It
was one of the strangest triple bills I've ever encountered -- country
traditionalist Justin Townes Earle, indie-folk stalwarts Gretel, and
hip-hop/roots artist Will Gray. Imagine Hank Williams hanging out with
Leslie Feist hanging out with ?uestlove and The Roots and you're in the
ballpark. Or, in this case, the bar; specifically, Cafe Rumba in the
north campus neighborhood. Nashville, Boston, and L.A. came to
Columbus. It was an unprecedented geographic and stylistic mashup, and
it was was an astonishingly redemptive, soulful batch of fun.
Justin
Townes Earle, as he took some pains to point out, is not only Steve
Earle's son, but his mother Carol's son (wife number 3 of 8, for those
keeping score at home). To say that there are a few unresolved,
simmering father/son issues might be a major understatement. I saw
Justin last spring at an outdoor festival. He was uneasy in front of a
large crowd, I was 500 feet from the stage, and the resulting set left
me underwhelmed. There were no such problems last night. Playing in
front of a hundred people tightly packed into a dive bar, Justin and
musical cohort Cory Younts absolutely ripped it up, playing a two-hour
set that featured most of the songs from Justin's two albums The Good Life and Midnight at the Movies,
and wide-reaching covers from The Replacements, Randy Newman, Townes
Van Zant, and Buck Owens. This was the real truckstop jukebox
shitkickin' deal, and watching Earle on stage, and listening to that
impossibly raw, keening voice, it was impossible not to imagine oneself
transported back to Montgomery, Alabama in the late '40s, as Hank
Williams was rocketing off on an all-too-short but brilliant career.
Look at that photo. I suspect Justin might be aware of those
comparisons, too. But look, they're deserved. The guy absolutely
channels Hank, and he writes some tunes that can hold their own with
the master. He's also a very fine picker, an aspect that isn't
highlighted enough on his albums, and with Younts on banjo, mandolin,
harmonica, and harmony vocals, they roared through a honky-tonk set
that was pure magic, and that left me grinning from ear to ear.
Gretel,
these three attractive Bostonians to the left, play raw, uncompromising
folk music that belies their wholesome image. Singer/songwriter Reva
Williams (on the right) writes and sings poetic, introspective soul
scourings that are frequently disquieting and alarming in their
intensity. Check out some of the lyrics from "Car Bomb Times":
Angels or doctors I can't afford
But I can pay to get fucked up when I get bored
Forty days and forty nights now I prayed to the Lord
I think he said it's high time I fall on my own sword ...
These are car bomb times, these are car bomb days
These are scared girl/boy rhymes, these are scared girl/boy ways
Don't
look for it at a worship conference near you any time soon. But if you
value honest songwriting sung in a Lucinda Williams howl, and if you're
one of the three or four Christians who doesn't have his/her life
totally together, you might find some thoughts that resonate pretty
deeply. Kate and I had the distinct pleasure of hanging out with Reva,
Melissa, and Phil at dinner, and I'm so thankful for their musical
talent, their unflinching writing, and their friendship. Their new
album Dregs, out in April, is well worth your time.
Will
Gray and band took the stage about 1:30. I was skeptical: two rappers,
a turntable maestro, an acoustic guitar player, a banjo picker (Reva
Williams, from Gretel), and a cellist. Sure, dude. Good luck.
And
it was absolutely mind-blowing. The rhymes were fabulous, Will Gray
sang like an old-school Marvin Gaye, and that band, impossibly, gelled
into a rockin', funky, folky R&B Americana machine. It was the
freshest music I've heard in months. Will is currently recording his
debut album with T Bone Burnett at the producer's helm. Watch for it in
late summer or early fall. I know I will be.
Check out the video for Will's song "Back to the Wall" right here.
We
left the house at 8:00 p.m., dragging our tired, middle-aged butts out
for a night on the town. We arrived home at 3:00 a.m. and neither one
of us wanted to go to bed. Such is the power and the wonder of great
music. We saw it in abundance last night, a strange and wondrous sonic
shot of joy. I live for nights like that, and I'm so thankful that
every once in a while they turn from wistful dreams to reality.

They do put on a great show. I had the great fortune of seeing Gretel and Will Gray at my college a few weeks ago and enjoyed myself immensely. I actually reviewed the show as well, for my blog, here. You've captured it well.