The Kitchen Garden has warmed the hearts of many American touring artists in its decade plus existence. Adding Don Gallardo to an esteemed list was a long time coming , with not a moment wasted in the hour and three quarters playing time. Older material like ‘Burgundy Wine’ from the ART OF TROUBLESOME TIMES album mingled with a few standout tunes from the new hot off the press IN THE NAME OF GOOD INTENTIONS EP release, ably led by its outstanding track ‘How Many Days?’
An audience made up of confirmed Don Gallardo fans and curious newbies had plenty of candidates to hang on the evening’s highlight coat hanger, with the time tested duo of ‘The North Dakota Blues’ and ‘Banks of the Mississippi’ certain to frequent any short list. The former closed the first set with its audience uninvited participation line ‘make sure you don’t run out of whiskey’ echoing round the venue. The latter did likewise to the pre-encore second set, getting underway with a hypnotic Travis Stock bass line and finishing with Jim Maving unleashing the Fender into undefined rock territory after chilling mainly in country mode for most of the evening. At this moment, the song morphed into a medley with the sampled Dobie Gray recorded classic ‘Drift Away’ injecting some funk groove into the proceedings.
A casual observer noting his Nashville base would class Don Gallardo as a country artist. True this style is heavily influential in his music with plenty of slide guitar induced twang from the fender backing up this assertion. However, this is just one part of the Don Gallardo make up and one a fair distance away from the commercial country music hub of his home city.
First and foremost, Don Gallardo is a finely tuned songwriter, penning incredibly influential songs rinsed with accessible simplicity. ‘Something You’ve Gotta Learn’, ’Carousel’, ‘Kickin’ Up the Pavement’ and the countrified ‘The Losing Kind’ are prime exhibits of a skilled artisan. Issue based songs like ‘Stay Awhile’, focussing on Nashville’s unabated building boom, and ‘Same Ol’ Alley Talkin’ Blues #12’ addressing homelessness, leads the content in a direction of the conscience.
Away from the original material, a nod to John Price was given with a cover of ‘Speed of the Sound of Loneliness’. Additionally, the Creedence Clearwater Revival classic ‘Bad Moon Rising’ appears on the new EP, recorded in conjunction with Lilly Winwood, as well in tonight’s set list and you rarely hear a bad version of ‘The Long Black Veil’.
This Kitchen Garden show came towards the end of a two-week European excursion that opened with an appearance at the Maverick Festival (complete with the legendary cow in the tent story) and had its core underpinned with an invite to play the Static Roots Festival in Germany across the middle weekend. Trips across the pond are a regular pattern for Don Gallardo and the more new venues that host him, widens the appeal and justifies the investment made to spread his music overseas.