On a sweltering afternoon at a festival in Kentucky around a
month ago, the hot sun was braved for fifteen minutes to catch part of a set by
Louisville based folk musician Joan Shelley. Amidst an event dominated by
fuller sounding brasher rock acts, thoughts turned to what Joan would sound
like in a more intimate setting. This was not meant in a detrimental way, just
a realisation of the many artists who have been witnessed flourishing in such
an environment over the years. Admittedly at this point it was known that Joan
was making a brief trip to Europe soon and choosing to play The Musician in
Leicester as her only club show of the UK segment. It may not have been 38c in
the English Midlands on the evening of her visit, but the positive promise of
that afternoon materialised into a majestic sense of reality.
With its close knit layout and dedicated audience, The
Musician provided the ideal backdrop for Joan to ease into her velvet groove of
folk song delivery and embrace those present with her soothing musical
presence. Joan’s vocals find the sweet spot with little effort and
tantalisingly move around the scale of pristineness. The lo-fi elegance of her
songs lures you into a fixated zone and swims around your senses with the
smoothest of sensations.
While Joan’s festival performance was in a full band format,
this evening’s show was in duo mode and the chemistry from working alongside
guitarist Nathan Salsburg exuded in magical portions. Their contrasting playing
styles complemented perfectly to create the ideal backdrop for her softly
presented songs to prosper. With minimalist variety, Joan ditched her own
guitar for a couple of songs, ditched Nathan for one and returned solo once
more for the first encore song singing a wonderful unplugged version of the traditional
Appalachian folk song ‘Darling Don’t You
Know That’s Wrong’, previously popularised by Addie Graham.
Joan was recently featured in a ‘Guardian online’ article as
one of the artists redefining the American roots agenda in the twenty first
century. The retro effect of listening to Joan live is certainly minimal.
Working alongside the accredited folklorist Nathan will always keep her musical
heritage rooted in the ideals of the past, but her writing and persona freshens
up the whole folk music process. Apart from the encore excursion and a cover of Kate
Wolf’s ‘Here in California’, the rest
of the songs populating Joan’s seventy minutes on stage were self-composed
originals.
These were mainly based on her most recent album OVER AND
EVEN, which is one of the most beautiful and tranquil records to hit my ears this
year. The title track acted as the show opener, with ‘Subtle Love’, ‘No More
Shelter’ and ‘Not Over By Half’
also surfacing as stand-out songs on the evening. The latter was placed in the
pre-encore slot and probably emerged as the highlight on the basis of its immense
melody. Either side of her most recent album, Joan dipped a little into an
older record ELECTRIC URSO and previewed a couple of new songs promising more
of the same.
The gorgeous array of songs, vocals and guitar playing held
the audience’s attention in frozen capsule status, thus leading to frenzied
activity at the merchandise table at the end. Joan prefers to let her songs do
the communicating and kept the between track banter to a minimum. However when
the effect of her songs are this good, few would argue with her chosen and
probably most comfortable stage presence.
Two credits need to be made surrounding this show. Firstly, the
innovative Green Man Festival for inviting Joan to the UK and the Magic Teapot
promotion team for arranging a diversion to Leicester as the duo journeyed from
Wales to Cornwall. Joan Shelley may be a name not widely known, but a return
visit will further ignite interest within the folk, indie and Americana communities in
the UK. Good people will relish a talented, respectful and progressive artist;
all the qualities that make Joan Shelley one to watch and savour.