In concert on August 05: Edmonton @ Edmonton Folk Festival

*
*** Fans: Tweet about the concert you attended, submit your concert review via the Post a Comment form below. If you want to submit the setlist, press reviews, a scan of  your ticket, photos, videos… please send me an email at chapmanist@yahoo.com
***

VIDEOS

Baby Can I Hold You
[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NIpLd47ljrs&autoplay]

Talkin’Bout A Revolution
[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SbAx2f89S9Q&autoplay]
[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uT4aHhhI6U&autoplay]

Fast Car
[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68QzNr9KDh0&autoplay]

PRESS REVIEWS

  • Lilith Fair for the folk crowd, Ladies shine in special Folk Festival one-off concert – By MIKE ROSS – Sun Media, August 06, 2009

EDMONTON – As if the folk fest isn’t long enough, they’ve gone and tacked another day on the thing — a mini Lilith Fair reunion right there on Gallagher Hill.

They say last night’s show with Sarah McLachlan, Tracy Chapman and Meaghan Smith wasn’t officially part of the Edmonton Folk Music Festival. It just looked, sounded and smelled exactly like the folk fest. It was a cool way to celebrate 30 years, in any case. By year 40, this thing might be a week long, feature 1,000 shows and bring the entire southside to a standstill.

Sarah McLachlan was the perfect way to illustrate the mellow side of the folk fest. Her melancholy songs and haunting mezzo-soprano (meaning she can sing high, but not high enough to crack glass) sent the crowd into laid-back spasms of candlelit rapture of a sort seen only at this event. Put it this way: there wasn’t a lot of opportunity to warm up by dancing. When this lady says she’s going to “slow it down,” she really means it. The mellow vibe was enhanced by a stripped down band that lacked a drummer. McLachlan, of course, divorced her husband/drummer Ashwin Sood last year and apparently hasn’t found a replacement yet.

No matter. The semi-retired mother of two doesn’t have a lot of new material, but she has so many huge songs in her arsenal she’s almost at the classic rock phrase where “here’s one from my new album” is an invitation to go for a beer, or perhaps in this case it’s a paper cup filled with white wine. The shivering crowd drank it all in. After joshing with the audience about the lousy weather (recalling the even lousier weather in Edmonton in 1999 on the last date of Lilith Fair), she launched into Building a Mystery. Other melancholy winners heard last night included Adia, I Will Remember You and Possession, perhaps one of the most beautiful songs about unhealthy obsession ever written. While she admitted she hasn’t actually played live since Canada Day, there wasn’t a hint of rustiness about her last night. She even managed to pull off a flawless version of Joni Mitchell’s River (chosen by the crowd from two possible Joni covers), plus Paul McCartney’s Blackbird. The simple arrangements, often with just piano, showcased her voice in the best — and mellowest — way possible.

Speaking of perfectly mellow for a perfectly mellow opening to the folk fest, Tracy Chapman was able to captivate thousands on the hill all by herself.

If anyone was disappointed she didn’t have a band behind her, I didn’t hear any complaining. It was more like preaching to the converted as her gentle yet politically charged music wafted over the hill, finding many sympathetic ears.

Songs new and old addressed politics, race relations, domestic disturbances and the folly of driving around in a “fast car” when one has no other worthy prospects in life.

Heard in the encore was her best-known song, Give Me One Reason, a great wake-up call for a last chance to save a doomed love affair. She did a spine-tingling a cappella version of Behind the Wall, about feeling helpless as a witness to spousal abuse.

Accompanying herself on guitar, some kind of electric banjo thingy and at least one appearance from the dreaded round-the-neck harmonica holder, Chapman also pulled out hopeful material from her latest album, Our Bright Future, which was released in November 2008. You have to wonder what she would’ve called it had the U.S. election come out differently.

Our first performer Meaghan Smith was just a kid when Sarah launched her all-girl festival, but she would’ve been a ringer for Lilith Fair — at least on the “Village” stage.

Gifted with a sultry voice, a wry sense of humour and a penchant for twisting up jump jazz with ragtime and acoustic country music, Smith and her “Cricket’s Orchestra” flew through amusing trifles of tune-age dealing mainly with former boyfriends.

One broke out of jail, another spurned her love, yet another broke her heart — and all of it came off like expressions of pure joy.

Perhaps she’s in some blissful state of denial: “Here’s a song I wrote for somebody … I’m pretty sure he loves me,” she said, introducing her first heartbreak tune, I Know.

Samples of old-time sounds — carnival calliope, string sections that could be soundtracks to silent movies, flowing harp glissandos — added a surreal touch to Smith’s inventive, rootsy style.

The closest comparison might be Amy Correia, a mandolin-strumming singer who specializes in putting an angelic touch to deep and depressing topics.

This seemed to be a running theme for the evening.

  • McLachlan performance shines in candlelit night, Fundraiser a success despite gov’t snub – By Sandra Sperounes, Edmonton Journal, August 6, 2009

FESTIVAL REVIEW
Sarah McLachlan, Tracy Chapman, Meaghan Smith
When: Wednesday
Where: Folk Fest, Gallagher Park

Chilly August evening or not, there’s no better venue for Sarah McLachlan than the great outdoors.

The Vancouver songstress and her earthy tunes tend to fall flat in hockey arenas and football stadiums, but they’re tailor-made for the idyllic surroundings of Gallagher Park.

As the headliner for Wednesday’s Folk Fest Forever concert, her rich, lilting voice resonated up and down the candle-speckled hill, warding off the rain clouds which threatened to burst.

McLachlan started with Building A Mystery and Possession, a haunting piano ballad about stalkers.

“I’ll take your breath away,” she sang to a hill of fans clad in scarves, blankets and fall jackets.

Her set, which also included Adia, I Will Remember You and a lot of anecdotes, topped off a night of soft, gentle melodies–perfect for meditation, meeting old friends, reflecting on the tragedy of Big Valley Jamboree, and easing into the next four days of the folk fest.

Wednesday’s concert was a fundraiser for the festival’s endowment fund, which now sits at $500,000. It was a bittersweet evening for producer Terry Wickham and his volunteers– earlier in the day, they found out the 30-year-old event wouldn’t be receiving any money from the federal government’s Marquee Tourism Events fund.

At least we can always rely on ourselves– as of Wednesday morning, the fundraiser was close to selling out of its 11,000 tickets, according to publicist Silvio Dobri.(He says it’ll take a few days before the festval can determine how much was raised.)

Unlike Stephen Harper and his Conservative pals, folk star Tracy Chapman didn’t disappoint fans. As the temperature started to plunge, she warmed the crowd with soulful acoustic folk tunes such as Say Hallelujah, Across the Tracks, Fast Car and Give Me One Reason.

While she’s painfully shy–no interviews, no photos–she was still a compelling performer and, contrary to rumours, she wasn’t afraid to make eye contact with the crowd, tell stories or crack jokes about the weather. “Just taking a moment to warm my hands on the very tepid cup of tea,” she quipped after playing a witty, anti-Hollywood tune, I Did It All, from her latest album, Our Bright Future.

The title could also apply to opener Meaghan Smith, who played a winsome set reminiscent of ’30s shuffle, twangy torch tunes, and ’50s movie musicals.

The Halifax siren only has a four-song EP to her name, but she’s already toured with k. d. lang and Sarah McLachlan, who was mingling with fans backstage during the up’n’ comers’ set.

“You’re one of the best folk fests we’ve ever been to,” said Smith, at the end of her 30-minute set. Tory politicians may not like the folk fest, but artists do–and ultimaely, that’s what counts.

ssperounes@thejournal.canwest.com
© Copyright (c) The Edmonton Journal

  • Folk Fest: Sarah, Tracy, Meaghan – By Sandra Sperounes, Edmonton Journal, August 6, 2009

Chilly August evening or not, there’s no better venue for Sarah McLachlan than the great outdoors. The Vancouver songstress and her earthy tunes tend to fall flat in hockey arenas and football stadiums, but they’re tailor-made for the idyllic surroundings of Gallagher Park.

As the headliner for Wednesday’s Folk Fest Forever concert, her rich, lilting voice resonated up and down the candle-speckled hill, warding off the rain clouds which threatened to burst. McLachlan started with Building A Mystery and Possession, a haunting piano ballad about stalkers. “I’ll take your breath away,” she sang to a hill of fans clad in scarves, blankets, and fall jackets.

Her set, which also included Adia, I Will Remember You, and a lot of anecdotes, topped off a night of soft, gentle melodies — perfect for meditation, meeting old friends, reflecting on the tragedy of Big Valley Jamboree, and easing into the next four days of the Folk Fest.

Wednesday’s concert was a fundraiser for the festival’s endowment fund, which now sits at $500,000. It was a bittersweet evening for producer Terry Wickham and his volunteers — earlier in the day, they found out the 30-year-old event wouldn’t be receiving any money from the federal government’s Marquee Tourism Events fund.

At least we can always rely on ourselves — as of Wednesday morning, the fundraiser was close to selling out of its 11,000 tickets, according to publicist Silvio Dobri. (He says it’ll take a few days before the festval can determine how much was raised.)

Unlike Stephen Harper and his Conservative pals, folk star Tracy Chapman didn’t disappoint fans. As the temperature started to plunge, she warmed the crowd with soulful acoustic folk tunes such as Say Hallelujah, Across the Tracks, Fast Car and Give Me One Reason.

While she’s painfully shy – no interviews, no photos – she was still a compelling performer, and contrary to rumours, she wasn’t afraid to make eye contact with the crowd, tell stories or crack jokes about the weather. “Just taking a moment to warm my hands on the very tepid cup of tea,” she quipped after playing a witty, anti-Hollywood tune, I Did It All, from her latest album, Our Bright Future.

The title could also apply to opener Meaghan Smith, who played a winsome set reminiscent of ‘30s shuffle, twangy torch tunes, and ’50 movie musicals. The Halifax siren only has a four-song EP to her name, but she’s already toured with k.d. lang and Sarah McLachlan, who was mingling with fans backstage during the up ‘n’ comer’s set.

“You’re one of the best Folk Fests we’ve ever been to,” said Smith, at the end of her 30-minute set. Tory politicians may not like the Folk Fest, but artists do — and ultimately, that’s what counts.

INFOS

Venue: Edmonton Folk Festival
Other Acts: Sarah McLachlan, Meaghan Smith
Tickets: Tickets – $70-$90

Share this article
Shareable URL
Prev Post

In concert on August 03: Glenside @ Keswick Theatre

Next Post

Tracy Chapman to collaborate with Herbie Hancock

Comments 5
  1. Was simply amazing. Crystal clear sound in the open-air venue. She made her 6-string (the ‘regular’ one; not that neat little one she also used) sound almost like a 12-string. Her musical soul just glows on stage. Didn’t like the cool Canadian evening; hard on her fingers! Played by herself, no band. Her set was worth the admission. With the rest: BONUS!

  2. A real privelege to see this great talent in person. Humble, gracious and warm. Her voice was beautiful and near perfection. Great show!

  3. Tracy Chapman is an incredible talent and she proved to be a magnificent live performer. Her voice & songs made for a wonderful evening of entertainment.
    I was honored she made the “out of the way” stop on her tour to come all the way to the Edmonton Folk Festival. It is fantastic that Tracy is a supporter our fundraising efforts for the Arts’.

Comments are closed.

Read next