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Adam Hood Live at Docie’s Dock Fort Walton Beach, FL — August 5, 2022

August 5, 2022 @ 8:00 pm 10:00 pm

Enjoy an acoustic performance of Southern Music in the intimate confines of Docie’s Dock with the talented singer/ songwriter, Adam Hood. Tickets available at Docie’s Dock or online — https://www.eventbrite.com/e/adam-hood-live-at-docies-dock-fort-walton-beach-fl-august-5-2022-tickets-348988663487?aff=efbeventtix

Solo artist. Frontman. Behind-the-scenes songwriter. For more than a decade, Adam Hood has left his mark onstage and in the writing room, carving out a southern sound that mixes soul, country, and American roots music into the same package.
It’s a sound that began shape in Opelika, Alabama. Raised by working-class parents, Hood started
playing hometown shows as a 16 year-old, landing a weekly residency at a local restaurant. He’d
perform there every Friday and Saturday night, filling his set list with songs by John Hiatt, Steve
Warner, Hank Williams Jr, and Vince Gill. As the years progressed, the gigs continued — not only in
Alabama, but across the entire country, where Hood still plays around 100 shows annually.
These days, though, he’s no longer putting his own stamp on the songs of chart-topping country stars.
Instead, many of those acts are playing his music. Little Big Town, Miranda Lambert, Anderson East, Frankie Ballard, Josh Abbott Band, Lee Ann Womack, and Brent Cobb are among the dozens of artists who’ve recorded Hood’s songs. An in-
demand songwriter, he signed a publishing deal with Warner/Chappell Nashville and producer Dave
Cobb’s Low Country Sound in 2016, while still maintaining a busy schedule of tour dates in support
of his third solo release, Welcome to the Big World. Two years later, he continues the balancing act
with his newest album, Somewhere in Between. A showcase for both his frontman abilities and songwriting chops, Somewhere in Between also shines a light on Hood’s strength as a live act. He recorded most of the album live at Nashville’s Sound Emporium Studios over two quick days. Teaming up with producer Oran Thornton (Angaleena
Presley’s Wrangled, Miranda Lambert’s Revolution) along the way, their goal was to create
something that reflected the raw, real sound of his concerts, where overdubs and unlimited takes are
never an option. Also joining Hood in the studio were bassist Lex Price, guitarist and co-writing
partner Pat McLaughlin, and drummer Jerry Roe, all of whom captured their parts in a handful of
live performances. Hood tracked his vocals at the same time. Stripped free of studio trickery and
lushly layered arrangements, Somewhere in Between is an honest, story-driven record — the sort of
album that relies on craft, not gloss, to pack its punch. It’s also an album that finds Hood telling his own story. A dedicated family man, he wrote “Locomotive” after watching his young daughter develop her motor skills while playing with a set of
blocks. A road warrior, he penned songs like “Downturn” about a life filled with wanderlust and long
drives from gig to gig. A native Alabaman who still lives in the Yellowhammer State, he celebrates
America’s rural pockets with “Keeping Me Here” and “Real Small Town,” two songs that fill their
verses with images of main streets, open landscapes, hard times, and good people.
Somewhere in Between may be autobiographical but there’s a universal appeal to this music. A true
blue-collar songwriter, Hood shines a light on the everyday experiences — from family to friends to
the thrill of Friday nights — that we all appreciate. It’s extraordinary music about ordinary lives,
performed with conviction by a man who continues to balance a critically acclaimed solo career with
his commercial successes as a songwriter. “It’s southern music,” he says, grouping Somewhere in Between’s wide range of music under an appropriate banner. “That’s what it represents: the soulful side of southern music, the country side of
southern music, the genuineness of southern culture, and the way I grew up. One of the t-shirts I sell
at every show simply says ‘Southern songs’ and that’s a good summary of what I do. It’s what I’ve
always done.”

$20