The Pink Floyd Project’s relationship with Colony Woodstock has produced enough sold-out Saturday nights at this point that calling it a return engagement is something of an understatement. This is not a tribute act parachuting into a new room — it is, by now, a recurring event with a committed audience in a town that carries more rock mythology per square foot than almost anywhere in the Hudson Valley. The nine-piece New York City ensemble comes back to Colony on Saturday, August 22, for three hours of material drawn from the full arc of Pink Floyd’s imperial catalog: The Dark Side of the Moon, Wish You Were Here, Animals, The Wall.
About The Pink Floyd Project
What separates the Pink Floyd Project from the crowded field of Floyd tributes — and in 2026, the field is genuinely crowded — is the production scale they manage to deploy inside a 150-person room. The band is nine musicians. They bring immersive sound design and a full light show. Their tagline, “In The Flesh,” is drawn directly from the Floyd catalog, which signals something about how they approach the material: this is not a bar band running through familiar chord changes, but an ensemble treating the catalog as a total production challenge worth meeting. The band bills itself as New York’s premier Pink Floyd tribute, and their Colony track record—sold-out shows in January, June, and October 2025, and again in March and May 2026—does nothing to undermine that claim in this market.
Last October, the band played Colony specifically for the 50th anniversary of Wish You Were Here, performing the album in full alongside material from across Floyd’s run. That anniversary context is behind them now. The August 22 show is simply the Pink Floyd Project doing what they do, which has proven, repeatedly, to be sufficient reason to sell this room out.
About Colony Woodstock
Colony Woodstock, at 22 Rock City Road, occupies a building that dates to 1929 — originally a hotel, described in its own institutional history as the tallest structure in town, a place where guests once came to dine and hear big bands in what is now the ballroom. The current owners have held the space since 2014, and under General Manager Michael Hurwitz, who joined the venue in 2017, Colony has invested seriously in its production infrastructure: a professional sound system, a rebuilt stage, and professional lighting. For a band whose show depends on immersive sound and a working light rig, those renovations are not incidental—they are part of why the Pink Floyd Project keeps returning to a 150-person room when other rooms are presumably available to them.
Tickets & Pricing
Tickets are $23–$29, available via Eventbrite. The show is all ages; anyone under 18 must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. No refunds. Doors open at 6 PM; the performance runs 7–10 PM, Saturday, August 22, at Colony Woodstock, 22 Rock City Road, Woodstock, NY.