FROM THE PRINT ISSUE: A Conversation with George Fetner By Kevin Oliver

photo by Perry McLeod

In local clubs and at festivals like St Patrick’s Day and Mardi Gras, George Fetner is well known for his funky party band George Fetner and the Strays, or the improvisational rock ensemble TenMileRide. His background, and his day job, is a bit more serious, however. Fetner holds a Bachelor’s and Master’s in Music Composition from the University of South Carolina, as well as a Master of Science in Data and Communication. He’s currently working as the school’s director of Donor Experience, but he’s never stopped creating music. Summer of 2025 saw the release of EPOCH, an instrumental soundscape of tones and textures that couldn’t be more different from his rock band, but it does connect elsewhere in his artistic endeavors. Fetner recently fielded questions from Jasper about all of his various musical personas.

 

JASPER: You've now been playing with George Fetner and the Strays (GFATS) for almost a decade, how has that changed for you over the years--has it accomplished what you first envisioned musically? 

GEORGE FETNER: It's always changing! Initially I wanted a two-guitar rock band with my friends. Then we added percussion, then horns, then keyboards, then did more vocal harmonizing, and more shows out of town. The influences and strengths of the band started guiding our live shows more and more, with the goal of having fun remaining a priority. Musically the band has blossomed. We're all much more confident in what GFATS is, in what works and what doesn't. I'm ok with doors that didn't open because others did that I wasn't expecting. When I look out from the stage, I see people who want us to deliver, and I take that responsibility seriously. Now, I'm almost 40, which is close to the median age of the band members. We all enjoy GFATS while also playing music outside of the band, and I'm thinking more about how to continue recording and performing graciously as we age. 

 

J: You've added TenMileRide, a looser, smaller ensemble with a different sound--what does that group do for you that your other outlets may not? 

GF: Have you ever seen the videos of skydivers joining hands and forming a circle while they're in the air? That's how playing in TenMileRide feels. I'm used to being a band leader in GFATS, but I don't do that much in TenMileRide. And every time we try to make a plan or follow a map, we lose the whole essence of in-the-moment playing. We've been trying it out in front of Grateful Dead fans and jam band fans but have picked up a lot of passionate fans who don't like the dead or the jam band sound. So, that's kind of a lesson in seeing where this ride takes us, too. I think people are deeply in need of real, shared experiences right now.  

 

J: Epoch, your latest project, is very different; explain how that one came about and how it fits in the George Fetner musical universe? 

GF: I wrote the piece as a sound installation in 2011, where people would wander into a room and be able to sit for a minute and experience it. But it didn't feel meaningful outside of that setting, so I put it away. I revived it last year to accompany a screening of silent home movies. It gave me an opportunity to experience it with fresh ears, a seasoned perspective, and the ability to fully support what it's trying to say. A big influence of mine, Pat Metheny, has a wide musical output in terms of style and ensemble. I've heard him talk about his career as "one long tune". I like that sentiment. What I release really is part of one larger statement. It's easier to see that after a few different albums, and very easy to see when I look back on all the music I've written. Epoch certainly fits into my electronic solar system with “Beneath the Ice” and other electronic media pieces I've written.

 

J: Your extensive compositional work has covered a lot of ground itself; and you graduated from the USC School of Music. How has that foundation helped you develop musically--the connections you have there? 

GF: It's hard to answer this question without going on tangents of gratitude, because I owe my musical and professional development to many, many people at the School of Music. But these people are inspiring. To be around people you admire musically, intellectually, and professionally is rare. These people also taught me to remain curious, to push myself creatively, and to be efficient with my creative time. I'm a natural daydreamer, so that last one has been particularly helpful as I've gotten older. 

 

J: What makes a good classical or instrumental composition, versus what makes a good rock song? Or are there crossover points that you've discovered after doing both?  

GF: If the songwriter or composer's intent is clear through the work itself, it's as close to "good" as you're going to get. You should concern yourself with making your intent clear using all the musical tools you have. Then challenge yourself by listening to what the piece is trying to say or do and support that. At a certain point you realize you're a translator of sorts: it's your job to translate what already exists in the music of the spheres and deliver it to your friends. I think that goes with any creative work. It's real. 

And if you're a participant, can you recognize a "good" work that you don't like? That doesn't move you? That's "taste" and it is constructed by every part of your history with music. If music moves you, what's the purpose of concerning yourself with what's "good"? It doesn't really matter. Music is language. Sometimes the message is simple and sometimes it's complex. There's nothing more important than the meaning you get from it, except of course sharing it. 

 The above article appeared in the fall 2025 print issue of Jasper Magazine.

THE BEAT: Local Music at St. Pat's in 5 Points by Kevin Oliver

Sure, the hype for the return of the annual St. Pat’s in Five Points festival is focused on the headliners Blues Traveler and national acts such as Surfaces, Laney Wilson, and Big Something, but what often gets lost in the coverage is that St. Pat’s is also one of the biggest local music festival opportunities of the year. Columbia bands are well represented on the main stages in 2022, and every year there are additional acts playing at unofficial side stages, local bars, and restaurants in the area, and more. To help you plan a locals-focused day at the festival, here’s a rundown of area artists and when to find them on what stage:

Villanova 

2:40 pm, Greene and Harden St. Stage 

Possibly the most popular local act to play St. Pat’s multiple times, Villa*Nova brings the noise every year. The current lineup includes founding members Bobby Dredd and DJ Able One alongside singer and guitarist Brian Conner. The band released their first new music since 2015 last year, the single “Vipers,” which revealed a commitment to a heavier sound within their melodic funk roots. There’s still plenty of the funk/rock/hip-hop hybrid left in the band’s back catalog to please their longtime fans, however.

George Fetner and the Strays

1:10 - 2:10 p.m., Greene and Harden St Stage 

George Fetner has corralled his band of musical misfits into a herd of magnanimous proportions that turns any stage into a groove-laden party. Despite the near double-digit number of band members on stage, tight arrangements make the proceedings chug along purposefully. If you’re into bands such as Lake Street Dive, or the classic jams of WAR, there’s plenty to love in the joy-filled, tuneful workouts that Fetner and the Strays produce. 

Stranger Company

12:00-12:50 Harden and Blossom St Stage

A newer presence locally, this young quartet has tapped into a jam band style of rock, blues, and jazz that hearkens back to the 70’s classic rock of acts such as Wet Willie, Santana, and Sea Level, where the grooves and the guitar licks were what mattered. 

Ashley Wright and the Vance Gap Ramblers

12:00-12:50  Saluda and Devine St Stage 

Ashley Wright and her band have managed to create twang-friendly tunes that transcend stereotypes and cut close to the emotional bone. The band’s delicate arrangements juxtaposed with Ashley Wright’s full-throated alto voice bring to mind Gillian Welch and Watchhouse. 

 

Sourwood Honey Tribute Band

7:00-8:30, Home Team BBQ Stage 

The beloved Sourwood Honey was a bar-packing mainstay of the regional club circuit in the 1990s, with the dual front of Ryan Goforth and Chris Conner and ace guitarist Herbie Jeffcoat taking on the wingman position. Their brand of jam-friendly southern country rock was always a cut above the rest due largely to Conner’s songwriting skills, showcased on the pair of full-length albums the band issued in their prime. 

Conner passed from cancer back in 2007 but a few years back most of the remaining band members reconvened around Chris’ younger brother Brian Conner (of Villa*Nova), and called it a “tribute,” with Brian taking over his late brother’s parts; the goal is to keep the memory of Chris alive and reintroduce the band’s classic songs to audiences old and new. 

 

The Ramblers

4:10-5:10, Home Team BBQ Stage 

Taylor Nicholson logged plenty of miles as the lead singer for the popular regional rock act Atlas Road Crew; this outfit aims to provide plenty of classic rock and blues vibes on familiar material.

Danielle Howle & the Tantrums

2:40-3:40, Home Team BBQ Stage

 The nostalgic aspect of this year’s St. Pat’s Festival is encapsulated in the fact that Howle, a former Columbia resident and musician who now calls the Charleston area home, was playing the festival as early as the 1990s with her band Lay Quiet Awhile. The Tantrums was her next full rock band, featuring members from another late great local act, Blightobody, and the group recorded several albums for Daemon Records in the late 1990s, gaining airplay locally and regionally with songs such as “She Has A Past.” 

 

Soul Mites

1:10-2:10, Home Team BBQ Stage

The perennial party band for many Columbia natives, The Soul Mites only come out and play any more on special occasions like this.. The gruff, insistent voice of Tim Davis may be the focal point, but his supporting cast gives him a funky soul drenched rock ‘n’ roll machine to carry his crooning to another level.