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Fans who arrived early to the show got to enjoy two fantastic openers: Paul Spring and Joan Shelley. Spring, originally hailing from St. Cloud, but currently based in Minneapolis, was accompanied by Charlie on upright bass and the two played a great folky set consisting of many tracks off of Spring’s newly released album Towards a Center (produced by Dap-Kings drummer Homer Steinweiss - how cool is that?)“...after a couple of years of doing this solo EDJ thing and having to have (Fruit Bats) in parentheses after my name everywhere I go, I've decided to drop the parentheses and start doing Fruit Bats again full steam ahead.
Fruit Bats' Letter
I missed having a band behind me, I missed my old songs, and I've come to hate parentheses. Who knew?”
Louisville native Joan Shelley came on next to pierce all of our hearts with her haunting Appalachian-inspired meditations and gorgeous voice reminiscent of Joni Mitchell and Gillian Welch. Her recent offering, Over and Even, came out in September and has already cast its spell over much of the music world. For the song “Not Over By Half,” Johnson came out to duet with Shelley and, let me tell ya, those two made some intoxicating harmonies together - like there should be some kind of surgeon general’s warning on these kinds of performances: Music May Cause Lightheadedness and Swooning.
But Johnson has always had that kind of effect on me ever since I heard Fruit Bats’ second album 2003’s Mouthfuls for the first time. Being able to immerse myself in what the band has jokingly referred to as “rustic pop” was such a thrill (I’m partial to “bootgazer,” myself). Although Fruit Bats has a revolving line-up, the current live band is pretty stellar: Kevin Barker on guitar, David Dawda on bass, drummer Brian Kantor and Garth Klippert working the keys (side note: Klippert is also in a band called Old Light which you should look up.)
“When you love somebody and bite your tongue all you get is a mouthful of blood.”
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Blood, bats, love and folk - I couldn’t have asked for a better precursor to Halloween.
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