For an hour and half this evening, the art of rocking, serenading, rejoicing and participating filled the air, all orchestrated by the charisma of Pokey. It helps if you have an ace guitarist as good as Adam Hoskins at your right hand side and a rhythm section in the guise of Matt Myers (drums) and Joey Glynn (upright bass) keeping impeccable time. Filling the gap left by the accident recovering fifth member Ryan Koenig has been a critical task facing the band on this return to European venues and the success can only be measured by the reception given to the remaining quartet playing their hearts out.
Right from the opening bars of ‘Better Man Than Me’, taken from the latest album, through to
classic Pokey in the crowd engulfing ‘La
La Blues’, the pace only frequently dipped, and that was for songs packed
with a slice of privileged sensibility. A key moment occurred straight into the
encore when the uplifting chorus of ‘Cairo
Illinois’ threaded through an enthralled gathering. Earlier Pokey had given
his band members a brief breather to allow him the space to deliver ‘Josephine’ in all its emotion. However,
this proved a solo exception as the entity of the unified band decorated the
evening that few would argue peaked with a rousing version of ‘Central Time’.
Other notable tunes on the evening came in the waltzing
melody of ‘Goodbye, Barcelona’, the
indulgent ‘Drinkin’ Whiskey Tonight’
and the smart lyrics making ‘Something in
the Water’ more than just a supreme album lead off title track. Pokey does
not leave too much gap between records, and with last year’s release, MANIC
REVELATIONS still finding new homes, hot off the press material is getting a
preview as exemplified by this evening’s playing of a song titled ‘Rotterdam’.
Whatever number played, a
dedicated fan base lapped up every moment of their hero playing a full-length performance
in a Midlands town. From a personal perspective, the delights of seeing them
play festival sets at Cambridge in 2014 and Forecastle in 2016 were blown away
by a sparkling performance that totally ruled a venue.
Opening for Pokey LaFarge on this tour is New Orleans-based
country singer-songwriter Esther Rose, who accompanies her own acoustic guitar
with a lap steel playing sidekick. Together, they blend a contrasting sound
formed of atmospheric twang and a vocal style capable of bringing any remote
dive bar to heal. Whereas Pokey takes the southern sound north, Esther took it
further west. More the wide open spaces of New Mexico than the tightly knit
semi-urban communities of southern Illinois. The title track from her recent
album ‘This Time Last Night’ proved
the consensus pick of the half hour set.
Consensus on Pokey LaFarge was rock solid on the overall appeal and only likely to be open to debate on which song proved the crowning moment. No doubt, a school of thought put the whole evening on a pedestal and that would be an assessment difficult to oppose. Winners were all round though: a band having a ball of a time; an audience grasping a rare opportunity to see a true American roots band in full glory and maybe just a city showing that it can come to the fore with supporting this type of music.
www.pokeylafarge.net