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"When we started this we said we wanted to be one of those bands that played for a long time," Rucker said. "And it's amazing 25 years after asking Dean to play with us, we're still looking for a bass player and we're still in a band. That's pretty awesome." Friends will celebrate Hootie & The Blowfish's 25th anniversary with a concert and art installation unveiling in Columbia on Oct. 21. Bryan
-- now a solo artist, producer and music industry instructor at the College of Charleston
-- says "a light roasting" is expected. "So it will be like a tribute, which makes me feel like I'm 80," he said. It will be a cherished memory for Rucker, who admits many of his memories from the Hootie years are a "blur." "We had just taken college and extended it a few years," he said. "Our tour was a traveling party every day. Every day, all day. I look back and I laugh, people will ask me things and they'll say things, and I'll say,
'I don't remember that.'" He knows, for instance, that he spent time on stage with Michael Jackson. He knows the story and there's video to prove it. But one of the highlights of his career just isn't in his memory. He plans to remember the next batch of Hootie milestones, though. "I don't get drunk any more," he said. "I made a conscience promise to myself to look around, to talk to people. At the Grand Ole Opry I want to make it a point to go up and talk to Little Jimmy. When I say,
'Thank you, guys, for this ride, I'm going to spend some time with my kids,' I want to make sure I have memories." ___ Online:
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