70s Cover Band in Tybee Island, GA – July 16, 2026

Summer on Tybee Island has a way of pulling people toward the water, the warmth, and the kind of music that makes you move without thinking about it. On Thursday, July 16th, the Tybee Post Theater is hosting 70s Kids, a six-piece band that has built a following by bringing the sounds of one of pop music’s most colorful decades back to life on stage.

This is the kind of show that works just as well if you were there the first time around as it does if you discovered the era through a playlist. The Tybee Post Theater’s intimate setting and historic bones make it a natural home for a night like this. Tickets are available now at ci.ovationtix.com/36415/production/1266462.

Show Details

70s Kids perform at the Tybee Post Theater on Thursday, July 16th, 2026. The venue is located at 10 Van Horne Ave, Tybee Island, GA 31328. Tickets can be purchased in advance at ci.ovationtix.com/36415/production/1266462.

About 70s Kids

70s Kids is a six-piece dance band dedicated to the music of the 1970s, and they bring serious energy to every performance. Costumes, props, and thoughtful visual staging give the show a full-production feel that goes well beyond a standard cover set.

Their set draws from the decade’s richest corners, touching on disco, pop, rock, and yacht rock, with songs rooted in the catalogs of artists like Hall & Oates, Donna Summer, The Bee Gees, the Commodores, Captain & Tennille, Fleetwood Mac, and Kool & The Gang.

The six people making it happen are Shannon Remley on lead vocals and dance, GK VIA on lead guitar, Ray Hartsfield on lead vocals and guitar, Rob Bowser on synths and keyboards, Doug Grabowski on bass guitar, and Mike Graci on drums and electronic sounds.

Crowd participation is part of the experience, and the band actively welcomes it. 70s Kids performs nationwide at festivals, private events, and public venues of all sizes.

What You Will Hear

Expect the kind of night where you might hear “Stayin’ Alive” by the Bee Gees rolling into the relentless groove of “Brick House” by the Commodores, or the disco stomp of “Disco Inferno” giving way to the cool strut of “Car Wash.” The band pulls from the full breadth of the decade, so a funky run through “Get Down on It” by Kool & The Gang or “Play That Funky Music” could land right alongside softer moments like “Dreams” by Fleetwood Mac. Songs like “I Will Survive,” “Hot Stuff,” and “Le Freak” represent the disco and dance side, while “Good Times” and “Dancing Queen” round out a set rooted in the sounds that defined the decade across soul, funk, pop, and rock.

About the Venue

The Tybee Post Theater has been part of Tybee Island since 1930, when it was built as a movie house for Army personnel stationed at Fort Screven. Today it functions as a community arts center and performing arts space, hosting everything from live music and comedy to film screenings and stage productions. The theater is small enough that there really is no bad seat, and the historic character of the building adds something to a night out that newer venues simply cannot replicate.

Plan Your Night

Tybee Island sees significant visitor traffic in the summer months, so arriving early is a smart move. Parking near the venue can be limited, and street or public lots in the area fill up quickly during peak season. For the most current information on timing and any additional logistics, check the official event listing at ci.ovationtix.com/36415/production/1266462 before heading out.

Tickets are on sale now. Head to ci.ovationtix.com/36415/production/1266462 to grab yours before the show sells out. July on Tybee Island does not stay quiet for long, and neither does this band.

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