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October 22, 2009 at 12:06pm

CONCERT REVIEW: Emmylou Harris and Buddy Miller at the Auditorium

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Emmylou Harris' name was written in the big letters on the marquee, but it was Buddy Miller's show Wednesday night at The Auditorium Theatre. It isn't just the fact that I root for the underdog, spin the B-side, constantly look below the radar, and thrive on music traveling the airways less traveled. It's because my goose bumps are in limited supply. When the cheese-grater flesh does make the scene it's due to a Molotov cocktail of factors --- incendiary and mostly elusive, as most music I like tends to be.

Miller strapped on a guitar and strode out in the pointiest cowboy boots I'd ever seen. You could have lanced a boil with those pig-stickers. His voice was rich and ragged as he opened with the somber "How I Got To Memphis" --- a tune he penned for King Solomon Burke, who in turned recorded it on his last album in Miller's living room. The goose bumps showed up and stayed up when Miller copped an electric guitar just slithering in slinky tremolo for "Does My Ring Burn Your Finger." Harris' bass player showed up for this one; his solid 2/4 on the doghouse helped put the song in gear and point it hip-ward. It was all lovely dovely and mysterious with an ominous undertone. In fact, ominous is like hot sauce; you take any song of any topic, any mood, any groove, and you splash on a little ominous...it'll burn ya, baby.

God, she's beautiful. Harris' voice is almost as luxuriously silver as her tresses. She sang in a voice that sounded a fraction of her 62 years. She floated like a butterfly and stung like, well, a butterfly. It was a mid-tempo honky-tonk lullaby that hovered just beneath the clouds, but I'd already spent my awe on Miller. Harris was still mesmerizing --- especially when she and Miller tag-teamed on the Nazareth classic "Love Hurts."

Just kidding, I know it's actually a Roy Orbison tune. Gotcha again; I know it's Gramm Parsons. Suckers. I thought I'd fuck with the wiz kids that read this column who freak out and roast me when I get something wrong. I get it right most of the time; give a brother a break. Besides, I know you like the Nazareth version the best. I think I do, too.

Comments for "CONCERT REVIEW: Emmylou Harris and Buddy Miller at the Auditorium" (4)

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Bruce Morgen said on Oct. 22, 2009 at 12:42pm

Buddy Miller didn't write "That's How I Got To Memphis," although he recorded the best extant version and recommended the song to Solomon Burke as the producer of Burke's "Nashville" CD. The song actually comes from the prolific pen of Tom T. Hall.

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Daniel said on Oct. 23, 2009 at 5:21pm

Buddy played for Emmylou's Sunday show at Hardly Strictly Bluegrass in SF earlier this month, and Emmylou sang for Buddy's Saturday morning outing at the same event - magical. Buddy's guitar playing is getting better, if that were possible; that tone breaks hearts, opens ears, rights wrongs - this is the best it's been...

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ktheerm said on Oct. 25, 2009 at 10:26am

"I know its Gramm Parsons".

Wrong again.. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love_Hurts

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CH said on Oct. 25, 2009 at 11:12pm

Let's recap:
1) Tom T. Hall wrote "That's How I Got To Memphis," not Buddy Miller.
2) Solomon Burke's last album was not NASHVILLE, which came out in 2006, but LIKE A FIRE, released in 2008.
3) The Everly Brothers were the first to record "Love Hurts," written by Felice and Boudleaux Bryant.

You know, Frank, if you're going to be so snarky and ill-tempered (as you are in your last sentence), you should get your facts straight.

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