At the edge of Hill Country near Boerne, Texas, Cave Without a Name hosts an annual Summer Solstice concert — Summer Solstice • Rudi & the Rudiments — a 90-minute subterranean performance that converts the Queen’s Throne Room into one of the most singular music venues in the Southwest. Set roughly 80 feet below the surface and reached by 126 steps, the cave’s limestone formations and vaulted chambers shape sound the way a concert hall shapes light: every note blooms and lingers. Rudi Harst and The Rudiments blend acoustic guitar, Native American flute, dulcimer, harmonica and Tibetan bowls into an eclectic program that moves between ancient-sounding modal pieces and contemporary world-beat arrangements. Part of the show is performed in total darkness, leaving the audience to experience rhythm and timbre without visual cues — an uncommon sensory reset that deepens the connection between listener, performer and place. Practical details matter here. The concert lasts about 90 minutes; plan to arrive 30 minutes early to check in at the gift shop and descend to the Queen’s Throne Room. The cave maintains a steady 66 degrees Fahrenheit with near-100% humidity (it feels closer to 70–75 degrees), so light layers are fine but shoes with good traction are essential; high heels are discouraged. Only bottled water is permitted inside to protect formations, and restrooms remain on the surface. There is no wheelchair access. Beyond the music, the setting is the star. The chamber’s flowstone, stalactites and crystalline drapery are exposed close to audience sightlines; these calcite features formed over millennia and give the room its signature timbre. On arrival, pause in the gift shop to pick up a water bottle or schedule other visits—overnight tent camping and RV hookups are offered nearby; call (830) 537-4212 for details. Why book this when visiting Boerne? It’s rare to combine live performance with an intimate encounter of subterranean geology and ecology: you’ll hear instruments against limestone, not speakers against drywall. The total-darkness segments are more than a novelty — they reset hearing, amplifying tiny acoustic details and making familiar songs feel newly strange and immediate. For music lovers, geology nerds and curious travelers, the concert is a compact, memorable way to experience Hill Country underground without technical caving skills. If you go, arrive early to explore the surface trails and picnic areas, respect the cave’s fragile formations by following all rules, and be prepared for a humid, cool, acoustically generous night that leaves most concert halls feeling conspicuously ordinary. Bring a small flashlight for the walk to and from the parking area, and consider combining the concert with other Boerne attractions such as local wineries, surface trails, or the historic downtown for a full, rewardingly tactile day.