The genre conundrum surfaced last night at Birmingham’s
Rainbow venue. Pete Bernhard, the frontman of The Devil Makes Three,
vociferously proclaimed that they are not an American country band. This is a concept
in line with the promoters who brought them to Birmingham and the earthy indie
rock venue hosting them in a location where the city centre spills into the
less salubrious inner city suburbs. However you only have to spend a couple of
moments observing and listening to this trio to discover that they have a far
greater synergy with the ideals of country music than much of the modern output
so decried by Bernhard. What The Devil Makes Three do succeed at is delivering
a near non-stop procession of high tempo acoustic roots music courtesy of
banjo, fiddle, guitar and bass in the true tradition of the pioneers of country
music and all the offspring strands.
This band, which is a trio at core but intermittently expanded to a four and five-piece during the show with the active participation of the techies, has been active in the US for well over a decade. Maybe the time was perceived right to expand their horizons and while this was certainly a debut Birmingham date, it is assumed an inaugural visit to the UK as well. Pete and his two colleagues, Cooper McBean (banjo/guitar) and Lucia Turino (bass), didn’t disguise the fun they were having on tour and those present enthusiastically reciprocated their affection.
This band, which is a trio at core but intermittently expanded to a four and five-piece during the show with the active participation of the techies, has been active in the US for well over a decade. Maybe the time was perceived right to expand their horizons and while this was certainly a debut Birmingham date, it is assumed an inaugural visit to the UK as well. Pete and his two colleagues, Cooper McBean (banjo/guitar) and Lucia Turino (bass), didn’t disguise the fun they were having on tour and those present enthusiastically reciprocated their affection.
The most striking way to describe the onstage sound mayhem
is to liken the band to a stripped down version of the Old Crow Medicine Show,
an act they have opened for in the US. Traditional roots music is a general
label to attach to The Devil Makes Three with shades of bluegrass, rockabilly,
blues and classic country spilling out of every note and song played. The bunch
of songs selected to fill a ninety minute long set spanned the band’s four
album recording-career to-date with a slight bias to 2013’s I’M A STRANGER
HERE. From this, their most recent release, the standout songs energising the
set included ‘Forty Days’, ‘Stranger’, ‘Spinning
Like a Top’ and ‘Hallelu’. In
fact there was a reassuring consistency about the songs stretching back to
their 2002 self-titled debut album which launched the career of a band formed
in Santa Cruz, California but originally from the far north eastern state of
Vermont. A topic of amusement to the band has been much comment on why a group
of musicians from New England play music more akin with the southern states.
Bernhard counters this by implying ‘we’re just a collection of hippies and
punks playing music we like’.
Cooper McBean brings a lot of traditional country influence to
the band with much admiration for Hank Williams and Bob Wills, perhaps punks
themselves in their day. He also added a vocal contribution in the form of a
Roger Miller song and his constant switching between banjo and guitar kept the
sound fresh. Another cover introduced by Bernhard was Elvis Costello’s ‘Lip Service’, a song originating in 1978
when it’s architect was spearheading a post-punk new wave movement and thus giving
a good indication of The Devil Makes Three’s approach to music making. There is
definitely a raw indie feel to their sound which explains adulation in the
world of Americana music as opposed to the more polished mainstream.
The band’s awareness in the UK grew last year via a session
on Bob Harris Country and a big push with this tour and further promotion will
help them build on this momentum. Maybe a dual attack on markets will help as
they combine well the raw vibrant sound of indie rock and a passion for real
country. Regardless of labelling, getting acquainted with The Devil Makes Three
is highly desirable either on record or more pertinently catching one of their
live shows. The aura, energy and technique of this band need to be captured and
diverted to influencing other sectors.