Tuesday, May 19, 2009

SXSW: James Harries with Nellie McKay

There's a little amount of anxiety present as we shuffle into line at St. David's. After all, as completely unaware as we were the previous night, we can't help but appreciate the cosmic sense of irony at starting our evening in a church. For the second evening in a row.

Initially, it's hard not to feel like we got a bit of the shaft. We came for Nellie McKay. But she's being billed as a special guest to this James Harries guy. Whoodat?

He stands at the mic with an acoustic guitar in hand and emotes his way through a few songs. His voice is strong and resonant. His songs take on a haunting quality that lazy journalists would compare to Jeff Buckley. But that's too easy. And too obvious given the singer's disheveled hair.

Still, at moments, it seems apt as when the singer brings his voice to a whisper, it's clear that he doesn't need the mic. He wrings every emotional atom possible out of every sung syllable. He changes his range at the drop of a dime and goes from hushedly quiet to an earth shattering vibrato. Clearly, Jeff Buckley would be proud. As would other other obvious comparisons like Thom Yorke and Chris Cornell. After just a few numbers, Mr. Harries hurries off the stage. This can only mean one thing: It's McKay time.

Nellie McKay enters the room to thunderous applause, nods humbly and sits down at the piano. Teasing chords out of it before ripping into the meat of the song, she sings about being secondhand and namechecks Joe the Plumber, a man she claims to "abhor." With no pause given or warranted, she launches into the next song with a little more sultry smokiness and a lot less whimsy.

Clearly, this audience loves her as they thunderously applaud. She strums the keys of her piano with all the laconic ease of a functionally alcoholic lounge singer: effortless and aloof. Taking this aloofness to another level, she rambles on through a monologue that takes on an air of pure ditz. She does it so well, one wonders if it's an act at all. Maybe it's just the way she introduces the song, "Ghost of Yesterdays."

Interestingly, this audience that loves her so seems to be filled with artists from the festival as noted by the numerous wrists sporting green artists wristbands. Even Franz Nicolay from the Hold Steady will be spotted after the show as the audience peters out.

Playing what seems to be a pastiche of a character of hers, she finishes one of her songs played in a mousy voice. Using the same voice, she follows up by announcing the next number as one of her angriest. It's an announcement hard to take in that tiny little voice. Tearing into the song at about a million words per second, she (in her own words) fucks up the solo, announces it, does a dance and rips right back into the song without missing a beat. The audience is delighted.

She switches up her cutesiness by taking a moment to play a ukulele song but before long she is back at the ivories. She announces the next three songs as one before making a playful comment about learning cliches from cowboys. Combined, the next three songs are played with a quiet glee and sophistication that would place her somewhere just a little more aloof than contempororaries like Regina Spektor. Never one to let the playful moment go by, she sings a quick song about scat before launching into a quick cover/parody (it's hard to tell) of Patsy Cline's "Walking After Midnight."

When she stops playing for laughs and rips loose, her voice, at times intentionally thin and mousey, becomes a real force to behold. Of course, watching her play for laughs is every bit its own joy to behold.

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