Sunday, March 27, 2011
Vetiver w/ Sara Lee Guthrie and Johnny Irion 3/26/11 The Space
Made the last few tunes of Sara and Johnny. Daughter of Arlo, this pair had good stage chemistry. Able to rock the folk tunes with the help of some Vetiver musicians. Andy Cabic and Vetiver have been to the area several times in recent years and I was glad to have caught them at the low-jey Space. Have been listening to their 2008 release Tight Knit from which some tunes came. Things of the Past album was an exercise in covering little known tunes from the 70s and 80s. Cabic says new record to come out in June.
Keller Williams 3/24/11 Toad's Place
Standard Keller show: Shakedown Street, Runnin on Fumes, Blazeabago> Dear John> Blazeabago, Tell Me Somethin' Good (by Rufus W/ Chaka Khan), Glory and Consequence (by Ben Harper. Good crowd for a Thursday. While groovin to a Keller concert staple, David Bowie's Golden Years, I mentioned to a nearby Freeker that I had seen Bowie and Tin Machine on that very stage. " You saw Keller with Tin Machine?" No dude, just another fragmented pass-it-down in Keller-land
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Family Band w/ Lys Guillorn 2/16/11 Bar
Woozy local Guillorn played singer-songwriter material as an opener to this show. I'm unnerved when the artist looks at the soundman and says " do I have time for five more?" Guillorn's smart lyrics were lost in her muddy delivery. Brooklyn hipsters the Family Band played fuzzy reverb drenched rock. I liked the female singer, but the set offered no memorable tunes or performance.
Saturday, February 12, 2011
The Piano Lesson 2/9/11 Yale Repertory Theater
August Wilson's "The Piano Lesson" was expertly performed at the Yale Rep. Wilson's plays offer insight into the African-american experience of the early 1900s. The story has a brother and sister arguing over the fate of the family piano. Boy Willie wants to sell and move on, while Berniece wants to preserve the memories associated with the piano. The lessons are many and the acting was stellar. Musical notes took form as worksongs, railroad songs, and tales of Parchman Farm. Live theater really is a treat.
Monday, January 31, 2011
Iron and Wine w/ Edie Brickell 1/29/11 Radio City NY
Exciting trip to the big apple had the whole family at this show. We arrived part way through Edie's set. Pop girl Brickell penned the 1988 smash What I Am, married Paul Simon then started a family. She offered a sleepy set with Charlie Sexton on guitar. Headliner I/W is the brainchild of bearded bard Sam Beam. Started out with Beam on acoustic, banjo, and two female backup singers. Playing songs off the new release, and some older tunes, Beam was beaming at the chance to play this hallowed venue. Halfway through he brought out horns, percussion, and electronics which added an awesome twist on some I/W favorites. Songs differed dylanesquely to the point that one audience member yelled "Judas!" Beam responded to the crowd that "Judas was Jesus' favorite" Boy with a Coin, House By the Sea, Lazarus were all stellar. Closed with a a discoey Cinder and Smoke. Thanks to Moe and Rachel for a great concert experience, remember, You Can Do It!
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Charles Lloyd's New Quartet 1/28/11 Crowell Hall Wesleyan
Veteran sax man Lloyd with Jason Moran (piano), Eric Harland (drums), and Reuben Rogers (bass) played to a full house at Crowell. Sold out when I arrived, I was lucky to get the first no show (row D center!). Lloyd's music has a spiritual quality and was the perfect antidote for three feet of snow. His warm tone and effortless fills are exotic and familiar at the same time. Moran's wife (opera singer) offered great renditions of "Go Down Moses" and "Lift Every Voice and Sing". Lloyd also played flute for one tune. To close the show. Lloyd recited a beautiful poem with Moran backing. Lloyd's California late sixties residency had his group at the junction of jazz and rock and can be heard on recordings by the Doors and Canned Heat. His group was the first jazz act to play at the Fillmore. Years later at Wesleyan, in his signature hat and dark glasses, Lloyd and company kicked it. He looked in cognito, disguised as himself.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Sharon Van Etten w/ Plume Giant 1/19/11 Bar
Return of the free shows at Bar on Wednesdays not Sundays. Excellent opener Plume Giant sported his and her violinists with acoustic guitar. Close vocal harmonies and imaginative songwriting make me a fan of Plume Giant. Covered a Strokes and Otis Redding song.
Headliner Van Etten is a Brooklyn folkie who had echoes of Beth Orton. Many songs were sombre and had a sameness to them. Group consisted of SVE guitar/vocals, bass, and drums. Odd looking squeezebox-keyboard was not played while I was in attendance.
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