Bartender and podcast host Rory Dowd hosts Sunday Services at Headquarters.
Bartender and podcast host Rory Dowd hosts Sunday Services at Headquarters.

Rory Dowd is the โ€œman about townโ€ sort, known around Reno as a longtime bartender and co-host of the music-centric Worst Little Podcast. These days, heโ€™s behind the bar at Headquartersโ€”known as โ€œHQโ€ at 219 W. Second St.โ€”and bringing in local musicians for a new, weekly live show.

Dowd calls the event โ€œSunday Services,โ€ and himself โ€œReverend Rory Dowd.โ€ Itโ€™s a shtick, he said, that โ€œjust kind of offered itself up.โ€

โ€œI was K-12 Catholic in the โ€™70s and the โ€™80s,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd I did want to go to seminaryโ€”so the Reverend Rory shtick really grew out of that. โ€ฆ Itโ€™s Sunday. Itโ€™s Sunday Services. It is also my service industry night. I do the specials all day. Itโ€™s not a night special.โ€

And Sunday Services music is not a nighttime event. Shows start each week by 7 p.m.โ€”a pragmatic decision on Dowdโ€™s part, meant to give folks a chance to catch new acts and familiar ones that normally play other local venues at later hours.

โ€œItโ€™s Sunday, early enough in the day to catch the day drinkers who might still be rolling around โ€ฆ and also early enough for anyone whoโ€™s got to work on Monday morning,โ€ Dowd said. โ€œA lot of people still do church and then a late afternoon, early evening dinner out on Sundays. This show, I thought, would be a nice, little dovetail after it.โ€

Dowd launched a similar event at St. James Infirmary while bartending there. This new iteration of Sunday Services has only been going for a few weeks now.

โ€œItโ€™s a different bar, and they are such different bars,โ€ Dowd said. โ€œInfirmary is definitely that kind of dark, close, cozy feeling. Hereโ€™s, itโ€™s much more of a party place. Itโ€™s the Headquarters, with the bar crawls and the late-night EDM thing.โ€

HQ owners Ed and Heidi Adkins brought Dowd on board to bolster business during earlier hours and on slower days. He also does the barโ€™s booking for other nightsโ€”so Sunday Services, he said, can serve as an opportunity for him to preview new acts.

โ€œIt is definitely kind of a try-out night, auditions for later on down the lineโ€”you know, shows on a Thursday, when I can actually pay them,โ€ Dowd said. โ€œThis is a donation show. Itโ€™s on the kindness of the audience.โ€

The shows arenโ€™t just a booking opportunity for new acts, though. Itโ€™s also a chance for established musicians to play new music.

โ€œLike I did with the early years of my podcast, Iโ€™m tapping friends of mine,โ€ Dowd said. โ€œThey may be lead singers or guitar players in bands, who I know do solo songs, covers, their own songs they donโ€™t do in the band. You kind of get this HQ unplugged, alternate version of some of their songs.โ€

On Oct. 28, the show featured Myke Readโ€”guitarist for the local punk rock outfit Infecto Skeletons. He came that night to perform โ€œtear-in-your-beer country songs and Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson.โ€

Dowd said his Sunday Services event is still in its nascence at HQ, but he has high hopes to attract a larger congregation of music lovers.

โ€œAs a child, I went to church every Sunday, and there was the guy up on the stage with the book talking to everybody,โ€ he said. โ€œNow, here I am with my own stage and my own books and my own words to save everybody. And I like to think theyโ€™re words of encouragement and love, too.โ€

Mostly, he encourages those showing up to Sunday Services to bring $5 for the donation plate.

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