From the dry dusty honky tonks of Bakersfield to the bayou in the swamps, along the rivers of the south and deep in the heart of fans of the Allmans and Skynyrd, is born the music Of Stacie Collins. This is Southern Rock like few bands have done since the hey day of the genre..
Musicians know how hard it is to come up with a great song and then be able to transform into an anthem is talent indeed. Little Sister is the rebirth of the king into the body of the queen, for Stacie Collins raises the bar high, high, high for any band that claims to play rock and roll. With her wailing harmonica style and gut bucket vocals she leaves other artist in the dust by her sheer power of performance. Of course any great singer requires a great band and that is just what she has. She has hooked up with Dan Baird from one of the few excellent Southern Rock bands to emerge in the 80’s, the Georgia Satellites for her production needs and she has assembled a rockin’ band that plays high energy rock and roll which compliments Stacie’s who appears to have as much energy as Janis Joplin and tears the joint up.
From her country honky tonk roots of Bakersfield, the home of Buck Owens and the Buckaroos, Stacie has molded herself into a southern rocker honky tonk queen. If you listen to American radio you will never hear the roots of American music, turn off the radio and listen to the sounds of America that is never played on the radio.
Stacie Collins (harp & vocals, Dan Baird ( electric-acoustic & bass guitars),
Ken McMahan (electric & slide guitars, tic-tac bass)
Paul Griffith (drums & percussion), Allen Collins (bass & acoustic guitars),
Eric “EBO” Borash (lap steele & electric guitar), Jack Irwin (piano & organ)
Britt Savage (harmony vocals).