
Dave Matthews’ rare Montana return sparks solo magic, and a collaborative finale electrifies Wildlands Music Festival in the shadow of Lone Peak Mountain.
Under the towering presence of Lone Mountain, the summer nights of the Wildlands Music Festival on August 1 and 2, 2025, delivered a rare and intimate musical experience with Dave Matthews at the helm – marking his first public show in Montana in over 30 years.
Friday evening opened with Molly Tuttle and her touring band, who set the tone with crisp Americana and roots-rock melodies. Tuttle, the exceptionally gifted guitarist and Grammy-winning flat-picker, known for her dexterity and warm vocal timbre, opened Friday’s concert with a set that immediately fused technical bluegrass brilliance with rock-inflected storytelling. “Crooked Tree” and “El Dorado” highlighted her uncanny ability to marry progressive string work with accessible, emotionally resonant melodies. Her scorching rendition of Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit” earned one of the evening’s first full-arena standing ovations. Her 45-minute set never lost momentum, even as she transitioned into more introspective material like “San Joaquin” and “Where Did All the Wild Things Go?” – songs that echoed the festival’s overarching theme of environmental reverence.
By the time Saturday rolled around, word had spread about the power of her Friday performance, and anticipation for her second set was palpable. Tuttle more than delivered. Backed by her two accomplished bandmates, guitarist/mandolinist Mary Meyer and bassist Vanessa McGowan, the acoustic trio ignited the early evening with a chemistry and command that felt both intimate and expansive. Their set became the spark that lit what would become a roaring musical fire in the mountains.
Lukas Nelson & The Shadow Band followed, their soulful performance stoking the fire Molly Tuttle had started and warming the Big Sky Events Arena with ease and conviction. Nelson’s set felt both wide open and deeply personal – anchored in heartland storytelling and elevated by raw, unfiltered musicianship. Backed by his newly-named Shadow Band, he blended cowboy poetry with soul-baring ballads and freewheeling guitar jams that nodded to his father’s legacy without leaning on it. “Forget About Georgia” carried a cinematic ache, while “Find Yourself” unfolded into a rousing, full-throated singalong that swept through the crowd.
A returning presence each year at Wildlands and a devoted Montana lover, Nelson also debuted “Montana,” a track from his upcoming album American Romance. Written in Big Sky at a friend’s home, the song landed perfectly with the sold-out audience – its lyrical warmth and lived-in authenticity striking a chord that felt as rooted as the pines behind the stage.
The Shadow Band played with that rare mix of tight precision and instinctive looseness that only years on the road can deliver – each player bringing warmth, grit, and emotional punch. By the end of both their Friday and Saturday sets, the slow burn they’d tended had erupted into a full-on barn burner, leaving the mountain air buzzing long after the final notes faded.
Beginning around 9 PM, Dave Matthews delivered a stripped-down solo set built around “Bartender,” “Stay or Leave,” and “Walk Around the Moon.” Molly Tuttle made a surprise arrival as she joined Matthews on stage for some heartfelt covers: Dylan’s “Oh, Sister” and her own “Yosemite,” the latter featuring Mary Meyer and Vanessa McGowen. The evening crescendoed with a collaborative cascade of “Just Breathe,” “Save Me,” and the climactic “Ants Marching,” which united Matthews, Nelson, Tuttle, and their bands. The encore, solo “Gravedigger,” left the crowd in awed silence.
Saturday brought heightened camaraderie and a brief confrontation. Matthews paused mid-“Pig” after spotting a fight, halting the performance until the disruption was cleared. Once control was restored, the mood shifted back to unity and spirit.
The second night’s setlist broadened in scope: Matthews solo on “Singing From the Windows” and “Crash Into Me,” then inviting Molly Tuttle and Lukas Nelson’s ensemble for a set propelled by Prine’s “Speed of the Sound of Loneliness,” “Angel From Montgomery,” “Spoon,” and Lanois’ “The Maker.” A burning rendition of Neil Young’s “Cortez the Killer” featured Nelson and Tuttle in perfect synergy. The night closed on Matthews’ solo encore of “Some Devil” – the emotional capstone to a weekend steeped in musical communion.
Friday and Saturday’s performances served as a powerful reminder of Dave Matthews’ songwriting depth, magnetic stage presence, and enduring vocal command. Performing for over two hours each night, Matthews held court with effortless charisma, telling stories and joking, captivating a crowd that had traveled from across the country, many of them longtime fans with hundreds of shows under their belts. The audience remained rapt throughout, responding to every quiet moment and explosive crescendo with reverent energy.
In keeping with Wildlands’ mission, the festival combined artistry with activism. This year’s event raised approximately $1.3 million to benefit American Rivers and the Center for Large Landscape Conservation – a striking leap from all the money raised in previous years. Contributions included matching generosity from Matthews’ Bama Works Foundation.
These two nights in Big Sky weren’t just concerts, they were understated masterpieces of collaboration, conservation, and the sheer wonder of seeing Matthews rediscover Montana at last.
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