Setlist
Tour Dates
04/19/13 St. Louis, MO Old Rock House
04/20/13 Columbia, MO Mojo's 05/10/13 Napa, CA Napa Valley Exposition 05/25/13 Napa, CA Uptown Theatre Napa 06/02/13 Solana Beach, CA Fletcher Cove Read More Tristan Prettyman Tristan Prettyman started off the show with her live band, Steve Miller and Josh Dunahoo. Listening to her talk about her songs, you realized that her music is basically a biography of her life and experiences. ...…
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Playing to the largest headlining crowd of her career, Prettyman enchanted with an evening of wine, conversation, and songs- in town for the third time in recent months promoting her latest release, 2012’s ‘Cedar + Gold’ (Capitol).
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After a brief break, Prettyman, Dunahoo, and second guitarist Steve Miller (no, not the ‘Jet Airliner’/’Jungle Love’ Miller) took the stage for an 85min set of cathartic songs of heartbreak, flirting, and redemption. This was a more confident and comfortable Prettyman than we’d seen the previous two recent times here where she played abbreviated and support sets, opening for The Script and appearing at a radio event.
Being part of a public breakup has to be awkward, but Prettyman’s way of dealing with it, via the songs on her breakout ‘Cedar + Gold’ and punctuating most with a prefaced story while sipping on red wine, made the night seem somehow more intimate, relating to the crowd like a friend sharing her recent ups and downs.
The crowd reacted early to ‘Say Anything’, currently on radio airwaves, and vaguely recognized covers of Rihanna’s ‘Stay’ and John Mayer’s ‘I Don’t Trust Myself (with Loving You)’, both of which fit the setlist in between other Prettyman songs that had similar themes.
The evening wrapped with ‘My Oh My’, the first single from the current album, a simple yet showcase song highlighting how much larger and bluesy Prettyman’s beach coffeehouse sound has progressed.
The show also doubled as an anniversary of a radio show’s morning program which half-expectedly (and unfortunately) brought in a Basilica Block Party-like crowd that seemed more interested in their own conversations and cocktails, than whatever happened to be on-stage. This was very evident from the main floor and reports from the balcony were similar. Satellite’s set didn’t have much of a chance over the din of people talking and even Prettyman’s slower songs like ‘Deepest Ocean Blue’ and some of her pre-song stories, struggled to be heard- the only blemish to what was a mostly satisfying ‘Taco Tuesday’ at First Avenue.
Tristan Prettyman at First Avenue, Minneapolis (04/16/13) |
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