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Staves Setlist
Tour Dates
06/09/16 Toronto, Lee's Palace
06/10/16 Montreal, Bar Le Ritz Pdb 06/14/16 London, Meltdown Festival 06/16/16 New York, Bowery Ballroom 06/17/16 Brooklyn, Baby's All Right 06/18/16 Dover, Firefly Festival 06/20/16 Washington, D.C. Rock And Roll Hotel 06/21/16 Carrboro, Cat's Cradleback Room 06/23/16 Atlanta, Smith's Olde Bar 06/24/16 Nashville, High Watt 06/25/16 St. Louis, Off Broadway 06/26/16 Kansas City, Riot Room 07/08/16 - 07/10/16 Winnipeg Folk Festival 07/22/16 - 07/24/16 Newport Folk Festival 08/12/16 - 08/14/16 Eaux Claires Festival Read More
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Call it what you will- a knowledge of each other for their entire lives, something related genetically, or simply hearing the same voices for years and years, but sibling vocal harmonizing seems to have the precise edge when it comes to singing.
Bands like The Corrs, The Jacksons, Beach Boys and more, have all benefited vocally from the family relationship and based on opening night of their North American Tour in Minneapolis, The Staves is a name you can add to that list.
Trevor Sensor |
Ending with ‘Nothing is Fair’, the song evoked a Woody Guthrie-like civil unrest about a South Carolina 2015 shooting of an unarmed black man, with Sensor exclaiming “I'm so damn scared for my generation, your mind's so numb, with little patience.” Ferocious one moment, gentle and brooding the next, Sensor’s song range and talent seem to only be growing.
The Staves
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Still, the sisters (Emily Staveley-Taylor; Jessica Staveley-Taylor; Camilla Staveley-Taylor) proved endearing, mesmerizing, and a little playful on this, their opening night after recently touring Australia and Southeast Asia.
The synchronicity of their sibling voices was immediately evident in the opening, acapella ‘Hopeless’, a new track added to the extended version of previous full-length If I Was (recorded in Wisconsin and on Nonesuch Records).
‘Sleeping in a Car’, the title track of their latest EP was played early on, with its minimalist percussion, building tempo, and lyrics admitting that it’s all “bigger than us”. “Who hasn’t slept in a car?” the girls joked after, “What, …wife kicked you out again?’ they continued.
“…Sisters!” someone up front shouted between songs, “…yeah…what else do you see?” they answered back, to crowd laughter. The trio even laughed off trying to hold a note on the next song and what could be better than three sisters harmonizing? – sometimes looping their own voices to sound like even more of a large choir.
Many of the songs had that “Wisconsin walk in the snowy woods” atmospheric that so many are locally used to with Bon Iver, but the in-tandem vocals and moving melodies often take the songs elsewhere.
‘Don’t Let Me Down’, as an example, done mid-set as their drummer left for a short break, had a spinning, dizzying chorus that took you completely into the rabbit hole along with them.
After saying how familiar they are with the upper Midwest and excited to be “playing some music that was conceived, born and raised around here”, the spanning ‘Damn It All’ started with just quiet plucking and singing, before moving full speed, into something much bigger.
Setlist |
‘Make It Holy’ and 2012’s ‘Winter Trees’ finished the main set, the latter painting the picture effectively with opening lyric, “White winter trees covered in snow I don't mind, I don't mind I think of you now, here in the cold”.
For the encore, Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon did not get on stage as a few in the crowd were hoping, but launching into the new ‘Tired as F*#k’, the girls seemed anything but that. ‘Teeth White’ ended the evening, an up tempo fun number with lyric “I don't know what to expect / I feel a disconnect / and in all my years I've never felt so young” that proves the road ahead is wide open and in complete harmony.
The Staves at Cedar Cultural Center, Minneapolis (03 June 2016) |
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