Son Volt with Jack Broadbent
Categories: Arts & Entertainment Live Music
Date and Time for this Past Event
- Thursday, Aug 4, 2022 8pm - 11pm
Location
Boulder Theater
2032 14th St
Details
2020 was not quite what Jay Farrar was expecting for the 25th anniversary of Son Volt, the band he started in 1995 after leaving the seminal group Uncle Tupelo, whose No Depression album helped define the alt-country and Americana genre. The group had just finished an Outlaw Country Cruise when the pandemic hit and sent them into their homes on lockdown.
Instead of a triumphant tour marking the illustrious landmark, Farrar was forced indoors by the pandemic, and his âReverieâ during that time helped define Electro Melodier, Son Voltâs 10th studio album â and third for influential Nashville indie Thirty Tigers. The title, taken from the names of two vintage amplifiers from the late â40s and early â50s, also describes the discâs unique blend of folk, country, blues, soul and rock â an electric troubadour with melodies that hit and stick. Social protest songs like âLiving in the U.S.A.â and âThe Globe,â the former about the promises of this nation gone wrong, the latter referencing the street protests accompanying the Black Lives Matter movement, exist side by side with odes to long-term relationships (specifically his 25-year marriage) in âDiamonds and Cigarettesâ and âLucky Ones.â
Once again accompanied by the current Son Volt line up â keyboardist/steel guitarist Mark Spencer, bassist Andrew Duplantis, guitarist Chris Frame and drummer Mark Patterson â Farrar takes a slight turn from 2019âs politically pointed Union to a series of songs that asks questions rather than demanding answers â think of âLiving in the U.S.A.â as Farrarâs version of Bruce Springsteenâs âBorn in the U.S.A.,â Neil Youngâs âRockinâ in the Free Worldâ or Patti Smithâs âPeople Have the Power,â an anthem to unite the populace.
âI had more time to devote to and concentrate on the writing,â says Farrar about his enforced quarantine. âWe were fortunate in that we had just released Union and toured the country, so we were off cycle. It was still a rough year, but as a songwriter, I was able to make the most of it.â
One listen to Electro Melodier, which opens with âReverie,â describing Farrarâs contemplative state gazing out his window, enlivened with Mark Spencerâs âWichita Linemanâ guitar riffs and the lush Big Star melodies, and you wonder why no other rock ânâ roll bands or singer/songwriters are making albums like this about what weâre all going through.
âI wanted to concentrate on the melodies which got me into music in the first place,â says Farrar. âI wanted politics to take a back seat this time, but it always seems to find a way back in there.â
Listen to the Moog line from The Whoâs âWonât Get Fooled Againâ channeled in âThe Globe,â or the Led Zeppelin homage in âSomeday Is Now,â the nod to gut-bucket Mississippi delta blues in the Lightninâ Hopkins low-tuned guitar stylings of âWar on Miseryâ or Spencerâs haunting slide on the funereal dirge of âThe Levee On Down,â which takes Andrew Jackson to task for everything from the âTrail of Tearsâ massacre of the Cherokees to his face on the $20 bill instead of Harriet Tubman. The environmentally conscious âArkey Blueâ nods to a honky-tonk in Bandera, TX, Arkey Blueâs Silver Dollar, where Hank Williams, Sr. allegedly carved his name into one of the wood tables, and even quotes Pope Francis on âturbulent rains never before seen.â
âIâm just asking the same question, how can so much go wrong in a country that is held up as an example to the world of something righteous,â explains Farrar about songs like âLiving in the U.S.A.,â in which you can hear doomsaying prophecies like Barry McGuireâs âEve of Destructionâ set to the guitar riffs of Lou Reedâs âSweet Jane.â
Still based in St. Louis (âIt kinda makes sense as a central location for touring because all the interstates connect through hereâ), Farrar was born in Belleville, IL, where he formed Uncle Tupelo with his high school classmate Jeff Tweedy. âWe had similar musical interests and took it from there,â says Jay modestly about the groundbreaking group.
Farrar is grateful to his wife of 25 years, a sentiment which he expresses lovingly on âDiamonds and Cigarettesâ â featuring vocals by country singer Laura Cantrell, along with songs like the soulful âLucky Onesâ and âSweet Refrain,â a song that captures the spirit of Bentonia, Mississippi, home of Skip James along with name checks for local legends Jimmy âDuckâ Holmes and the Bluefront Cafe. âThese are the Timesâ was recorded entirely remotely by Zoom, signaling one of the new methods of making music ushered in by Covid.
With tour dates scheduled before the end of 2021, Son Volt is ready to return to what they know best after a welcome period of introspection. âItâs a good time to take stock of whatâs lost and whatâs gained,â said Farrar. âAt this point, weâre not even sure what weâre going to get back.â The songs of Electro Melodier help remind us to be thankful of what we still have â new music from Jay Farrar and Son Volt.
âDaylight brings the clues to the world to life/Make or break gotta do what it takes to survive.â âSweet Refrainâ