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Alejandro Escovedo: Old folks boogie

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Onstage Thursday night at Cat's Cradle, Alejandro Escovedo told a very funny story about asking his teenage son Paris what he thought of his old man's music. "It's old music," Paris reportedly replied, "for old people."

Well, maybe so. But you still can't find a better example of rocking gracefully on into one's later years than Escovedo, who turned 60 years old this month and is still out there offering rocked-up pearls of wisdom. That anecdote introduced the song "Down in the Bowery," a fatherly prayer with one of my favorite lyrics from last year: "I hope you live long enough to forget half the stuff that they taught you."

In contrast to some of his lavishly orchestrated bands of tours past, Escovedo's current band is a streamlined four-piece featuring lead guitarist David Pulkingham. Long stretches of Thursday's show featured noise, glorious noise, with Escovedo and Pulkingham trading salvos of feedback on a set mostly drawn from Escovedo's 2010 release "Street Songs of Love"; they also fired up the riff to Led Zeppelin's "Black Dog" at one point (and I was only sorry that he didn't actually sing that one).

Still, my favorite part came when they switched over to acoustic guitars for a couple of songs, the instrumental "Fort Worth Blue" followed by the beautifully dreamy majesty of "Rosalie" -- a  sweet song of love. Can't wait for him to come back...

(photo credit: Alex Howard)

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Was it crowded?

Blureu, thanks for the tip.  I'm listening to the show now.

Was Cat's Cradle very crowded?  I've seen Escovedo there twice, and both times the club was about half full.  When we went to see John Hiatt a few months ago, however, Cat's Cradle was so crowded it was uncomfortable, and we left halfway through the show.  For that reason, and because AE seems to be getting more popular, I decided to skip this most recent show by Alejandro.  I'm just getting too old to enjoy standing around for hours in the middle of a crowd.

Was it crowded

It was a decent-sized crowd, but not totally packed out, either. I'd say between half and two-thirds full.

Recording of show

There is a great recording of the show on archive.org. It won't let me post the link. boo!

Google it :)

I'm just saying

"Long stretches of Thursday's show featured noise, glorious noise, with Escovedo and Pulkingham trading salvos of feedback." Whoa. I thought you wern't a fan of jam band music. I mean, what happens if you substitute Bob Weir and Jerry Garcia for Escovedo and Pulkingham in that sentence?

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About the blogger

David Menconi has been the News & Observer's music critic since 1991. Before that, he spent five years at the Daily Camera in Boulder, Colo. He has a masters in journalism from the University of Texas and a B.A. in English from Southwestern University. You can find more of his writing here.

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