Photo by Clay Patrick McBride |
“For my entire life I have been trying to give voice to the rhythms and words that underscore, propel, and inform me. Because my peripheral vision is more acute than my direct powers of observation, and my love of an A-minor chord is more charged and refined than my understanding of my own psyche, I have often attempted to explain my experiences to myself through songs: by writing them, singing them, listening to them, deconstructing them, and letting them fill me like food and water. I have charted my life through not only the songs I’ve composed, but the songs I’ve discovered, the songs that have been given to me, the songs that are part of my legacy and ancestry. Through them I’ve often found meaning and relief, while at other times I’ve failed to recognize or understand a rhythm or a theme until it became urgent or ingrained and I finally came across a song that captured that experience…My life has been circumscribed by music…”
Rosanne Cash said all that in the
introduction to her brilliant 2011 memoir Composed. And last
Saturday night at the Burlington Performing Arts Centre, she and her
band took a sold out audience on a journey through music that no one
will soon forget. The Performing Arts Centre in
Burlington is a gem. Medium-sized it maintains an intimacy and
warmth that makes it a first choice as a venue for acoustic music
such as Rosanne plays. There is a carpark directly next door
offering free parking after 6pm and all day on weekends. This is a
bonus if you’re used to theatres in Toronto, or other big cities.
And the icy cold didn’t affect us either since the car park is
connected by a bridge to the theatre. Genius.
I’d been enjoying The River &
The Thread for a few days, having pre-ordered it from her
web-site, and
the band played
through the songs from the album one by one. The unfamiliarity of
the tunes didn’t matter, since each song was illuminated by images
on the back wall of photographs from the trips Cash and Leventhal had
taken throughout the south. The cover photo, in fact, was taken by
Leventhal as Cash looked out from the Tallahatchie Bridge. You know
the one. Where Billie Joe MacAllister jumped from in Bobbie Gentry’s
“Ode to Billie Joe.” That bridge, Rosanne would tell us, is a
focal point not far from the grave of blues legend Robert Johnson,
and on the other side the small grocery store where 14 year old
Emmett Till signed his death warrant by ‘flirting’ with a white
woman in 1955. The photographs that form the back drop to the first
half of the show expand on the songs, the lyrics seem clearer due to
the illustrations, and animation. Kevin Barry plays the stinging
slide guitar lead that Derek Trucks provided to “World of Strange
Design” on CD. John Leventhal adds harmonies throughout the
evening even though he’s suffering from bronchitis. He has trouble
with his guitar all night, but it seems to have more to do with his
monitor than the room sound. Rosanne reminds us that this is an
album, “a CD is merely a delivery system…this is an album.”
And the concept is marvellous. Not unlike Blackie & the RodeoKings’ recent album, it’s a drive south.
After a 20 minute intermission John and
Rosanne return. He begins the rhythmic opening that links both
halves of the show. Rosanne sings “Ode to Billie Joe.” From
then on, it’s all the hits all the time. A handful of classic songs
from The List start things off. This was another concept
album based on a list of important country songs given to her by her
father. In 2011 she recorded a dozen of them, this night she plays
four. A strangely upbeat “Long Black Veil,” Hank Snow’s “I’m
Movin’ On,” and Dylan’s “Girl From the North Country” all
come from that album. She rocks a bit with “Seven Year Ache.”
She explains writing “I Don’t Know Why You Don’t Love Me” as
a response to not winning a Grammy…and then confesses that the
following year “I Don’t Know Why…” won a Grammy. She pays
tribute to her father’s time in the Air Force in Germany with
“Radio Operator.” Then it’s goodnight.
Rosanne Cash live at the Burlington Performing Arts Centre |
The crowd jumps to its feet cheering
and applauding and it’s not long before the group is back on stage.
Someone yells out “Tennessee Flat Top Box,” a song of Johnny
Cash’s which was a hit for her. She says, “I don’t think the
band knows it.” They confer. Everybody knows it except the bass
player, and he’s willing to give it a shot. They create probably
the best magic of the night with this display of spontaneity. This
excitement continues with the last number, the final song from The
List, and we’re asked to sing along on the chorus. I try
giving it my best Elvis Costello harmony on “Heartaches By The
Number.” The music stops, she throws us a kiss, and Rosanne Cash
and band disappear. They’re movin’ on. Gone to the next town,
the next show. They’ll perfect a version of “Flat Top Box”
now. Everybody wants to hear that one.
Over coffee with some old friends we
rehash the show. I just want to go home, and listen to the album
again, to relive the moments. Songs that I’ve discovered, songs
that Rosanne wrote, that have become (or are becoming) part of my
life.
– David Kidney has reviewed for Green Man Review and Sleeping Hedgehog. He published the Rylander Quarterly (a Ry Cooder-based newsletter) for 8 years before turning it into a blog, at http://rylander-rylander.blogspot.com. He works at McMaster University as Director of Learning Space Development and lives in Dundas, Ontario with his wife.
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