The Stone Pony on Earth closed for good in 1998. Or so they say.
Technically, it reopened here — in orbit — a hundred and twenty years later, because humanity can’t let go of its favorite myths. Some venture capital type decided to recreate every “legendary” Earth venue in a ring-shaped station orbiting Mars: CBGB, Whiskey a Go-Go, the Fillmore (with a barrel of real apples). But the Pony? That one’s the crown jewel: gravity set to a perfect 0.98g so you still feel your boots stick to the floor, and the bar smells faintly of beer, salt, and disinfectant — nostalgia with a citrus finish.
They kept the name, too: Stone Pony II. The font’s the same, neon tubes flickering by design, even though nothing on the station actually flickers anymore. And if you look out the portholes behind the stage, you can see the curve of Earth glowing like an amp light left on after load-out.
The tour buses may be interstellar shuttles now, and the roadies wear magnetic boots, but the bones of being in a band haven’t changed. It’s still equal parts exhaustion, duct tape, and ego management.
And I’ve still got fifteen minutes till showtime.
15 Minutes
Greenrooms haven’t evolved either. This one’s the same as every other: peeling posters, half-dead couch, snacks that expired before the moon was colonized. Someone left a case of synth-beer labeled “Pony Pilsner” — probably brewed in the same tank as the coolant.
The sound tech pokes his head in to say, “Ten till line check,” which in musician time means “eventually.”
There’s an old photo of Springsteen on the wall — original Earth-era — smiling like the world hadn’t gotten loud yet. I tap the frame for luck.
Outside the airlock, I can hear the low hum of the crowd. It’s not real air I’m breathing — just filtered atmosphere — but it’s heavy with anticipation anyway. Maybe that’s what rock and roll is now: recycled oxygen, still managing to catch fire.
10 Minutes
My bandmates are arguing about set order. The drummer wants to open with something fast. The bassist insists we save that one for last because it’s “the only one people remember.” The singer, who’s twenty-three and has never lived on Earth, suggests we cut both because “slow songs are more emotional in partial gravity.”
I don’t bother voting. I’m busy restringing my guitar. Even up here, the laws of physics still hate E-strings.
The tuner glows green and I grin. Old habits. I still use a manual pedal — analog tech, no AI assist. The kids call it “vintage.” I call it trustworthy.
A notification pings on my wristband: “SET TIME CONFIRMED — STONE PONY II MAIN STAGE — 2100 HOURS.”
My pulse answers, just slightly off-tempo.
5 Minutes
There’s a superstition we carry from planet to planet: never say it’s going to be a good show. That’s a jinx. You can say loud, tight, on time (rarely true), but never good.
I check my gear one last time. Amp hums steady. Pedals lit. Picks magnetized so they won’t drift if someone kills the gravity mid-song — a lesson learned the hard way during a festival gig on Titan.
The monitor tech floats by the door, grinning. “Crowd’s hyped,” he says. “They say someone from Springsteen’s great-great-grand-family’s out there.”
“Terrific,” I say. “Maybe they’ll write us off on their taxes.” He laughs and disappears down the hall.
The room goes quiet. That’s when it hits me — the same flutter it’s always been, no matter the planet or century. The kind that makes you check your strings again even though you just did.
The kind that means you still care.
2 Minutes
The guitarist from the opening act stops by to wish us luck. Kid can’t be more than nineteen, hair the color of ambition, holding a borrowed Strat with duct tape across the pickguard.
“Man,” he says, “you guys are legends.” I smile. “In certain zip codes, sure.”
He stammers, “No, really — my dad used to play your first record. Said it sounded like the future.”
“That’s ironic,” I tell him. “The future sounds like us covering the past.” He laughs politely, not sure if it’s a joke. Maybe it isn’t.
He floats back down the hall and I catch myself muttering, “Don’t buy the cheap strings.” Some advice transcends gravity.
Showtime
The hallway to the stage is narrow and lined with holo-posters that shimmer when you pass: CBGB at its peak, the Fillmore in color, the original Pony before the tides took Asbury Park. The air tastes faintly of metal and memory.
The crowd noise rises — not a roar exactly, more like a heartbeat. The house lights dim, the stage lights ignite in blue-white arcs.
My boots clack against the floor as I step out into the glow. The artificial gravity hums underfoot. The room tilts — not physically, just that rush of recognition: we’re on again.
The singer counts us in. The drummer misses the downbeat by a microsecond, which means everything’s perfect.
The first chord hits — loud, imperfect, human. It echoes through the hull, bouncing off the aluminum ribs of the station, traveling farther than sound was ever meant to.
For a second, I can see Earth through the portholes — that thin blue curve, distant and soft. Down there, the original Pony’s long gone, sand reclaimed by the sea. Up here, the noise keeps going, amplified by nostalgia and vacuum.
I glance at my bandmates: old friends, new recruits, a rotating cast of dreamers with calloused fingers. They’re grinning like kids at their first gig.
And I think: some things really don’t change. The gear, the gravity, the crowd — all just variables. The constant is the noise we make and the way it feels when someone out there sings along.
The lights flare, the monitors hum, the room vibrates. I catch my reflection in the glossy curve of my guitar — tired eyes, dumb smile.
Someone in the front row yells a request for a song we haven’t played in twenty years. I laugh into the mic. “You got it, pal. Let’s see if we remember the bridge.”
We don’t. Nobody cares.
Because for the next hour, the universe contracts to the size of a stage, the crowd moves like a single heartbeat, and every old song sounds brand new again.
And when it’s done — when the feedback fades and the applause feels like gravity pulling me back — I grin and think,
The lights came up, the crowd cheered like it mattered. And for the next hour, it did.
That’s enough.
This story first appeared on my substack. If you want to see my work before it comes here, please consider subscribing as a paid or free member. New stories drop there on Wednesdays, and here, sometime later.









