Winter Music ∙ March 7, 2026 ∙ 8:00pm
Gene Casey and the Loan Sharks
They've played every roadhouse, bar, and honky tonk from Manhattan to Montauk

Winter Music ∙ March 7—March 7, 2026
Gene Casey and the Loan Sharks
They've played every roadhouse, bar, and honky tonk from Manhattan to Montauk
In the latter part of the last century, Gene Casey departed New York City and its Punk rock/New wave scene for Long Island’s East End. There, he formed the Lone Sharks, “the house band of the Hamptons,” where bars were plentiful and audiences – both the local and the celebrated – were robust and loyal. Over the course of the next few decades Gene and the evolving line-up of Sharks “played – and tore up – every roadhouse, bar, and honky tonk from Manhattan to Montauk” (Bop Magazine), sharing the bill and backing legendary roots rock & roll acts as Wanda Jackson, the Band, Bo Diddley, Sleepy LaBeef, NRBQ, and the Ventures.
Gene’s original music met with great acclaim with local and international indie radio play. Several of his roots-drenched songs have been used in “A Prairie Home Companion” and on the soundtracks to television and feature films, including “Justified” and “Sons of Anarchy” ; the 2012 thriller “The Tall Man” starring Jessica Biel, the 2013 release “The Killing Season” starring Robert DeNiro, and Rob Reiner’s “Being Charlie.”
In 2014 Gene and the Lone Sharks were inducted into the Dan’s Papers “Best of the Best” Hall of Fame, having been honored over 20 times. A year later Gene, “the premier barroom troubadour of Eastern Long Island” (author Josh Alan Friedman) received the Long Island Sound Award by the L.I. Music Hall of Fame, “for contributions to the Island’s musical landscape.”
Band Members
Critics Reviews
“[Gene Casey’s music is] a rockabilly classic. Clear and true, and has the feel of those great AM analog hits that I used to turn up loud when I was crusin’ in my ’66 Fairlane.”
“He’s definitely one of those bands that’s created the musical fabric of Long Island”
“[Gene Casey and the Lone Sharks] are like the East End’s Johnny Cash.”





