Music
Beach Tested, Crowd Approved: Wheeland Brothers Ride Into Tortuga
The sand, the sound, and the timing all line up as Wheeland Brothers step into Tortuga ready to connect.
March 31st, 2026
There are bands you listen to, and then there are bands that quietly shift your mood without making a big deal about it. Wheeland Brothers fall into that second category. Their music drifts in like a coastal breeze, loosens everything up, and before long, you’re mentally somewhere between a beach chair and a wave set. At one point, their sound was described as something that might make you “surf horny,” which is both hilarious and strangely on point.
That energy comes from a pretty simple place. Brothers Nate Wheeland and Travis Wheeland aren’t chasing trends or trying to land in a specific lane. They’re writing what they feel in real time. “We write the songs that we’re craving,” they said, treating each track like a reminder to get off the couch and go do something worth remembering.
A lot of those ideas start in the ocean. Waiting for waves gives them space to think, and that’s usually when melodies and lyrics start forming. The only problem is there’s no easy way to record anything out there, so it turns into a mental loop, repeating lines over and over until they can get back to shore and grab an instrument. It’s a chaotic way to write songs, but it fits the way their music feels.
Before the beach became the foundation, their early influence leaned more toward the unpredictable energy of the Red Hot Chili Peppers. That translated into thrift store outfits, off-the-wall performances, and just enough weirdness to make people stop and stare. It wasn’t polished, but it built a mindset that still shows up in their music today.
Trying to label their sound doesn’t really land. Their catalog feels more like a playlist than a straight-line album. One song leans reggae, another pulls in something more mellow, then there’s a shift into a different rhythm or mood. It all connects through a shared feel tied to beach life, travel, and a general restlessness to get out and experience something. They don’t map it out ahead of time. The connection shows up after the songs exist.
That same approach carries over into how long ideas stick around. Some songs take years to come together. Nothing is rushed out just to fill space. Ideas can sit for a long time, then come back into focus and turn into something stronger. “A song is information,” they said, explaining why nothing ever really feels finished or off limits.

There’s also a sharper edge that slips into the writing at times. Their recent release “Sidelines” takes aim at how much technology pulls at attention and how hard it’s become to unplug. The comparison stuck. Social media being the cigarettes of this era feels a little too accurate. That thought lands even as the music itself stays relaxed and easy to listen to.
Before anything makes it out into the world, it has to pass what they call the “hideaway test.” If a song doesn’t feel right at their beach hut, it doesn’t move forward. It’s a simple filter, but it keeps everything aligned with who they are and how they live.
That mindset lines up perfectly with their upcoming appearance at the Tortuga Music Festival. Playing on the sand in South Florida fits their music in a way that most venues can’t. Every set they build already revolves around that beach setting, so bringing it directly to one of the biggest beachfront festivals in the country feels natural.
Festival sets come with less time, which changes the pacing, but not much else. Expect a tight mix of songs, a few newer tracks, and some unreleased material mixed in. They’ve hinted at a song that pulls from a familiar melody, something that might catch listeners off guard for a second before it clicks.
Watching a crowd figure them out is part of the experience. It usually starts with people trying to place the sound, then shifts into smiles, head nods, and eventually full buy-in. That moment tends to happen quickly, especially when they’re playing in front of new audiences, like on tour with Niko Moon. By the end of the set, people who had no idea who they were are already locked in.
That’s where the music lands best. Not overexplained, not overthought, just experienced. It makes you want to move, get outside, and maybe take a break from everything pulling for your attention. At a place like Tortuga, with the ocean right there and the energy already high, that connection tends to hit a little quicker.
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