Showing posts with label singer-songwriters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label singer-songwriters. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Album Review: Samantha Mae, Reverie (2025)

The album cover of Reverie, by Samantha Mae, 2025.


Singer and songwriter Samantha Mae



Samantha Mae is a Vermont-based singer/songwriter who just released Reverie, her first full-length album earlier this year. Reverie gathers 8 original songs written by Samantha Mae. She’s a strong songwriter, and Reverie takes the listener through many different musical moods. Samantha Mae also has a fantastic, flexible voice that has elements of country, folk, and pop within it.  

The title song is a beautiful meditation on the loss of a loved one. Samantha Mae sings, “I’ve spent too many years/Chasing the ghost of you/And all I have to show is your old perfume.” That’s such a fantastic line, and Samantha’s voice gets the emotion of the song across.  

“My, My Baby Goodbye” is a catchy, up-tempo song about starting over in a new city. Thinkin’ I might stay in this town just for fun/Just to see what my life could be,” Samantha sings, as she leaves an old relationship behind.  

“She’ll Know” is a fantastic break up song that details a toxic relationship. One of my favorite lines in this song is “You were a temporary high/and I’ve broken the bridge leading back to you.” Samantha’s voice has such power on this track.  

“Through with It” is a rollicking song that has a strong country flavor, and it features an excellent teasing, taunting vocal. Samantha makes it clear that she is tired of the toxic masculinity this guy has to offer, as she sings on the chorus, “Get out, get over it/You can’t even call this quits/Cause we weren’t even something worth a mention/And I’m through with it.”  

“Porch Light” shows off the lower range of Samantha’s voice nicely. It’s another excellent song, about finding love and sticking with it. Samantha Mae’s lyrics are thoughtful and heartfelt, and free from cliches. “Through all the years of my mistakes/I never made it easy for us to make it/But darlin’ we made it/The best damn story that we’ll tell to our children/Under that porch light.”  

“Keep You Happy” is a song about loss and saying goodbye. It has a bittersweet flavor, and the music still has a bounce to it, even though the lyrics are melancholy.  

“Time” is a lovely song, a slow ballad that finds the narrator worried that she’srunninoutta time...pullin’ rope every day with the Devil/Nothin’ heard and nothin’ said.”  

“Mosaic” has a harder rock sound than the other songs on the album. Samantha sings about “Tension, tension builds and choir sounds/Conducting a catastrophic blow/To fuel my rage as I explode.” It’s a fantastic song, and a really strong song to end the album with.  

Reverie is an album with no weak songs. The production on Reverie is superb, with each song having a distinct sound and feel, and yet there’s a cohesion to the album as well. The variety of songs that Samantha Mae has written is really amazing. I’m impressed with her range as a songwriter, especially for a debut album. Samantha Mae is also a superb singer, and it’s easy to imagine her interpreting songs from many different genres. Reverie is an outstanding piece of work, and I’m looking forward to what Samantha Mae does next.  

Monday, June 25, 2018

Concert Review: James Taylor and Bonnie Raitt at the Xcel Energy Center

Poster for James Taylor and Bonnie Raitt.

On Friday night James Taylor and Bonnie Raitt brought their songs to the Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul in front of a supportive and enthusiastic audience. The show was Raitt’s first since undergoing emergency surgery at the end of April. She looked and sounded good, and she played some awesome guitar during her hour-long set. 

Taylor came out onstage to introduce Raitt, which was a nice gesture. It was clear to see throughout the evening what a close bond the two musicians have. I’m not that familiar with Bonnie Raitt’s music, but I enjoyed hearing her in person, and she puts on a very good show. Raitt’s songs were mainly the blues-rock that she’s most famous for, and her killer band did a great job backing her up. I was excited to learn that Ricky Fataar played the drums in Raitt’s band. To me, Fataar will always be the silent Stig O’Hara from Eric Idle and Neil Innes’ Beatles parody The Rutles. Cool fact: Fataar also played drums for the Beach Boys in the early 1970’s.

I can’t remember the first time I heard of James Taylor. Since we share a last name, I feel like I’ve always known who he was, simply because he was one of the most famous people with my last name. I didn’t listen to his music until I was an adult, but I really enjoy his songs. As I wrote in my review of Paul Simon’s concert, there’s something about Simon and Taylor’s voices that is warm and comforting. James Taylor always feels like autumn to mehe balances the excitement of summer with the wistful melancholy of winter. 

My wife and I saw James Taylor sing “America the Beautiful” at Obama’s second inauguration, but I hadn’t seen him in concert before. Taylor is an engaging performer with a low-key charisma who draws you into his songs and stories. In the video montage that preceded Taylor taking the stage, he said in an interview, “When I write songs I don’t present a version of myself, I’m presenting myself.” I thought that was an astute comment about his musical style. 

Taylor’s set list drew heavily from his classic 1970’s albums, and included just about all of his best-known songs. Highlights included a smoking version of Taylor’s blues parody “Steamroller,” which he said “takes longer to perform than it did to write.” Taylor opened with “Carolina in My Mind,” one of his classic songs, and a beautiful evocation of home. 

The band backing Taylor did a superb job of making his melodies come alive, and Taylor is an inventive enough singer that he’s able to vary his phrasing without making the songs sound totally different from the studio versions. Taylor’s voice has also held up amazingly well over the years. At 70, he doesn’t seem to have lost any of his top range, and his voice still has the same high tenor sweetness that it did back in the 1970’s. 

Taylor sang several songs accompanied by his backup singers, and it was lovely to hear them harmonize together. One of the highlights was “Shed a Little Light,” a lovely gospel-inflected song from Taylor’s 1991 album, New Moon Shine. Taylor also performed excellent versions of “Mexico,” “Up on the Roof,” and “Shower the People,” three of my favorites from his catalogue.

The encore was superb, as Bonnie Raitt came back out to join Taylor and the band for a cover of Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode.” Taylor then sang a lovely version of “You’ve Got a Friend,” and serenaded Raitt with “You Can Close Your Eyes.” It was a fun evening with one of great singer-songwriters. 

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Concert Review: Rufus Wainwright at the Fitzgerald Theater



Rufus Wainwright at the Fitzgerald Theater, April 13, 2013. (Photo by Mark Taylor.)

Last night my wife and I went to see Rufus Wainwright at the Fitzgerald Theater in Saint Paul. We also saw him last summer at the Minnesota Zoo, which I wrote about here. This show was a solo concert, presented by Minnesota Public Radio station 89.3 The Current. It was a terrific show, and Rufus was in a very good mood. Wainwright has an easy, relaxed charisma on stage. He’s able to do a solo show very easily because he’s so obviously at ease in front of an audience. He’s funny, charming, and intelligent. As I noted in my review of Rufus’s show at the Zoo last year, he definitely has some traits in common with his father, folk singer Loudon Wainwright III, who is also a very funny, charming, and outgoing solo performer. (I saw Loudon in concert last year at the Cedar Cultural Center, which I reviewed here.)

Rufus Wainwright is a very unique singer, songwriter, and performer. There’s no one I’d really compare him to, which I think is a good thing. His songs encompass many different sounds and styles. Rufus’s voice is so amazing. He has a huge range, and he can project so much emotion with his vocals. He held some super long notes on “Vibrate,” and it was fun to hear him show off a little bit.

It’s clear that Rufus really enjoys the Twin Cities, as he mentioned that he’s always loved Minneapolis and that he’s beginning to love Saint Paul as well. As he put it “Saint Paul’s not trying too hard.” This is a great explanation of the charm of Saint Paul. Saint Paul is what it is; it’s not trying to be showy. (I grew up in Minneapolis but now live in Saint Paul.) Rufus also revealed that he was wearing a new pair of shoes which he purchased from Heimie’s Haberdashery, which is one of the best men’s stores in the Twin Cities. This also gives me something in common with Rufus, as I have also bought a pair of shoes at Heimie’s-in addition to the suit I was married in. 

Wainwright opened with “The Art Teacher,” which is one of my favorite songs of his. I love the story the song tells, I love that it’s about art, and I love that he sings it from a female perspective. “The Art Teacher” tells the story of a schoolgirl who has a crush on her art teacher, “He asked us what our favorite work of art was/ But never could I tell him it was him.” Great song, and with Rufus’s dynamic piano playing it made for a dramatic concert opener. 

Rufus’s vocals were soaring on the catchy “Vibrate,” aka, “My Phone’s On Vibrate For You,” and he held a very, very long note at the end of the song. Wainwright has an amazing gift for writing infectious melodies that remain in your brain long after you’ve heard them. 

Rufus switched from piano to guitar for “Out of the Game” the super catchy title track to his most recent album, and “Jericho,” also from “Out of the Game.” “Out of the Game” is one of my favorite Rufus songs; it’s so catchy and has such a great arrangement. 

For the rest of the concert Rufus played piano, and the next song was “Who Are You New York?” His piano playing on “New York” is so gorgeous and lovely to listen to. Rufus told a story about meeting the singer-songwriter Jeff Buckley, shortly before Buckley tragically drowned in 1997. Rufus said that he had been somewhat jealous of Buckley, as his career seemed to be advancing at a faster pace than Wainwright’s. But Rufus went on to say that by spending time with Buckley he learned how gifted and fragile Buckley was, and his envy went away. Rufus said he wished they could have sung together, which would have been a magical meeting of great voices. Rufus then sang “Memphis Skyline,” which he wrote for Buckley after his death. “Skyline” segued directly into “Hallelujah,” the Leonard Cohen song that both Buckley and Wainwright recorded well-known versions of. Then it was time for intermission, with Rufus promising us a special surprise for the second half of the concert.

The special surprise was the very first choral performance of  Wainwright's piece "Bloom," which was written for a dance company. "Bloom" is based on poems by Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson, and was sung by the Twin Cities choir Vocal Essence, conducted by Philip Brunelle. "Bloom" was very nice, and you could tell that Rufus was really thrilled to have it sung the way it's meant to be. This special touch made Wainwright's affection for the Twin Cities clear. That he went to the time and trouble and expense to have a local choir perform this piece says a lot about how he feels about the Twin Cities.

Rufus then returned to the piano and sang “Going to a Town,” another one of my favorites of his. He followed that with the very catchy “Montauk,” which imagines Rufus’s daughter going to visit Rufus and his husband on Long Island when she’s an adult. The next song was the very moving “Zebulon.” I’ve heard “Zebulon” before, but had never paid it much attention. For whatever reason, the emotion of the song really struck me when I heard Rufus sing it last night. “Zebulon” was the closing song on Rufus’s 2010 album “All Days Are Nights: Songs for Lulu,” his concept album about the death of his mother, the folk singer Kate McGarrigle. So obviously the song has a lot of meaning for Rufus. It’s a slow song, with a melancholy melody. Lyrically, it’s about the narrator’s friend Zebulon coming to visit, whom the narrator has not seen in a long time. The only reference to death is the lyric “My mother’s in the hospital,” but a prevailing sense of sadness runs through the song. It also struck me last night how close Rufus obviously was with his mother. The first time I saw Rufus in concert was 2010, when he was touring “All Days Are Nights.” He performed the entire album from start to finish, with a request for no applause between songs. Rufus also didn’t talk between any of the songs. Once that half of the show was over, Rufus was his usual outgoing self. It was a strange experience, seeing this singer I wasn’t very familiar with performing sad song after sad song with no interaction from the audience. He seemed like a man possessed. Looking back, I think I get that concert more. His mother died and he was obviously very close to her and was still mourning her through performing these songs. References to his mother’s death still crop up on the “Out of the Game” album. On “Montauk,” the lyrics reference “One day years ago in Montauk lived a woman now a shadow/There she does wait for us in the ocean.” The closing song on “Out of the Game” is the lovely “Candles,” which is also a tribute to Rufus’s mother. During the encore, Rufus spoke effusively about tribute concerts for his mother this summer in New York, and the upcoming documentary, “Sing Me the Songs That Say I Love You,” which documents one of the tribute concerts.

 Rufus closed the show with perhaps his most famous song, “Cigarettes and Chocolate Milk,” which he gave a lovely reading of. He quickly came back for an encore, and played an interesting mix of four songs. First up was “Millbrook,” from his first album, followed by a song written by his mother, “The Walking Song,” which was lovely and quite moving. Next was “Complainte de le Butte,” which is a cover of a French song that Rufus sang for the “Moulin Rouge” soundtrack. Finally, Rufus closed the show with “Foolish Love,” the opening song from his first album. On one of the encore songs, I think it was “Foolish Love,” he made several mistakes in his piano playing and laughed at himself for it, but if he hadn’t pointed them out I don’t think I would have noticed-his playing still sounded great to me. It was a fun evening with a very talented and gregarious performer.

Set list:
The Art Teacher
The Maker Makes
Vibrate
Out of the Game
Jericho
Who Are You New York?
Memphis Skyline
Hallelujah
Intermission
Bloom-sung by Vocal Essence
Going To a Town
Montauk
Zebulon
Cigarettes and Chocolate Milk
Encore:
Millbrook
The Walking Song
Complainte de la Butte (from Moulin Rouge)
Foolish Love