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Play good and play hard
Live Review: John Hiatt & Sherri Jackson, The Rage, Vancouver, B.C.,
Saturday, December 6, 1997
by Gary 'Pigboy' Swartz
Photography by Jeff Hornby
January 25, 1998, Drop-D Magazine, Vol.2 No.34 - Issue 83
"Ladies and gentlemen, please give a warm Tokyo
welcome to John Hiatt!" Whoops! Wrong city. Wrong year. But
the right artist. Definitely the right artist.
I first saw John Hiatt in Tokyo, not long after the
release of his 1987 break-through album, Bring the Family.
At the time I was seeing two or three shows a week. A lot of the
artists and/or bands I was seeing, all with major label releases
and reasonable airplay, have returned to the obscurity they so
richly deserved. (For the good reasons why, think of all the bad
shows you've seen by bands that think one hit equals 'established.')
About two songs into Hiatt's set I knew I'd be hearing from and
seeing this guy for years and years to come.
Hiatt comes to entertain. To sing and play with passion
and to give his audience their money's worth. He is fortunate
enough to be able to underpin that desire with self-penned material
written in the same vein, the kind of material that grows with
each listening. This show was no exception. The man came to perform
in overdrive, and I had the strong feeling it was for an audience
that had been there before. And loved it. Yeah, he isn't everyone's
micro-brew, but I suspect he seldom loses a fan.
For that growing legion he opened the show with "Alone
in the Dark," accompanied only by his acoustic guitar. One
of the strengths of Hiatt's material is that it can be just as
compelling stripped down to basics as it is given the full-blown
treatment -- not only by Hiatt, but the dozens of others who have
chosen to cover his songs. Then the Nashville Queens -- oddly
enough all three musicians list California as their home state
-- joined Hiatt for "Drive South" and stayed on stage
for the remainder of the show.
As with the other bands that have accompanied him
in recent years, like the Guilty Dogs and the Goners, the Nashville
Queens seem to relish their role as Hiatt sidemen. Playing good
and playing hard are the main requirements. And despite the C&W
heritage implicit in the name, the arrangements and overall performance
seemed a lot more R&R rooted than I remember from past shows,
with less reliance on slide guitar. Either way works good.
The selection of songs was a well- balanced mix of material from Hiatt's current album, Little Head, and more
familiar selections from earlier albums. Among the latter were
"Memphis in the Meantime," "Icy Blue Heart,"
"Perfectly Good Guitar," "Cry Love," "Have
a Little Faith in Me" (during which those at the show accompanied
by lovers, significant others and similar emotional bond mates
moved a little closer together, all the better to exchange meaningful
glances and a bit of lip wrestling), "Thing Called Love"
and "Slow Turning." Among the newer songs, "Sure
Pinnochio" proved representative of lyricist Hiatt at his
wittiest -- it's hard to imagine a more elegant way to imply that
someone is a lying whatever -- and to my mind is the kind
of songwriting that keeps fans tuned in for more Hiatt.
To opening act Sherri Jackson, my most profound apologies.
Thanks to the Great SkyTrain Fire of '97, I arrived late for her
set and caught only the last song and a half, but I did walk into
a room full of people that seemed to be enjoying themselves. I
have subsequently heard two cuts from her album on 92.9 FM, the
world's greatest radio station, and now believe that I did both
Sherri and myself (not to mention you, dear reader) a disservice.
Since she apparently hails from Washington State, she hopefully
won't be a stranger to our fair city and we'll get a chance to
make good at some future date. Like Hiatt, I have a feeling that
she could just be another survivor.
©
1998 Drop-D Magazine
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