Local band ready for rodeo concert

Local band ready for rodeo concert
From left: Andy Bale, Dave Mucci, Jordan Stoner, John Salvati and Brian Stoner, also known as the Crash Test Silverados, will serve as the opening band for Walker Hayes at the Hudson Valley Rodeo in Amenia on Saturday, Sept. 16 Photo submitted

STANFORDVILLE —  For Jordan Stoner, country music has been a lifelong journey.

“Most people love music; I’m obsessed with it,” said Jordan Stoner. “Music is the one thing that has always made me happy. I didn’t know this, but my dad used to sing ‘I Won’t Need You Anymore’ by Randy Travis every night when I was a baby. One day I told my father that I wanted to add that song to our set list. Turns out it was the song that put me to sleep for years.”

These days Stoner is busier than ever with his band the Crash Test Silverados, who will be the opening act for national country artist Walker Hayes at the Hudson Valley Rodeo in Amenia on Saturday, Sept. 16.

Now 32 and a resident of Highland, Stoner was born in Stanfordville and attended schools in Pine Plains before moving to nearby Ancram at the age of 26.

Stoner plays acoustic guitar, which allows him to concentrate on rhythm and lead vocals, and is supported by his father, Brian Stoner, and John Salvati on electric guitars, Andy Bale on bass, and Tim Vandeburg on drums. The band has shared the stage with Rodney Atkins and Aaron Tippin.

As a youngster, Stoner spent most of his time in the basement of his parents’ house singing along to country songs. He took vocal lessons and remembers his parents singing together.

“Those two making people happy just by singing was the most amazing thing I’d ever seen. I knew that’s all I ever wanted to do. I sing to make everyone else feel something. If the crowd doesn’t feel anything, what’s the point?”

His father, who performed as a duo with wife Wendy in the ‘90s, described Stoner’s early attraction to music: “When he was around 12, he came home from school and told us a friend had a drum set for sale and he wanted to buy it with money he had saved. So he did and started practicing. In the meantime, his younger brother, Brandon, started playing my bass guitar and teaching himself. Fast forward a couple years and the kids, my wife and I started performing locally as the Stoners. We did that for the next 12 years. During that time, Jordan started singing from behind the drums and now, here we are. It’s funny he used to play in my band and now I play in his.”

Stoner describes his sound as “a touch of rock and roll mixed with traditional country sounds” and is inspired by George Jones, Dwight Yoakam, Buck Owens, Randy Travis and Garth Brooks as well as more modern artists such as Randy Houser and Jason Aldean, but still cites his father as his biggest influence.

Mid-August had Stoner playing festivals all over New England and New York state, often driving five hours between gigs and performing for hours at a time. He has recorded in Nashville, Tennessee, and at Clubhouse Studio in Rhinebeck, recently putting the finishing touches on his soon-to-be-released fourth single, “Downpour.”

“His style is interesting and heartfelt, inspired by life in upstate New York,” Brian Stoner said.

“My father is the first and most important reason for me falling in love with music,” said Stoner. “I’ve never seen anything in this world that he loved more, besides my mother and his kids. For years he played every single show with me and would still be up at 3 or 4 a.m. for work the next morning. Some years we played over 300 gigs.

Brian Stoner shares his son’s sentiments and explained that it’s a family affair: “We get along very well. I handle a lot of the behind-the-scenes business stuff so that he can concentrate more on the music. Our family is pretty tightknit, and my wife makes sure everyone stays that way.”

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