A
Winter's Day
Back
in July I wrote a column after the Master Musician's Festival in
which I mentioned only a few of the performers who had been
particularly effective at leaving me rapturous. I ended that column
with a promise of more later. I love promises like that because they
are so open ended that it is hard to accuse me of defaulting on the
promise. Well, now is later.
Ben
Knight and the Well Diggers came to the festival being unfamiliar to
me but Ben's Uncle Chris Knight has been to the festival several
times and is a crowd favorite. I think Ben could become that also.
When I listen to a live performance I listen for something in the
delivery that makes the performer unique. Perhaps something that
gives them a connection to the audience. One of the first things I
noticed was that Ben Knight's voice was not a pristine one. There
were flaws in how he held a note and sometimes drifted just a bit off
key but what I heard was a uniqueness. I searched for someone to
compare him to and decided that Rob Thomas of Matchbook Twenty was a
pretty good likeness. Both of them have a little catch in their
singing that let's you know that there are no tricks here. Just
straight forward music. You know from that that the music is from
the heart, most likely self-penned and hasn't been corrupted by some
studio manager somewhere. It is the kind of music that speaks to the
heart and soul and draws you closer to see what it is that the
musicians have to tell you. It causes me to listen more intently to
the lyrics and try to find out what the message is about because I
know that it is something that is important for the purveyor to say
and for me to hear. Sometimes it isn't worth the effort but with Ben
Knight and the Well Diggers it certainly was. I was so impressed
that I made my way to the merch tent to purchase the CD and talk to
the band. I complimented Ben on the strong lyrics to his songs and
he assured me that they were self-penned and not a cover in the
bunch. I told him was that I have never heard of strong lyrics
hurting a record. This was the kind of band that one could do a lot
of listening to without getting bored.
Another
band that was on the bill was Sister Sparrow and the Dirty Birds. I
had never heard of them prior to this day but when they came out on
stage I knew it would be all right. They were fronted by a lithe,
smallish woman but what I really noticed was the HORNS. Horns just
do the trick for me. And with the type of music this band delivered
the horns were a existential part. This little woman started off
with a low growl that one would not have expected and built it to a
roar with a voice sort of like Beth Hart or Susan Tedeschi and set
off prowling non stop about the stage in the stifling heat. There
are a lot of bands running over with good music that we just never
get to see and some of them benefit greatly from being seen live.
This band is one such band. I caught them a few weeks later on the
TODAY SHOW and the music lacked that edge that was present at the
Master Musician's Festival. Rock and Blues almost has to be
delivered with an edge that almost betrays the musicality inherent in
the song. It is the attitude and empathy that accompany the song
that cuts right to the heart. This band calls Brooklyn home but the
music is straight out of the Southern Soul Sound that is so familiar
to aficionados of the old Stax and Muscle Shoals sound and that sound
carries me away. I never tire of it.
It
was a strong festival showing. From the Bluegrass of Sam Bush to the
traditional Mountain sound of Abigail Washington. From the jazz
influenced banjo of Bela Fleck to the Caribbean influenced sound of
Ben Sollee. From the nontraditional Americana sound of Ben Knight
and the Well Diggers to the soulful blues and raucous delivery of
Sister Sparrow and the Dirty Birds.
I
once asked Carol Young of the Greencards what it was that caused her
and her bandmates to leave Australia to play the festival circuit in
the United States. She told me that it was the opportunity to
practice her art. She said that such a festival circuit did not
exist in Australia. Playing the festival circuit is not an easy
lifestyle but nowhere else is such freedom of expression afforded an
artist willing to pay the toll. The chance to get to see bands like
these is a treasure. Personally, I think the very best music being
made is heard at the festivals outdoors. We are very fortunate to
the the Master Musician's Festival call Somerset home.
Already
thinking about July. And that's My Take for this cold January day
when reverie drifts to a more pleasant and joyful time. See you
there.