Tag Archives: joan shelley

Joe Manning with Spirits of the Red City @ The Workhouse Ballroom (10.30.2010)

several years ago, i went to see mary gauthier at (imho) one of the worst venues in louisville, uncle pleasant’s. for the reasons that made the place is a great neighborhood bar, it was horrible as a listening room. the place was loud, smokey, people rambling around, talking loudly and getting loaded up fast.

then, this unassuming guy with a full “homeless” beard, seemingly walked on stage from the audience, quietly stood behind the mic and without a word or introduction, started to sing acapella. before the end of the first verse, the place was stunningly quiet and stayed that way for the rest of the set. that guy was joe manning. i’ve been a huge fan ever since.

tonight was one of those “secret” type shows, in was mentioned on joe’s facebook page, only 90 tickets were available @ cherry bomb, a quirky vintage clothing store and you weren’t told of the secret venue until you opened your sealed ticket. and that was one of the coolest parts of a very cool night, the venue, “the workhouse ballroom” was actually long, narrow, “bunker” built into the side of a hill on lexington road. it was easy to assume that this was some kind of weapons storage or safety shelter from the civil war era. all that was visible from outside was a door on the side of the hill, i’ve driven past it many times, never having noticed it before or having any idea of it’s existence. inside, it was long, narrow with rounded walls and ceiling made of hand laid stones, it was literally “underground.”

being halloween eve, about half the crowd was dressed for the holiday, there were mummies, a mozart, nurses, vampires, etc mixed it with the crowd (there appeared to be well over the 90 number announced). it was a “byob” event and everyone seemed to be having a great time and were respectful, appreciative and supportive.

“spirits of the red city,” from minneapolis, opened and they were wonderful. a quirky five piece, their set was all un-mic’ed/un-amped acoustic and the room handeled it perfectly. i knew virtually nothing about them and really enjoyed their set. they are definitely worth looking into.

next up, ironically, joe started the night much like the first time i saw him, unannounced, with people still milling about, he (joined by the lovely joan shelly) opened with a quiet acapella and within a few seconds, the room was still and quiet. for the rest of his set, until the last few songs, when joan rejoined him. joe was accompanied by his longtime friend and bandmate in “the obscure handsome brothers,” glen dentinger. they played about 45 minutes of originals by joe, and these guys lay down some of the most incredible harmonies that you will ever hear. amazing stuff.

joan came back up for the last three songs, the first of which was her beautiful song, “unbound,” joe introduced it “as a hundred year old song that joan just wrote,” it could be. and they ended the set much as it was begun, with joan and joe nailing and old, traditional irish folk song, acapella.

i’m so glad i went to see mary in that shitty little bar years ago and found joe’s music…

(it was too dark in the place to get any pictures, and there is nothing that i can find on youtube of joe, here’s a video of joe joining joan on “unbound.”)

Joan Shelley @ ear x-tacy (10.16.2010)

this afternoon, joan shelley played a very nice set, featuring music from her recent independent release “by dawnlight,” at ear x-tacy.

joan brought along a couple of friends to help her out, they happened to be my two favorite local artists; joe manning on guitar and vocals and her maiden radio bandmate, cheyenne mize on fiddle.

“by dawnlight,” joan’s first disc was released earlier in the year and is really a wonderful little record. well worth your time, effort and hard earned money. you can have a free listen (but support the artist and go ahead and buy it too) @ http://joanshelley.bandcamp.com/album/by-dawnlight

cheyenne marie mize

joe manning

“Maiden Radio” Album Release Show (w/”The Obscure Handsome Brothers) 09.26.2010

what can i say? two of my favorite local performers; joe manning and cheyenne marie mize performing on the same bill has to equal a wonderful evening of music. and it did, even topping my already high expectations.

when an evening in a simple, yet elegant old chuch with rich, warm acoustics begins with the vocals of joe manning, glen detinger, nathan salsburg as the “obscure hansome brothers” delivering classic covers (old gospel, tom waits and warren zevon) and selected original songs, you know you’re off to a good start. had the show ended after their set, it would have been more than worth my time and the minimal cover charge.

but end, it did not. in fact, it was just a perfect beginning…

take three beautiful women (maiden radio; cheyenne marie mize, joan shelley, julia purcell) with great individual voices, add in wonderful two & three part harmonies, guitars, violins, banjos and some traditional american music (both original and covers) and the only sensible thing to do is just sit back and let the experience wash over you. and that’s exactly what the quiet, yet apprectative crowd did.

the gathering was to celebrate the release of maiden radio’s self titled first record, and yes, i mean “record,” it was released only on vinyl (you also received a “download code” with the purchase). cheyenne, joan and julia played a nice mix of songs from the new record, a few traditional covers and one or two originals that didn’t make it onto the record.

during the set, they often swapped lead vocals, joined together on two and three part harmonies, traded instruments and told a story or two, often joking about julia’s pregnancy and the fact that she could possibly deliver at any moment. it was obvious that they were having a good time and enjoying themselves, the evening and the attentive audience.

the evening was capped by the joe, glen and nathan joining the ladies for the last couple of songs and closing out the show with a quietly stunning version of stephen foster’s “hard times.”

these type of small, intimate shows are my favorite, and to me, this is what music is and should be about. artists doing what they feel, what they love… in a roomful of like-minded souls that want to hear and feel it with them. personally, i’ll take a show like this over U2 or the like in some corporately named mega arena any day.

you can buy maiden radio’s record @: maiden radio

the obscure handsome brothers

maiden radio

http://picasaweb.google.com/bivester