While the entity of American Aquarium is a wholly owned subsidiary of BJ Barham – the songwriter, musician, performer and inspiration - such an assertion is a little disingenuous to the stellar line up of crack musicians assembled for this latest re-incarnation of the band. Ace pedal steel picker Adam Kurtz and top lead guitarist Shane Boeker joined Barham out front on the cramped stage at Manchester’s Night and Day Café, but these guys would be the first to acknowledge the backroom trio of bassist Ben Hussey, Joey Bybee on drums and a keyboard player ripping up the B3 with a name that will come to me eventually!
Anthony D'Amato |
This show
in Manchester revealed a nineteen-strong song set list spanning an hour and
half with a strict curfew meaning music probably curtailed some chat. Briefly, Barham
mentioned sobriety and growing up in Reidsville North Carolina, curtly
responded to gig talkers and request shouters, while really leaving what he has
to say in the multitude of songs now spreading well into a second decade.
Only once
did the band leave the stage for Barham to deliver on his own, but the performance of
‘Unfortunate Kind’ off the solo
ROCKINGHAM record, conducted in a commendable pin drop environment, was utterly
mesmerising. This 2016 album, which got a UK release on At The Helm Records,
also supplied the title track and ‘American
Tobacco Company’ to the set list, the latter re-enforcing Barham’s southern soul searching and storytelling
alongside determination to rinse out the afflictions that surround his homeland
and personal experience. Political writing does play a part in his art and ‘The World is on Fire’ from the new album
mixes personal and policy especially in the significant line “if anyone builds
a wall in her journey, baby burst right through it”. New family is certainly stoking
the fire.
One astute
comment was giving Manchester tough praise in commenting that there is a degree
of dirt to the city, and is the type of place where the feeling of being stabbed resides
next to some establishment offering a £25 haircut. A city he duly liked. As a non-resident of Manchester, I
could not possibly comment, but the point is heard.
Joining
American Aquarium on this tour is New York based singer-songwriter Anthony D’Amato.
His thirty-minute opening slot is a cut above what you get on the live touring
circuit and represents an artist rapidly justifying the positive words that are
seeping out. Assisted by the token acoustic guitar and harmonica, he came
across as an accomplished artist, comfortably at ease in both a hipster bar setting in his home
borough of Brooklyn and less salubrious establishments when the roads get dustier.
Joining songs from his previous release COLD SNAP were a few numbers from an
upcoming record including ‘The Oyster and
the Pearl’, a track already out there to listen, buy and enjoy.
Twelve
months ago, American Aquarium played a sensational show in Oxford that was just
edged out by Chuck Prophet as gig of the year. Time will tell whether this
night will go one-step further. However, there is nothing more BJ Barham and
the boys could do to meet every ideal craved from the live music experience. Whether
you want to anoint this band as country, alt-country, Americana or just good
ole fashioned rock ‘n’ roll, the fun is in listening, believing and relishing
everything they set out to accomplish. In the song ‘Casualties’, BJ Barham proclaims that, “now, I’m just a casualty of
rock ‘n’ roll”. Probably best summing up American Aquarium is that they start
out full of country sentiment before finding the fault lines of rock ‘n’
roll, not a bad place to be though. A wonderful fulfilling gig from an awesome
band sums the night up perfectly.