Dean’s excellent 2015 album INTO THE SEA provided a fruitful
source for a fair chunk of the set list including ‘Valentine’s Day in New York’, ‘Evergreen’ and ‘Virginia Street’. The latter, a song mixing Glasgow and Kris
Kristofferson, was announced as the new single with more than a nod to Bob
Harris’s approval. Outside the latest record the strongest offerings were ‘The Night Johnny Cash Played San Quentin’
and ‘Lost Time’, with the former
being lifted from Dean’s 2012 cut CASH BACK: SONGS I LEARNED FROM JOHNNY CASH. The
influences and style of Dean Owens are not too difficult to detect and
ascertain, with the presiding overview that he interprets them successfully.
While on the theme of the new record, one track was introduced
by Danny, in the form of the Paul Lush penned ‘Never in the Moment’. A further innovation for the show was the
limelight afforded to pedal steel player Henry Senior Jr with the opportunity
to share a tune from his brand new instrumental album. PLATES OF MEAT is the inaugural
release from the Maiden Voyage Recording Company, a project jointly launched by
Danny and Del Day.
The majority of the show was a lesson in reassurance. Paul
Lush persistently excelled on lead guitar while Chris Clarke steadied the ship
on bass aligned with Steve Brookes supplying the driving percussion beat. Danny
was just Danny, the grateful and humbled entertainer further buoyed by the
recognition the band received from this year’s Americana awards. The sweaty,
packed and earthy Donkey venue was fertile Champs ground with oodles of mutual
appreciation in a heady and cramped atmosphere.
The set list was extensive, familiar and rich, with mainly
upbeat dance friendly material. ‘(Never
Stop Building) That Old Space Rocket’ remains a personal favourite and a
choice slice of Danny idealism. ‘Colonel
and the King’ retains its extended infectious appeal and ‘Henry the Van’ will never be forgotten.
Perhaps one song beginning to ripen as a live masterpiece is ‘Clear Water’, surely heading in the
legendary direction of ‘Restless Feet’
and ‘Every Beat of My Heart’.
Any review of a Danny and the Champions of the World show should
end with an invitation to personally seek out this live experience. Many
Leicester folks did just that and opportunities in the future around the land are likely to be
countless . Hopefully the same can be said of Dean Owens and more
excursions south from his Edinburgh base. The quality of a live performer will
rise to the top and the two artists on show this evening personify this
assertion.
www.deanowens.com