What's love got to do with it

Audrey Ryan + Strand of Oaks + Lewis & Clarke, Clarendon Hill Presbyterian Church, February 14, 2009
By MEGAN V. BELL  |  February 18, 2009

090220_audrey-main
A V-DAY WITHOUT LOVE SONG? Well, Audrey Ryan did play one.

"Happy Valentine's Day. That was a saint, right? St. Valentine?" mumbled Lewis & Clarke's (wasted?) frontman/sonic adventurer, Lou Rogai. As I turned to snicker to my friends, my eye wandered to a massive painting of Jesus kneeling on the ground, hands in prayer, eyes cast imploringly to Heaven.

Saturday's concert was a spiritual experience of a sort. Some 35 people were scattered about the pews — most of them couples, though a few ostensible swinging bachelors showed. Doing double duty on guitar and accordion, Audrey Ryan started things off, managing to make songs about crucifixes and depression whimsically sweet with her strong, slightly twangy alto. She allowed an audience member to dedicate to his girlfriend her final number, which she admitted was "one of the few love songs I've ever written."

Strand of Oaks could be lumped into the company of Bon Iver and Fleet Foxes, what with Timothy Showalter's soulful, raspy voice and the varying intensity of the three-piece's facial hair. Lewis & Clarke delivered a more challenging set — the first song (or possibly the first three songs strung together) lasted at least 10 minutes, with long wordless bouts and cosmic, experimental noodling, plus an arrangement that included upright bass, piano, and synthesizer buzzes. In the final moments of the show, the synth player struck tiny bells on a string, as if announcing the Eucharistic presence.

On a day that compels one to appear as either an ostentatious lovebird or an embittered loner, Saturday's concert was a welcome solace — exactly what I was looking for as an out and proud "single." It was about romance, but it was also about friends, family, and neighbors. Or maybe sitting next to that Jesus painting and listening to folk music for over two hours simply turned me into a good-for-nothing hippie. Either way, it was one of the most meaningful V-Days I've had. Saints be praised.

Related: Getting to know Audrey Ryan, Ravi Shavi, Atlantic Thrills hit N. Main, Toughcats’ electrified third release, More more >
  Topics: Live Reviews , Entertainment, Music, Music Reviews,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY MEGAN V. BELL
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   WHAT'S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH IT  |  February 18, 2009
    "Happy Valentine's Day. That was a saint, right? St. Valentine?" mumbled Lewis & Clarke's (wasted?) frontman/sonic adventurer, Lou Rogai.
  •   CHRISTMAS ON MARS  |  October 28, 2008
    Stylized after the sci-fi B-movies of yore, the film recycles Atomic Age angst: a group living in a space station on Mars have run out of spare parts, and it seems that everyone’s doomed.  
  •   ADORING PUBLIC  |  October 24, 2008
    If the goal was to bring to life for a night the strange beast that is cable access, they nailed it.  
  •   GAG REFLEX  |  January 28, 2010
    “You are in the elite first wave of people to hear this stuff,” Ben Folds told us Friday night with a smirk, possibly no longer able to be serious on stage after nearly two decades of tongue planted firmly in cheek.  
  •   FOR THE DOGS  |  July 31, 2008
    In June, seven greyhounds suffered broken legs within a six-day period at Massachusetts’s two racetracks.

 See all articles by: MEGAN V. BELL