
The Tybee Post Theater has hosted film premieres, local theater, and touring comedy since its 2015 reopening, but July 17th brings something different: a full night of 90s hits performed live by a band that treats the decade like the deep catalog it deserves. If you grew up taping songs off the radio or waiting for MTV countdowns, this is the kind of show where the setlist does the heavy lifting and the crowd does the rest.
90s Kids Superfly Tribute takes the stage with a set that moves between alt rock, pop, hip hop, and R&B without making it feel like a costume party. The focus stays on the songs people actually played, not just the ones that ended up on greatest-hits compilations.




Show Details
90s Kids Superfly Tribe performs Friday, July 17th, 2026, at Tybee Post Theater, located at 10 Van Horne Ave in Tybee Island, GA. The venue’s historic 1930 layout keeps the performance close and the sound tight, so expect a listening-room feel rather than a sprawling floor plan. For current ticket availability, doors time, and age policy, check the venue’s official event listing.
About 90s Kids Superfly Tribute
90s Kids Superfly Tribute are a six-piece crew designed to make the entire 90s catalog feel alive, stitching together pop hits, dance grooves, grunge attitude, and hip hop swagger with a stage presentation that brings the era back in full color. Shannon Remley leads the vocals, while Ray Hartsfield handles lead vocals and guitar, giving the front line extra movement and muscle. Roey Haviv plays bass guitar and bass synth, keeping the rhythm glued together and the harmonies bold. G K delivers lead guitar and vocals, balancing raw edge with melodic punch. Rob Bowser runs keyboards and crazy synths, recreating the unmistakable sound design of the decade. Mike Graci drives drums and percussion, making sure the energy stays high and the transitions stay sharp. With costumes, props, and a crowd-first approach, they do more than play songs—they stage a 90s experience.
What You Will Hear
Expect the kind of night where you might hear “Basket Case,” “All the Small Things,” “Wonderwall,” “Santeria,” “No Scrubs,” “Gangsta’s Paradise,” “Wannabe,” “MMMBop,” and “You Oughta Know.” The setlist moves between guitar-driven tracks and chart-topping pop without forcing a narrative, so the energy shifts naturally from sing-along choruses to quieter grooves and back again. The band knows how to pace a room, and the song selection reflects what people actually want to hear when they think about the 90s.
About the Venue
Tybee Post Theater was built in 1930 as a movie house for Fort Screven, sat dark for decades, then reopened in 2015 as a space for live music, comedy, and films. The restored interior keeps the old-school vibe intact, with a stage-and-seating layout that puts performers within arm’s reach of the audience. The venue books a rotating mix of entertainment, so the calendar stays eclectic and the programming feels rooted in the island’s community rather than a standard touring circuit. The intimacy works in favor of a cover band—this is a room where you hear every lyric clearly and feel the bass in your chest.






Plan Your Night
Parking on the north end of Tybee Island can fill up quickly, especially on summer weekends, so the venue suggests arriving early and keeping overflow options like the Lighthouse parking lot and North Beach parking lot in mind. If you’re planning dinner or drinks before the show, factor in a little extra time for island traffic during busy periods. Tickets are available now, and the venue’s official event page will have the most current details on doors, pricing, and any last-minute updates. This is the kind of show that rewards showing up on time and staying through the whole set.