Heidi and I vacated our people watching perch and started walking down the road to Variety just as the opening act, Bobby Bare Jr., was set to get started. It’s been quite awhile since I’ve been on time for a show. I don’t know what’s gotten into me lately, but for some reason or another (perhaps a dwindling capacity for endurance), I consider myself lucky to catch the last few songs of an opening band. It’s really quite silly to pay for a show and not take advantage of the opportunity to discover new music. Some of my favorite bands have been uncovered while waiting for a “main act” to begin. Needless to say, Bobby Bare Jr. will serve as a good reminder that I need to do a better job of this. As we stood in the ticket line at the Playhouse, a middle-aged man caught our attention and approached us with an extra ticket to the show. My buddy Frazier has been known to drop a free ticket on some unsuspecting recipient and I admire the good-will of everyone who shares this idea. It would be easy enough to knock $5 off of a ticket price and sell your extra to a fan in need, but karma will thank you for taking the higher road and brightening someone’s day with such a generous act of kindness. We thanked the man and headed inside.
Enter insanely annoying Bobby Bare Jr. fans who just so happened to find a pair of seats directly to our right. These two were literally a concert-goers worst nightmare. Drunk and obscene, the female counterpart began shrieking both during and after every song that Bobby played. Her voice was like a sharp, thin blade splintering your ear drums over and over again. The male, just as drunk and probably more obscene, quite honestly thought he was having a question an answer session with Bobby himself even though he sat over 50 yards away amidst an increasingly crowded venue. Bobby, pointing out the obvious, announced that his friend Todd Snider would be next on the billing and this idiot responded with a loud and proud “FUCK TODD SNIDER!!” as if everyone in the venue was there to see Bobby Bare Jr. and had an equally close-minded outlook about any other musician who might be playing with him that night. After a couple of firm “shut-ups” from other annoyed concert-goers, things quieted down a bit. But the drunken woman’s shrill voice never ceased until the second Bobby was off the stage. Lucky for us, this trashy duo only stuck around long enough to see their coveted Bare play and they were off to annoy some other group of people trying to enjoy a night out on the town. The crowd applauded not only the performance of this skilled folk-singing musician, but the exit of dumb and dumber who none of us wish to ever encounter again.
“My name is Todd Snider and I’ve been traveling around for 15 years makin’ this shit up and playing it for anyone who will listen. Some of it’s sad, some of it’s funny, some of it’s short, some of it’s longer than others, and sometimes I will ramble on for as many as 18 minutes between the song. But I will tell you this ladies and gentlemen without batting an eye… I absolutely LOVE this shit.”
Right from those opening lines, you get a glimpse of Todd Snider’s sincere love for what he does. Todd makes a point of telling people exactly how it is. He will tell you that some people like to label his music as being opinionated. Fine. But never does Todd think that because he has a guitar and a microphone, that he is in the position to force his opinion on you or tell you how to live your life. And he doesn’t ever claim his opinion to be right. He’ll tell you that he says what he says because quite simply, it rhymes. But on a deeper level, he says what he says because it’s therapeutic for him. When things go wrong for Todd, he writes. He writes heartfelt, authentic tunes FILLED with the humor that makes his music so unique.
“So there’s nothing left for me to learn here. Just this half full of half empty cup.
Less than an ounce of possession, shit, I could do that kind of time standing up.
Some of this trouble just finds me, some of this trouble I earn.
How do you know when it’s too late? How do you know when it’s too late to learn?”
“Well they roped off all of my problems and pointed their fingers at addiction cause they know if you’re doin’ the pointing then no one’s looking at you. But you know this war on drugs is funded by the Tobacco and Alcohol Commissions… It’s not what drugs you’re strung out on they care about as much as… whose. You see, people still dig drugs. I mean ya’ll do anyway… I’m over it.”
“And then one night after closing, she poured me up a beer
She said "Come over and sit down you little shit I got somethin’ you oughtta to hear"
She said "Life ain't easy gettin’ through, everybody's gonna make things tough on you
But I can tell you right now if you dig what you do, they will never get you down"
Too short not to love everybody, and life's too long to hate
I meet a lot of men who haggle and finagle all the time
Trying to save a nickel maybe make a dime
Not me, no sireee, I ain't got the time
Now I ain't seen Ol' Virgy in must have been about ten years
I've been bummin’ around this country singing songs for tips and beers
Now the nights are long, and the driving's tough, the hotels stink, and the pay sucks
But I can't dig what I do enough, so it never gets me down”
This last line pretty much sums it up. Underneath his signature low-brimmed hat, Todd sports an enormous smile. One of the greatest things a performer can do to engage an audience is to simply enjoy themselves on stage. Todd does this better than anybody and it’s infectious. In summary, this was a phenomenal show that easily topped each of the two performances I had seen prior to this one. The South seems to be a lot more receptive to this style of music and I am happy that I had the chance to be a part of it. At the very least, this show offered the “90-minute distraction” that Todd promised us the second he walked on stage. At the end of the show, Todd brought Bobby Bare back out on stage and the duo did a hilariously bad version of Dr. Hook’s “Cover of the Rolling Stone” in which Bobby declared “We were drunk when we thought this would be a good idea”. But Elvis took the cake with a surprise guest appearance at the closing of this one. The icing on the cake.
6 comments:
What a great show...Todd is an outstanding story teller. I am so glad I got the opportunity to see him in Atlanta with my baby brother! Todd's at Hoxeyville this year, just sayin'! YEAH TODD!
If only he could have told the story about "The Ballad of the Devil’s Backbone Tavern". At least you got to hear the KK Ryder story, my favorite! Great pictures. I wish I could have been there.
One of the few talented talkin' blues players around. Did he do Seattle Grunge Rock???
I heard an NPR story on him a week or so ago. Check out the World Cafe site to find it: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=39
Nice work, man! Go wings !
Andrew,
No Talkin' Seattle Grunge Rock Blues this time around. Thanks for the NPR Story! While I was using the pisser at Variety, I heard a couple of guys talking... One says to the other "You ever seen Todd before?" and the man responds in the most Southern voice you could ever imagine "No, I just heard Jerry Jeff doin' a couple of his songs."
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