



We’re a nonprofit collaboration built by energy professionals who believe the industry is strongest when it shows up together. Through battle of the bands style events and concerts, we bring energy to the stage to channel industry passion into collective action.
We’re a nonprofit collaboration built by energy professionals who believe the industry is strongest when it shows up together. Through battle of the bands style events and concerts, we bring energy to the stage to channel industry passion into collective action.
All proceeds from the event will go to well deserving charities in the Houston area. Just another way the energy industry gives back to the communities where we live.
All proceeds from the event will go to well deserving charities in the Houston area. Just another way the energy industry gives back to the communities where we live.
“Energy Rocks started as a simple idea: bring the industry together and make it fun. Music breaks down barriers, competition brings people in, and when this industry unites, it can create real impact.” - Co-Founder, Ian Davis
“Energy Rocks started as a simple idea: bring the industry together and make it fun. Music breaks down barriers, competition brings people in, and when this industry unites, it can create real impact.” - Co-Founder, Ian Davis


Our 2026 Event Sponsor
Our 2026 Event Sponsor
Our 2026 Event Sponsor




Planning for the next event is underway, stay tuned!
Planning for the next event is underway, stay tuned!


ABOUT THE BAND
Sound Policy was forged in the dimly lit backrooms of Washington, DC’s rarely documented, faintly bipartisan, and questionably legal energy-policy rock underground — a scene so obscure even the lobbyists deny it exists. Bassist Erik Anderson and drummer Bob McNally, veterans of several bands that were either ahead of their time or deeply misunderstood by it, crossed paths with guitarist Ian Davis, another road-scarred rocker with suspiciously strong opinions about amplifiers and geopolitics. Thus, the original power trio detonated into existence,
The plot thickened when they encountered the preternaturally gifted vocalist Miriam D’Onofrio, whose arrival expanded the band’s sonic jurisdiction from Led Zeppelin thunder to Cranberries shimmer, often within the same song and occasionally the same verse. More recently, Jeff Orenstein and David Woest joined the enterprise on keyboards and guitar, respectively, completing a lineup now widely rumored to be audible from several congressional districts away.


Sound Policy was forged in the dimly lit backrooms of Washington, DC’s rarely documented, faintly bipartisan, and questionably legal energy-policy rock underground — a scene so obscure even the lobbyists deny it exists. Bassist Erik Anderson and drummer Bob McNally, veterans of several bands that were either ahead of their time or deeply misunderstood by it, crossed paths with guitarist Ian Davis, another road-scarred rocker with suspiciously strong opinions about amplifiers and geopolitics. Thus, the original power trio detonated into existence,
The plot thickened when they encountered the preternaturally gifted vocalist Miriam D’Onofrio, whose arrival expanded the band’s sonic jurisdiction from Led Zeppelin thunder to Cranberries shimmer, often within the same song and occasionally the same verse. More recently, Jeff Orenstein and David Woest joined the enterprise on keyboards and guitar, respectively, completing a lineup now widely rumored to be audible from several congressional districts away.


Sound Policy was forged in the dimly lit backrooms of Washington, DC’s rarely documented, faintly bipartisan, and questionably legal energy-policy rock underground — a scene so obscure even the lobbyists deny it exists. Bassist Erik Anderson and drummer Bob McNally, veterans of several bands that were either ahead of their time or deeply misunderstood by it, crossed paths with guitarist Ian Davis, another road-scarred rocker with suspiciously strong opinions about amplifiers and geopolitics. Thus, the original power trio detonated into existence,
The plot thickened when they encountered the preternaturally gifted vocalist Miriam D’Onofrio, whose arrival expanded the band’s sonic jurisdiction from Led Zeppelin thunder to Cranberries shimmer, often within the same song and occasionally the same verse. More recently, Jeff Orenstein and David Woest joined the enterprise on keyboards and guitar, respectively, completing a lineup now widely rumored to be audible from several congressional districts away.


ABOUT THE BAND
Sound Policy was forged in the dimly lit backrooms of Washington, DC’s rarely documented, faintly bipartisan, and questionably legal energy-policy rock underground — a scene so obscure even the lobbyists deny it exists. Bassist Erik Anderson and drummer Bob McNally, veterans of several bands that were either ahead of their time or deeply misunderstood by it, crossed paths with guitarist Ian Davis, another road-scarred rocker with suspiciously strong opinions about amplifiers and geopolitics. Thus, the original power trio detonated into existence,
The plot thickened when they encountered the preternaturally gifted vocalist Miriam D’Onofrio, whose arrival expanded the band’s sonic jurisdiction from Led Zeppelin thunder to Cranberries shimmer, often within the same song and occasionally the same verse. More recently, Jeff Orenstein and David Woest joined the enterprise on keyboards and guitar, respectively, completing a lineup now widely rumored to be audible from several congressional districts away.


ABOUT THE BAND
Sound Policy was forged in the dimly lit backrooms of Washington, DC’s rarely documented, faintly bipartisan, and questionably legal energy-policy rock underground — a scene so obscure even the lobbyists deny it exists. Bassist Erik Anderson and drummer Bob McNally, veterans of several bands that were either ahead of their time or deeply misunderstood by it, crossed paths with guitarist Ian Davis, another road-scarred rocker with suspiciously strong opinions about amplifiers and geopolitics. Thus, the original power trio detonated into existence,
The plot thickened when they encountered the preternaturally gifted vocalist Miriam D’Onofrio, whose arrival expanded the band’s sonic jurisdiction from Led Zeppelin thunder to Cranberries shimmer, often within the same song and occasionally the same verse. More recently, Jeff Orenstein and David Woest joined the enterprise on keyboards and guitar, respectively, completing a lineup now widely rumored to be audible from several congressional districts away.

© 2026 Energy Rocks
© 2026 Energy Rocks