Music
Fantasies of Rock & Roll Become Reality
30 Years Plugged In With No Signs of Slowing, Rock Camp Still Shreds Limits and Rewrites Lives.
From Joe Perry, Roger Daltry, Alice Cooper, the legends keep showing up and so do the breakthroughs.
April 6th, 2026
There’s something about walking into a room with your musical heroes that feels larger than life. For some, it borders on intimidating. For others, it’s the spark they didn’t realize they needed. For David Fishof, it’s been the heartbeat of Rock & Roll Fantasy Camp for three decades and counting.
And somehow, after 30 years, the excitement hasn’t faded.

“Roger Daltrey, first of all,” Fishof says with a laugh, pointing to his longtime friend and recurring camp headliner. He isn’t just a name on a poster. He’s part of the reason Fishof still feels energized heading into each new session. “He loves it because it reminds him what it was like when he first started.”
That sense of going back to the beginning runs through everything the camp does.
Campers arrive prepared, often practicing songs ahead of time, only to find themselves face to face with the very artists who shaped those tracks. At first, it can feel overwhelming. Then something shifts.
“They come as one person, and they leave as someone else,” Fishof says.
That transformation is the real product here, not just the music.
Over the years, Fishof has watched that shift happen again and again. Some campers return year after year, already knowing what to expect. Others walk in unsure and walk out with something entirely new. Confidence. Direction. Sometimes even a second act.
There are stories that blur the line between coincidence and something bigger.
At a songwriting camp with Linda Perry, one camper caught her attention. Weeks later, that same camper was performing alongside her on Jimmy Kimmel Live. Another participant found her way into a touring band. It’s not something Fishof markets or promises, but it happens often enough to raise eyebrows.
“I never advertise that you’re going to get discovered,” he says. “But I’ve seen it so many times.”
Still, the stories that stick with him aren’t about fame.
They’re about change.

One of the most powerful moments came from a woman invited through a cancer foundation. She arrived as a lawyer. She left with a different outlook entirely.
“She said, ‘I found my happiness at Rock and Roll Fantasy Camp,’” Fishof recalls.
That experience pushed her to leave her career behind, pursue writing, and eventually publish multiple bestselling books under the name Lauren Rowe. It wasn’t about becoming a rock star. It was about becoming herself.
That theme keeps surfacing.
A Wall Street professional quits to enroll in a drumming school. A lifelong hobbyist finally forms a band. A weekend guitarist realizes he’s been labeling himself wrong all along.
“You’re a guitarist first,” Fishof remembers Joe Perry telling one camper. “You do that legal stuff to pay for your guitars.”
It’s blunt. It’s funny. It also lands.
Because for a few days, the usual labels don’t matter.
There’s no competition. No judgment. Just a room full of people chasing something they’ve probably put off for years.
That environment doesn’t just impact the campers. It pulls the artists in too.
Veteran musicians who are used to high-pressure tours and studio sessions often find themselves sticking around longer than expected. Leland Sklar once stayed all four days of camp, drawn in by something simple.
“The smiles on these people’s faces,” Fishof says.
No complaints. No egos. Just pure excitement.
Others have echoed the same sentiment. Alice Cooper, Rob Halford, even Nick Mason have embraced the energy, stepping out of their usual roles and into something more collaborative.

It’s not about being the icon in the room. It’s about being part of it.
That dynamic has evolved over time. Early camps relied on in-person auditions, with musicians essentially drafting their bands on the spot. These days, preparation starts earlier, thanks to virtual sessions and a more curated approach.
“It’s like matchmaking now,” Fishof explains, crediting musical director Britt Lightning for organizing campers in advance.
By the time participants arrive, they’ve already connected, chosen songs, and built a foundation. The nerves are still there, but they’re mixed with something else.
Readiness.
The camp has also seen a noticeable shift in who’s showing up.
“The biggest growth has been women,” Fishof says, pointing to a surge in female musicians stepping into roles as guitarists and drummers.
It’s not just a trend. It’s a change in who feels invited into the space.
And then there are moments that extend beyond music entirely.
After the October 7 attacks, Fishof brought a group of Israeli musicians, including a drummer he encountered at a funeral, to Los Angeles for a camp session. What followed became something bigger than a program.
“It became a love affair for four days,” he says.
That experience is now being turned into a documentary titled The Bridge, produced by Kevin Bright, known for his work on Friends. The film captures how music can connect, heal, and bring people together in ways that words alone can’t.
Which, in many ways, circles back to the core idea.
Music doesn’t just entertain. It reminds people of who they are. Sometimes, it helps them become who they’ve been avoiding.
“How many times do you put on a song and it takes you back?” Fishof says.
That’s the hook. Always has been.
And even after 30 years, it’s still working.
With names like Roger Daltrey continuing to return and new campers stepping in with fresh energy, Rock & Roll Fantasy Camp doesn’t feel like it’s slowing down. If anything, it’s finding new ways to resonate.
Because at its core, it’s never really been about standing on stage next to a legend.
It’s about what happens after you walk off it.
ROCK CAMP the Movie is now FREE on Amazon Prime. Click HERE to watch.
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