Son Volt played a brilliantly paced set at Higher Ground on 9/21, that unlike the group's last appearance at the Vermont venue in spring of 2007 where Jay Farrar and company struggled to gain traction, the quintet leapt into action with "The Picture" and were blazing away by the time they finished roughly two and half-hours later.
As on the haunting new album American Central Dust, Farrar played mostly acoustic guitar on the last night of summer, while mixing guitars, keyboards and pedal steel. "Highways and Cigarettes was just one number where the band, propelled by bassist Andrew Duplantis and Dave Bryson, sounded in constant forward motion.
Moving inexorably though songs like "When the Wheels Don't Move," it's clear the intelligence of the lyrics matches the haunting quality of its melody. There's a certain sameness to his material apart from that consistent virtue: his preference for mid-tempo can be monotonous if it doesn't mesmerize. More often than not, as on his striking homage to Keith Richards, "Cocaine and Ashes," the effect was riveting: no wonder the ballroom crowd stayed at such rapt attention throughout the show.
As Farrar played electric guitars through the home stretch of the set, Son Volt shifted to high gear. The leader's crisp authoritative rhythm work contrasted Mark Spencer's pedal steel and electric keyboards, especially when the Burlington resident opted for organ rather than the rare electric piano. The way guitarist James Walbourne gracefully followed the contours of the melody on the tribute to Jack Kerouac, "Big Sur," belied some of his later contortions playing his Telecaster of black solid body guitar.
Equally effective on lap steel, Walbourne's frenzied solos became more and more extended in the last half-hour, as did Farrar's own immersion in the sound of his instrument. At this point in the show Son Volt was riding the momentum they'd generated and, as "Action" gave way to "Roll On," there was no mistaking Jay Farrar's intent to rouse his listeners. He may be too diffident and matter of fact for his own good (thought he was sincere in his repeated thanks to the crowd) but when he gets his band fully in motion as they were in closing with Waylon Jennings' outlaw country number, "Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way," it's hard not be moved.
SETLIST The Picture Feel Free Underground Dream Down to the Wire Dust of Daylight Highways and Cigarettes Cocaine and Ashes When the Wheels Don't Move Ten Second News Dynamite Pushed Too Far Jukebox of Steel [banter] Big Sur Methamphetamine [band introductions] Tear Stained Eye Strength and Doubt No Turning Back Hard Times Medication Damn Shame The Search Buzz & Grind Bandages & Scars Afterglow 61 [encore break] Action Roll On Windfall Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way (Waylon Jennings)