ Redick

Presented by Uninterrupted and ThreeFourTwo Productions, Mind The Game is an entry into the heralded basketball minds of LeBron James and JJ Redick. The two sit down weekly to discuss the state of the game, dissect X’s and O’s, and wax poetic about the game they love.

iHeart Podcast Networks .css-1q01m3q{margin:0 0 -2px 0;}

© 2024 iHeartMedia, Inc.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Guest Experience
  • Premium Spaces
  • Concessions
  • Getting Here
  • Venue Rentals
  • Nearby Restaurants
  • The Seaport

Yacht Rock Revue 2022 Tour

Yacht Rock Revue 2022 Tour

Yacht Rock Revue bring their 2022 Tour to The Rooftop at Pier 17 on July 7, 2022.

Tickets on sale now at Ticketmaster.com.

SCROLL DOWN FOR REQUIRED GUEST POLICIES.

Doors: 7:00PM Show Starts: 8:00PM

All Ages Rain or Shine Event concludes no later than 10PM

CURRENT HEALTH & SAFETY POLICY STATUS

Guests will not be required to show proof of vaccination or proof of negative test to enter this event. Please note guidelines are subject to change if later mandated by local governments. Check back in the days leading up to your show for any updates and latest guidelines specific to this concert. __________________ By purchasing tickets to this event, unless prohibited by law, you agree that you and all individuals in your attending party will abide by the health and safety measures in effect at the time of the event date. __________________ Tickets are non-refundable.

Coming to a Concert?

Everything you need to know before coming to a show.

Artist/event subject to change

IMAGES

  1. Yacht Rock Radio

    yacht rock radio review

  2. Yacht Rock Revue sets sail with its own sound

    yacht rock radio review

  3. Yacht Rock Radio

    yacht rock radio review

  4. Yacht Rock

    yacht rock radio review

  5. Yacht Rock Radio

    yacht rock radio review

  6. Yacht Rock Radio Recently Played and Playlist

    yacht rock radio review

COMMENTS

  1. Yacht Rock Revue

    Sign up with your email address to receive news and updates. Email Address. Sign Up

  2. About

    Hailing from Atlanta, GA this sensational band has captivated audiences worldwide with their immaculate renditions of classic hits from the late '70s and early '80s. Inspired by the golden era of soft rock, Yacht Rock Revue has mastered the art of recreating the breezy and laid-back tunes that defined a generation.

  3. Yacht Rock Revue

    The Yacht Rock Revue is everything the late '70s and early '80s should've been: massive sing-along soft rock hits, tight bell-bottom jeans, impeccable musicianship, polyester shirts ...

  4. Yacht Rock Revue

    Yacht Rock Revue is an American band that specializes in performing and paying tribute to the soft rock and yacht rock music of the 1970s and 1980s. The term "yacht rock" refers to a style of music characterized by smooth melodies, lush harmonies, and lyrics often associated with a carefree, summertime, or coastal lifestyle. Yacht Rock Revue is ...

  5. Yacht Rock Radio: 70s & 80s Soft Rock

    Yacht Rock Radio. Next Airs Today at 1:30 am. 8 hrs 30 mins. SiriusXM's tribute to Yacht Rock celebrates the smooth-sailing soft rock from the late 70s and early 80s. You'll hear artists like Michael McDonald, Christopher Cross, Hall & Oates and other titans of smooth music. It's the kind of rock that doesn't rock the boat!

  6. Yacht Rock Revue: 70s & 80s Hits, Live from New York

    Stream Full Concert with Passport: https://to.pbs.org/yachtrockA sneak peek of this nostalgic musical journey through the late 70s and early 80s, featuring h...

  7. Yacht Rock Revue not a fad but a phenomenon

    The Atlanta band Yacht Rock Revue, which plays a variety of smooth hits from the 1970s and 1980s, started as a bit of a lark that kept on growing until it became a national touring band with its ...

  8. Confessions of a Cover Band: Yacht Rock Revue croons the hits you love

    Yacht rock was mostly made in the late '70s and early '80s, but the genre wasn't named until 2005 when JD Ryznar, a writer and actor, created the Yacht Rock web series with a few friends ...

  9. Tour

    Sign up with your email address to receive news and updates. Email Address. Sign Up

  10. Yacht Rock Revue: 70s & 80s Hits, Live from New York

    ABOUT THE PROGRAM Yacht Rock Revue: 70s & 80s Hits, Live from New York. Set sail on the shimmering seas for a nostalgic musical journey through the late 70s and early 80s, where soft rock and ...

  11. Yacht Rock Radio: Hear Smooth-Sailing Rock from the 70s and 80s

    At SiriusXM, it's yacht rock season all year long as we bring you your favorite smooth-sailing hits from the 1970s and '80s. Yacht Rock 311 (Ch. 311) will remain available on the SiriusXM satellite platform and streaming platform on Channel 311. Wherever you are, head to the SXM App by clicking above to start listening to the soothing sounds of artists like Michael McDonald, Christopher ...

  12. Yacht Rock Revue

    Set sail on a musical voyage with Yacht Rock Revue in Atlantic City on March 23rd! Immerse yourself in the smooth sounds of the '70s and '80s as this talented ensemble recreates the magic of yacht rock classics. Secure your tickets for an unforgettable night of nostalgia, dancing, and good vibes. Don't miss the yacht rock experience of the year - book your spot now and cruise into a night ...

  13. Yacht Rock Revue

    Yacht Rock Revue. 56,211 likes · 354 talking about this. We're the smooth you're looking for #yachtrockforever

  14. Interview: Frontman Nick Niespodziani Talks Yacht Rock Revue's

    Man plans, and God laughs. So goes the Yiddish adage, and that proves no truer than with the career trajectory of the Hawaiian shirt-wearing, sea captain hat aficionados of the Yacht Rock Revue. Since 2007, the seven-member-deep outfit has specialized in covering artists and songs one might hear a cheerful woman on a radio station ad promoting as the best easy listening from the '70s, '80 ...

  15. Sirius XM Presents

    Yacht Rock Revue began in the least-yachtiest of states, 2,000 miles from breezy Marina del Rey. Niespodziani and Pete Olson met in the fourth grade in suburban Indiana, went on to Indiana University in the late Nineties, formed the band Y-O-U, then escaped - Rupert Holmes reference intended - to Atlanta. One night, Y-O-U tucked their ...

  16. Yacht Rock Revue

    Yacht Rock Revue is an American band that specializes in performing and paying tribute to the soft rock and yacht rock music of the 1970s and 1980s. The term "yacht rock" refers to a style of music characterized by smooth melodies, lush harmonies, and lyrics often associated with a carefree, summertime, or coastal lifestyle. Yacht Rock Revue is known for their energetic live performances and ...

  17. Yacht Rock Revue Tickets, 2024 Concert Tour Dates

    The Yacht Rock Review was so fun to hear and dance to! Rating: 4 out of 5 Really good cover of yacht rock songs by LMac on 2/13/24 Brown County Music Center - Nashville. Yacht Rock Review covered all of the good easy listing "yacht rock"songs very well. They were really good. Nice easy vibe with the crowd.

  18. Column: Your endless summer is brought to you by yacht rock and

    Streaming and satellite radio: Whether it's Spotify's 11-hour playlist or the stations curated by SiriusXM satellite radio and the LiveXLive streaming service, yacht rock's non-stop happy ...

  19. Yacht Rock Revue: 70s & 80s Hits, Live from New York

    This talented group with exceptional musicianship and tight harmonies pays homage to the golden era of yacht rock and takes audiences back in time, encouraging everyone to sing and dance the night away. Set sail on the shimmering seas for a nostalgic musical journey through the late 70s and early 80s, where soft rock and smooth grooves rule the ...

  20. Yacht Rock Revue Concert Setlists

    Yacht Rock Revue at Columbia County Performing Arts Center, Evans, GA, USA. Artist: Yacht Rock Revue , Venue: Columbia County Performing Arts Center , Evans, GA, USA. Set Times: Doors: 6:30 PM Show: 7:35 PM - 9:35 PM. It Keeps You Runnin'. Escape (The Piña Colada Song)

  21. Yacht Rock Radio

    Nothing but smooth sailing ahead. Yacht Rock Radio Playlist. A playlist for 70s & 80s Smooth Soft Rock - updated weekly! Singer-Songwriter Legends. Legendary storytellers, poets and voices. Cover: James Taylor. iHeart70s Playlist. A playlist for 70s Pop Hits - updated weekly! iHeart80s Playlist.

  22. Yacht Rock Revue 2022 Tour

    Yacht Rock Revue bring their 2022 Tour to The Rooftop at Pier 17 on July 7, 2022. Tickets on sale now at Ticketmaster.com. SCROLL DOWN FOR REQUIRED GUEST POLICIES. Buy Tickets. Show Info Thu, July 7, 2022 Event Info. Doors: 7:00PM Show Starts: 8:00PM. All Ages Rain or Shine ...