Experience Steve Louw and Big Sky Live in Stellenbosch on 21 February 2025
Steve Louw and Big Sky perform live at Daisy Jones, Stellenbosch, on February 21, 2025. Tickets from R160, table bookings essential.
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The blood of our fathers lights the road we’re on
Moving out of the darkness to a place in the sun
These are the words that usher in the conclusion of “I’m Coming Home,” the last song on Thunder and Rain, the new album by veteran South African rocker Steve Louw. The dawning of hope in the lyric—a sentiment that’s matched by the stirring music—acts as a rebuke to the impending doom etched out by the album’s opening title track, a song where it’s possible to hear and feel bad weather creep in over the horizon.
Waiting for light to emerge after darkness is a thematic undercurrent on Thunder and Rain, a record where Louw balances these opposite impulses with strength and compassion. He may open the record with a sense of foreboding—a feeling that resonates strongly in 2022, as the world picks up the pieces left after a global pandemic—yet he doesn’t dwell in the darkness. Louw celebrates the restorative, nourishing love on “Mother, Don’t Go,” an insightful, insistent tune graced by guitar wizard Joe Bonamassa, who brings out the song’s incandescent spirit as he intertwines his playing with that of Doug Lancio, a guitarist who has just entered Louw’s orbit. The album winds its way through “The Road Fades from Sight,” a ballad built upon the soul-sustaining power of longtime love, then reaches the finish line with “I’m Coming Home,” an invigorating conclusion that leaves no doubt there’s room for optimism in these troubled times. By finding space for this full range of emotion, Thunder and Rain operates on a refreshingly human scale, emphasizing deep emotions and interpersonal interactions—it’s music that’s meant to be felt as much as heard.
Thunder and Rain follows hot on the heels of Headlight Dreams, the 2021 album that found Steve Louw returning to active duty after a thirteen-year absence. After this prolonged period away from the spotlight, Louw discovered an audience who was eager to hear new music from the singer/songwriter: Headlight Dreams received strong reviews and earned a nomination for Best Rock Album from the South African Music Awards in 2022.
Revitalized by his comeback, Louw was soon back in the studio recording a new collection of songs with the team responsible for Headlight Dreams. Returning to the fold are Grammy-nominated keyboardist Kevin McKendree, guitarist Rob McNelley, bassist Alison Prestwood and drummer Greg Morrow, with Doug Lancio serving as a versatile multi-instrumentalist. With producer Kevin Shirley—a longtime friend and colleague of Louw’s who has also worked with Joe Bonamassa, John Hiatt, Robert Cray Band, the Black Crowes—behind the boards, Thunder and Rain shares some sonic similarities to its acclaimed predecessor, yet it has its own distinctive character. Where Headlight Dreams crackled with the pent-up energy of an artist eager to unburden his feelings in the wake of a long hiatus, Thunder and Rain unfurls at a relaxed pace. Some of this shift in tone can be credited to the addition of Lancio, who adds considerable color and texture to the music, whether he’s playing mandolin on “I’ll Be Back” or slide guitar on “I’m Coming Home.” This casual warmth is a welcome tonic in a time of global unrest: Louw’s small-scale vignettes resonate because of their intimacy.
Thunder and Rain teems with stories of unrest: the songs are rife with images of stony beds, burning skies and abandonment. Despite all this bad weather, Louw ultimately finds glimmers of optimism and reconciliation, an optimistic conclusion he conveys with warm, intimate performances. The interplay on Thunder and Rain is often subtle yet it’s undeniably soulful, the songs benefiting from the easy turns of phrases and chord changes.
Even the gloomier tunes on the album benefit from this seasoned execution. “Thunder and Rain” is a perfect example: it unfolds slowly, deliberately, the sound of weather creeping across the horizon. Louw captures a sense of unease with oblique references to the “pain in our town” but he counters this sense of dread by relying on community and the promise of love, elements that take root on Thunder and Rain. Sometimes he conveys these emotions through strength, as he does on “I’ll Be Back,” a song where acoustic guitars give the track a steady, windblown propulsion, one that muscles through on the chorus–he’s a man on a mission, one dedicated to the task at hand.
This sense of purpose flows throughout Louw’s career. It was there on the two records he made with his first band All Night Radio, including 1986’s The Killing Floor, the album where he first collaborated with Kevin Shirley. Louw came to stardom as the leader of Big Sky, a group who put out their first album, Waiting for the Dawn, in 1990. Big Sky’s arrival coincided with South Africa’s journey away from apartheid rule and the group’s music provided a joyous soundtrack for positive revolution over the next fifteen years. During their time together, Big Sky released five albums, a discography highlighted by 1995’s acclaimed Horizon, creating a catalog of South African radio perennials in the process. The band earned accolades from the industry, including winning the FNB Music Award for Best SA Rock Act in 1996. At the end of their run as a band, Big Sky was the opening act for Rodriguez on his valedictory tour of South Africa, a journey captured in the 2012 Oscar-winning documentary Searching for Sugar Man. The film raised Louw’s international profile, leading to his collaboration with Queen‘s Brian May and Eurythmics‘ Dave Stewart on “Amandla,” a song on 2003’s Nelson Mandela-inspired AIDS awareness project 46664.
Following the release of Trancas Canyon in 2008, Louw retreated from the spotlight. He broke his silence with Headlight Dreams, a rousing comeback delivered in 2021. Thunder and Rain capitalizes on the revitalized spirit while also being a testament to the enduring strength of his partnership with Kevin Shirley. Once again, the producer assembled a group of sympathetic pros to bring depth and dimension to Louw’s handsomely constructed songs, cutting the basic tracks at Ocean Way Studios in Nashville, Tennessee. It’s the same approach Louw and Shirley employed for Headlight Dreams but the difference on Thunder and Rain is palpable: this is music that feels comfortable and experienced, music that suggests a rich interior life in its blend of searching soul, muscular folk and insistent rock. It’s a blend that Louw has refined throughout his career, so no wonder it feels so rich and natural on Thunder and Rain: it is, quite literally, the music of his life.
Read the 12-part series The Cold Facts…. A Journey On The Road Ahead written by Steve Louw in 2021.
See Steve Louw’s Musical Family Tree at The South African Rock Encyclopedia.





















Steve Louw and Big Sky perform live at Daisy Jones, Stellenbosch, on February 21, 2025. Tickets from R160, table bookings essential.
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Steve Louw (born 16 September 1955) is a South African musician and singer-songwriter who specialises in album rock, blues rock, country rock and Americana music. He was born in The Hague and has been active as a musician since 1981. He was inducted in the South African Rock Hall of Fame in 2003.
Louw, who was born Stephen Geoffrey Louw, learnt to play the guitar after being inspired by the music of Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones, and Neil Young, and formed his first band, Atlantic Rose, while in high school in Cape Town in the late 1960s. While a student at Stellenbosch University in the 1970s he became involved in the local music scene, playing his own songs in various line-ups.
His career as a professional musician began in the early 1980s when he formed the band All Night Radio with fellow former Stellenbosch University students Nico Burger (guitar) and Rob Nagel (bass). The group recorded two albums – The Heart’s the Best Part (1984) with US producer John Rollo, and The Killing Floor (1986), on which Louw began a partnership with producer Kevin Shirley that continues to this day.
Louw then formed the band Big Sky and in 1990 released their debut album, Waiting for the Dawn, again produced by Shirley. The album arrived just as South Africa began moving away from apartheid rule and the group’s music helped soundtrack a decade of positive revolution. The title track is today considered a South African rock classic. Big Sky released another five albums over the next 15 years: Horizon (1995), Going Down with Mr Green (1997), Best of the Decade (1999), Beyond the Blue (2002) and Trancas Canyon (2008); as well as the concert DVD Heart and Soul, filmed at Cape Town’s Little Theatre in 2008.
Louw and Big Sky achieved considerable success in South Africa with sell-out tours and several major radio hits including “Kathleen”, “Mr Green”, “One Cut With A Knife”, “Strange Room” and “Diamonds and Dirt”. In 1996 the band won the FNB South African Music Award for “Best Pop Music Performance” and “Best Rock Album” for the album Horizon.
In 1998 Big Sky opened for US singer-songwriter Rodriguez on his triumphant debut tour of South Africa, with the musicians in the band also backing the US artist. The tour is chronicled in the 2012 Oscar-winning documentary Searching for Sugar Man.
Louw gained an international profile after he collaborated with Brian May (Queen) and Dave Stewart (the Eurythmics) on the track “Amandla”, recorded for the 46664 Aids awareness project inspired by the work of Nelson Mandela.
In 2021 Louw returned with the album Headlight Dreams, produced by Shirley, and recorded in Nashville with crack studio musicians and featuring a guest appearance by US guitar legend Joe Bonamassa. The album received critical acclaim and the first single, “Wind in Your Hair”, has become a popular Spotify hit.
Louw released his sophomore solo release Thunder and Rain on November 11, 2022, through BFD. The album was produced by Kevin Shirley and features Joe Bonamassa and Doug Lancio.
On 6 September 2024, Louw released his third solo album Between Time, produced by Kevin Shirley.
On 15 May 2026, Louw released his fourth solo album Traces Of The Flood, produced by Kevin Shirley.