St. Louis - Music - B-Sides gets personal with alt-folk troubadour Patty Griffin. - riverfronttimes.com
Steven Bridge  |  by www.riverfronttimes.com. All rights reserved. 7.04 | 0:19

Nintendo finally gets 1-Up on the competition.
Bow to your sensei.
"So I took some aspirin and read it again.

"

Here comes the neighborhood!
A small-town mayor's plan creates one big controversy.
Come out and support your favorites at Atomic Cowboy.

Many Valley Park residents want their mayor to step down.
Baseball's bad boy is now doing the Lord's work in O'Fallon, Missouri. How long will that last?

Get over it, you bleeding-heart liberal pieces of shit!"
We've even included a key!
(Even if they're not even aware of it.

)

Then we snag an interview with country legend and new friend of Lambchop Charlie Louvin.
Avant-garde label aPop Records opens a storefront and moves its operations onto Cherokee Street.
10 p.

m. Thursday, March 29. Way Out Club (2525 South Jefferson Avenue).

:30 p.m. Monday, July 24.

UMB Bank Pavilion (14141 Riverport Drive, Maryland Heights).

9 p.m.

Thursday, February 1. Off Broadway (3509 Lemp Avenue).

Friday, April 22; the Pageant (6161 Delmar Boulevard)
Sure, Patty Griffin's fan-favorite song, "Cold As It Gets," is a homage to Holocaust victims.

And true, she loaned her music to the soundtrack of Niagara, Niagara, a movie where a young woman with Tourette's syndrome is shot in the head. And OK, of all the Bruce Springsteen songs to cover, she chose the divorce chronicle "Stolen Car." So maybe Patty Griffin's music isn't exactly the best way to get the party started.

But her delicately morose alt-folk is the musical equivalent of running fingers over flames it hurts, it hurts, but oh, that exquisite pain. The sparseness of her music allows every trickled note to shiver with tortuous ecstasy, as close as musically possible to a literal heartrending. All the more compelling is her voice, which is perpetually on the cusp of a world-weary cry.

It's so doleful that she doesn't deserve a Grammy; she deserves an Oscar. In fact, although B-Sides isn't usually prone to quoting Dave Matthews, he was on point when he praised Griffin in a Boston Globe article by saying, "I can't think of a more beautiful singer and a better songwriter alive today." Yet for all of her musical emotional honesty, Griffin calling via phone from her tour bus is surprisingly reserved.

And introspection guides her Southern-tinged syntax. "I do bring a few elements of my own experiences into things," she says. "But for the most part, I piece outside things together feeling things, seeing things, living life.

" Despite possessing a body of work that expertly lends itself to commiseration with homesickness and crippling estrangement, Patty Griffin is feeling optimistic. Of her fifth studio effort, Children Running Through, she says, "I was looking for things that connected to the audience a little more closely not just sad songs. But I am a Pisces," she giggles.

Though Children has a few songs reminiscent of her past repertoire, overall it's a deviation from her norm. The album is atypically upbeat and layered with instruments, allowing Griffin to vocally leapfrog and sound younger than ever. (Only with an artist as mature as Griffin does nodding to youth signal growth.

) She cites her latest influences as "a lot of Sigur R o s, a lot of Cuban music it has a strong emotional pull for me. I also listened to Marvin Gaye, which isn't new, but..

.." She pauses, as if debating whether to continue, and then says with a cryptic laugh, "Yeah.

...

I got influences." But perhaps more important is her influence on others. Though Patty Griffin isn't necessarily a household name, many of her masterpieces are.

The Dixie Chicks' "Top of the World" and "Let Him Fly" are both Griffin covers, as are Bette Midler's "Moses" and Emmylou Harris' "One Big Love." When asked if it's difficult to be a seemingly silent partner in hit-making, she is characteristically modest. "As I get older," she says, "getting credit gets a lot less important to me.

There's a lot of amazing musicians out there that no one knows about. I walk into a Baptist church in Memphis and there are these amazing singers, amazing songwriters, and no one knows their names. There are more people out there not getting credit than those that do.

" That's not to say Griffin is unknown. Her fan base is fiercely loyal and helped Children Running Through debut at No. 34 on the Billboard charts.

But as much as she cherishes her public, she knows her formula and she's stickin' to it. "I won't let what the audience thinks they want direct me. I have to trust my own instincts, always.

Hey, that's what got me where I am." And though she speaks humbly of her success ("I have nothing to complain about. I make a good living.

"), her success-o-meter gauges her audience's response. "I see them smiling and dancing and, well," she laughs, "you really can't ask for more than that, can you?" 8 p.

m. Friday, March 30. Pageant, 6161 Delmar Boulevard.

$22.50. 314-726-6161.

Charlie Louvin lost his singing partner and brother, Ira, in 1965. His post-Louvin Brothers career has never been the same, but he hasn't faded away. Lambchop's Mark Nevers produced Louvin's new, self-titled release on the New York label Tompkins Square and seeing as it's jammed with guests such as George Jones, Will Oldham, Tift Merritt, Elvis Costello and Jeff Tweedy, the 79-year-old is clearly making a run for college-radio listeners, young rock fans who know the Louvin Brothers, but may not know Country Soul Brother No.

1. Now's their chance. B-sides: You'll be eighty years old this July.

I guess you're not ready for retirement? Charlie Louvin: I'll retire when I can't sing on key. I hope that's not soon!

Did you know who or what Lambchop was before this album? No sir. I'd never met Mark Nevers until Josh Rosenthal [of Tompkins Square] introduced us.

I knew the boy from Wilco, and I knew Uncle Tupelo, because they recorded "The Great Atomic Power." I was very familiar with Elvis Costello; he's an avid Louvin Brother fan, and I hope I made him a Charlie Louvin fan before this is over. Were you surprised by what Mark wanted to do in the studio?

Actually, Roy, I went in and did my parts. I was responsible for getting the Possum in there, and Tom T. Hall and Bobby Bare.

I assume they were going fishing afterward. But I live 75 miles outside of Nashville, so I suppose I wouldn't have had time to be there for all of it. Eventually I'll get to meet everyone, I hope.

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Keywords: Patty Griffin, Charlie Louvin, b Sides, Louvin Brothers, As It, Mark Nevers, No One, Children Running, Children Running Through, One Big
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