For the second year in a row, the Warren Haynes-led Mule fired up devotees with blues-infused favorites and singular covers. (Photo gallery, video)
Pandora’s online version of “Gov’t Mule radio” brings up the usual suspects of peripherally related, blues-hued rock acts: Stevie Ray Vaughan, Led Zeppelin, Eric Clapton, The Black Crowes and, of course, The Allman Brothers.
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But “friends of Mule” who’ve witnessed guitarist-singer Warren Haynes and his exceptional cast of musical comrades kick up their heels live know darn well there’s nothing quite like Gov’t Mule.
This Southern-fried supergroup brews its own, inimitable, tasty stew of soulful, muscle-bound strains – a diverse musical feast that changes nightly with the band’s bottomless pit of songs.
And so it was on Thursday, when the band returned to Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park on a breezy, gorgeous evening, delivering two sets covering 2 hours and 22 minutes, and not surprisingly, just 15 lengthy songs (depending on how you count medleys).
RIVETING MULE STANDARDS AND SURPRISING COVERS
For those figuring Haynes, drummer Matt Abts, keyboardist Danny Louis and bassist Jorgen Carlsson would play what amounts to a warm-up for their appearance this weekend at Tennessee’s humongous Bonnaroo festival, it was far more than that (even if it didn’t include a star guest like guitarist Donald Kinsey who appeared at last year’s Meijer Gardens show).
The crowd of 1,300-plus (why in tarnation wasn’t this a sellout?!?) certainly wasn’t shortchanged as Haynes and company showed their affection for the amphitheater with Mule faves (“Thorazine Shuffle,” “Beautifully Broken” “Scared to Live” “Bad Little Doggie,” “Frozen Fear”) that showed off Haynes’ unfathomable ability to slide seamlessly from blues to Southern rock to jazz to reggae to prog-rock with tasteful aplomb.
But it may have been the band’s always unpredictable choice of covers that really sealed the musical deal, pumping out Led Zeppelin’s “Dyer Maker,” Bill Withers’ “Ain’t No Sunshine” and even The Hollies’ “Bus Stop” (not to mention part of the “Mission Impossible” theme and other familiar melodies they weaved into various songs).
It’s what makes Mule, well, Mule.
Here are some highlights from the four-star show, with a Photo Gallery by Anna Sink and video snippets:
THE VIBE
Perfect, sun-drenched weather, with a light wind wafting through the amphitheater. The crowd was populated with clusters of tie-dyed, Deadhead-loving “older hippies,” but there were a fair number of younger jam-band devotees on hand, too, not to mention the usual gaggle of slack-jawed guitar geeks.
THE NIGHT’S BIG MOMENTS
“If Heartaches Were Nickels” midway through the second set boasted drop-dead gorgeous blues licks from Haynes, while the show-closing “Bus Stop” turned a 1966 pop hit into a psychedelic, slow-cooking, soulful masterpiece. But, really, the band was in stride from the opening salvo of “Thorazine Shuffle.”
THE BANTER
“We’ve got a beautiful night and a beautiful day and beautiful folks and beautiful music. What else do you need?” – Warren Haynes
“They do a different set every night. They’re just phenomenal musicians. You never know what crazy covers they’re going to play.” – John Ford, of Chicago, who’s seen Gov’t Mule 20 times and taped Thursday’s show along with a few other Mule disciples.
GOV’T MULE: THE LOCAL SPINS PHOTO GALLERY (JUNE 13)
Email John Sinkevics at jsinkevics@gmail.com.
Copyright 2013, Spins on Music
My favorite comment of the night came from some stuffy swell in the men’s room line who sniffed, “They didn’t sound like that on Spotify….”
Seriously, it was a different feel for a Mule show, especially in the second half. Very mellow with quite a few quiet, mournful songs. Perhaps to address volume issues in the second half? I don’t know. I do now I saw a lot of people leaving during the second set while they seemed rivited to the hill last year.
Speaking of the hill, did anybody notice they removed one (or more) of the levels at the top?
I am not sure what the people were doing behind me on the hill, but I was front and center and I know my feet didn’t stop moving the entire night. It was a great show!