It's all happening! Kate Hudson wants to reunite with her Almost Famous costar Billy Crudup and perform

Is it too early to put in a request for "Fever Dog"?

More than 20 years ago, Kate Hudson played a character who followed the fictional rock band Stillwater across the United States in the film Almost Famous. Now, she’s ready to flip the script and bring one of the group’s members to one of her concerts. 

The singer and actress, whose debut album, Glorious, dropped on Friday, told PEOPLE that she’s keen to reunite with her costar Billy Crudup for an upcoming performance. And, honestly, we can only hope that "Fever Dog" or "Love Thing" makes the set list.

“I was just thinking, 'Billy still plays guitar.' I was like, ‘I'm going to get him on stage. I'm going to make him do this,’” Hudson said. “ I was thinking, 'Wouldn't that be so fun for Billy to actually play guitar?' I feel like an audience would love, would freak out.”

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Almost Famous Billy Crudup and Kate Hudson
Kate Hudson and Billy Crudup in 'Almost Famous'. Neal Preston/Paramount

Hudson was nominated for a Best Actress Oscar for her performance in the 2000 film as the legendary Penny Lane, a self-described “Band-Aid” who has a complicated romantic relationship with Stillwater’s married guitarist Russell Hammond (Crudup). Along the way, the pair also serve as lifelines for 15-year-old journalist William Miller (Patrick Fugit) as he tries to survive on the road and complete the band’s dramatic Rolling Stone cover story. 

Crudup learned guitar for Almost Famous and famously underwent a Rock School program with his costar Jason Lee, who played Stillwater lead singer Jeff Bebe, that was led by Peter Frampton and Heart’s Nancy Wilson. They performed several of Stillwater’s songs in the movie alongside actual musicians John Fedevich and Mark Kozelek, who starred as drummer "Silent" Ed Vallencourt and bassist Larry Fellows, respectively.

Hudson described the Cameron Crowe–directed film, which is loosely based off his own personal experience as a young rock journalist, as “one of the great music movies of all time,” adding that “everybody in that film loved music.”

She also said Crowe "really blew the lid open for so much music" for her during shooting. The film's soundtrack includes hits from Joni Mitchell, the Who, Cat Stevens, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and Elton John, among others.

"I was 19, and he just filled me with all this great music that I’d never heard,” Hudson recalled. “That was the beginning of everything for me.”