I thought I was ready for a big concert. I hadnt been to anything on a grand scale since Gasparilla Music Festival in March 2020. Turns out everyone at Chris Stapletons Tampa show was ready. Everyone but me.
Starting off the MidFlorida Credit Amphitheater show was country rocker Kendell Marvel. There were some people enjoying the Southern Illinois singer-songwriter, backed by a full, high-energy band, but his set mainly served as a backdrop to people finding their seats or waiting in the not-so-bad beer lines. (I chose to wait for a Questlove Impossible Cheesesteaka veg version of the Philly classicwhich was really freaking good.)
Next up was pop-rock singer Sheryl Crow who started to fill in seats. I thought I didn't know a lot of her songs but then I knew all of the words to every song she played except the new one. It was an hour-long best of set from all stages of her career which included the 28-year-old single Leaving Las Vegas.
During My Favorite Mistake, a Vintage Vibe-style keyboard she was playing malfunctioned and she had to play from the back of the stagewithout a beat lost.
Crow appeased the crowd and leaned into her country side, jumping from guitar to harmonica, wearing fringed pants, a leather vest and really over-playing the lyrics in the anthem Real Gone from the Cars soundtrack. I was born in the south, sometimes I have a big mouth, the Missouri-born Grammy-winner sang to the cheering crowd.
It was a fun singalong but there was something muffled about the soundit seemed distorted and too loud, at least from where I was sitting. A friend sitting in the lawn section thought she sounded amazing.
Either way, Crows All I Wanna Do is Have Some Fun vibe encapsulated what the packed crowd was there for. People were dancing, drinking and singing without a care, and hardly a mask, in the world. I, however, had a hard time getting out of my were still in the middle of a pandemic head.
When we first got to our seats we had some breathing room. But closer to Chris Stapletons set, maskless people surrounded and invaded my safe zone. Besides the employees of MidFlorida, I counted seven people with masks onseven in a crowd of a packed venue that holds 20,000.
I tried to keep an open mind and hoped most people were vaccinated and were just now letting loose after being safe for a long time. I felt out of place masked up the entire time and the woman wearing a shirt that said The next wave of covid is Communism didnt help my paranoid insecurity. (Still trying to wrap my head around that one.)
Stapletons emotional start got me out of my head. His voice, presence, and guitar were the only things needed to fill the large stage during the opener Whiskey and You.
The whole band came out for Nobody to Blame including his songwriting and back-up singing wife, Morgane Stapleton. Love oozed from the couple, whove been married since 2007 and have five children. They gazed into each others eyes on stage while singing, and coyly smiled in between breaths. Ill have what theyre having.
The stage was beautiful, looking like The Polices Zenyatta Mondatta album cover, lit magically with a giant triangle in the middle. Lights moved from reds to blues to greensit was an epic sight.
Though I felt out of place in the crowd, I felt a connection with Stapleton. He grew up in Kentucky, within a family of coal miners. Im from southern Ohio, a family of steel workers. Many of my regrets in life were also whiskey basedthough I have long given up the booze.
The fifth song, Starting Over, is my favorite, off the 2020 album of the same name. Its a song for moving forward during hard times but hearing the hopeful lyrics This might not be an easy time. There's rivers to cross and hills to climb felt lost to me in a crowd that seemed to have forgotten we really arent very safe at this moment.
The night was filled with heavy rock tunes (Devil Always Made Me Think Twice), country jams (Broken Halos) and always-emotional and goose-bump inducing songs like Fire Away and Cold. He even got into a little Free Bird, but just the tip, before going into The Devil Named Music.
When performing, Stapleton doesnt move around a lot. His body is an anchor to transcendent Southern soul vocalsif he doesnt stay grounded he might just fly away.
Stapleton was first a songwriter, writing hits for Kenny Chesney and Joss Stone, among many, so its ironic that the song that made him big was David Allan Coes Tennessee Whiskey. Lets just agree to give the song over to Stapleton because is anyone should be canceled over his racist past, it should be Coe. The hit was the last one Stapleton played before the encore, which I did not stay for.
You get lost in Stapletons music and especially his voice. You drink whiskey and think about love and life and forget about your problems. Everyone at the show was able to do it, and though Stapleton had me there for a bit, because damn hes just so good, Im just not quite that ready yet.Stephanie Powers