Concert Review

Richie Havens’s hippie minstrel show; Jess Klein’s arrival
By Seth Rogovoy

(LENOX, Mass., October 1, 2000) Nostalgia was the operative dynamic of the evening at Ozawa Hall on Saturday night, as Richie Havens and Aztec Two-Step took listeners back a quarter-century or more to a time at once more innocent and, perhaps, more vital.

Havens, the iconic folk-hippie, may have aged some, but time has only ripened him. Bedecked in his purple floor-length tunic, with a flowing gray beard and hint of a pony tail, he had the presence of a folk-Buddha or sage, albeit one with a quirky, whispery wit. He seemed to be in on a not-so-secret secret, one he happily shared with his audience, who got the joke, which was that at a Richie Havens concert, it’s always 1969, and freedom’s just another word for the last song on his set list.

Havens always was and still is unique. He’s a self-made folksinger, one who invented his own style of performance which hasn’t varied in over 30 years. Now as then, he takes popular and obscure folk and pop songs and runs them through the Richie Havens blender, and out comes Bob Dylan and Beatles songs that bear little to no resemblance to their original versions.

Instead they’re delivered as impassioned tirades over rapidly strummed, open-tuned modal chords. Stripped of melody and rhythm, the songs lose their native impact, instead serving as raw material for Haven’s torrential outpourings of raw emotion, courtesy of his resonant, gluey baritone, as much the instrument as his guitar.

Havens peppered his hour-long program with tales, some evocative, some simply bizarre, from the lifelong tour he said he’s been on since ’67. Fans greeted stories about Greenwich Village coffeehouses and phrases like “blows my mind,” “hip” and “far out” like parched wanderers in a desert suddenly stumbling upon an oasis. A lengthy digression about an unnamed guitarist who spouted cryptic koans on Muscle Beach left listeners scratching their heads, however, much like the unfortunate musclehead who eventually was revealed as the butt of the joke.

Ultimately, Havens is simply a category to himself, and if his stylized renditions made everything he played sound like the same song, it didn’t much matter to the audience; they happen to like that song just fine. They liked Aztec Two-Step too, even though the duo’s particular style of 1970’s pop-folk doesn’t hold up as well as that of Havens. This is partly because there’s nothing particularly original about it; Rex Fowler and Neal Shulman play a sincere, gentle, wistful but ultimately unsophisticated style of pop-influenced folk-rock that smooths over folk’s rough edges and avoids rock’s dissonances.

What’s left is unconvincing, as in a song that implores its listeners to dance while offering them no reason to do so, or as in their cult favorite, “The Persecution and Restoration of Dean Moriarty (On the Road),” whose cliché image of Jack Kerouac as an outsider is the musical equivalent of those Gap ads that use the writer’s image to sell khakis.

The revelation of the evening was opener Jess Klein. In her all-too-brief set, the singer-songwriter displayed immense promise to go along with her overwhelming talent. Klein combined the naked expressiveness of Emmylou Harris, the rootsy sensuality of Lucinda Williams and the sheer tonal beauty of Joan Baez in a voice all her own.

The half-dozen, well-crafted songs she played showed an astonishing range of mood and narrative style; “The Cloud Song” was a poem she wrote for her mother; “Ireland” was a fierce message to a lover running away from problems at home; “I’ll Be Alright” was an imaginary letter from a female millworker uprooted from her family farm.

The dimunitive Klein boasts enormous vocal range and power. She isn’t always fleet with her guitar, and she lacked the commanding focus and presence of her much more experienced colleagues on the evening’s bill. Given time, however, there’s seemingly little to get in her way of being the main attraction.


[This review originally appeared in the Berkshire Eagle on Oct. 2, 2000. Copyright Seth Rogovoy 2000. All rights reserved.]



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