28th Annual Steve Conn & Sonny Landreth Day After Thanksgiving Show

Fri Nov 29 2024 at 08:00 pm to 11:00 pm UTC-06:00

Spirits Food & Friends | Alexandria

Spirits Food & Friends
Publisher/HostSpirits Food & Friends
28th  Annual Steve Conn & Sonny Landreth Day After Thanksgiving Show
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Steve Conn & Sonny Landreth's Day After Thanksgiving Show live at Spirits!  Doors open at 6pm for dinner and ticket holders only.
About this Event

Join us for Steve Conn & Sonny Landreth's 28th Show live at Spirits Food & Friends! It's a Spirits tradition, and we are truly thankful to be able to host these legendary performers on this special night of great music and great friends. Please join us, and be a part of this epic night.

Doors open at 6pm for dinner and ticket holders only. Show starts at 8pm. Tickets will go on sale November 1st at 8am

Steve Conn's Biography

“It’s a bad neighborhood, but I keep coming back,” Steve Conn sings in the title cut to his fifth album, Flesh and Bone. “Searching for mercy, in spite of the facts,” he declares, inviting listeners on a guided tour of flowing grooves and vivid tales that hit extremely close to home.

Conn’s songs illuminate the human experience in a way few can. And given his many achievements and glowing accolades, it’s not surprising that he continues to best his own impressive high-water marks.

The son of a noted swing bandleader and a witty, vivacious bank teller, the masterful pianist, vocalist and songwriter has been on a quest for love, hope and truth since his earliest days. Take a listen to the gospel-tinged ballad “Sing Me To The Other Side,” and you’ll be immediately transported back to the loamy soil of central Louisiana where his career began. Conn’s time spent making music in the mountains of Colorado, the canyons of Los Angeles and the hills outside Nashville also colors his musical and lyrical insights.

He’s wry, but rootsy. Erudite but funky. And his songs offer unforgettable glimpses into experiences you might know all too well. “Sackcloth and ashes, 10,000 naps, there’s not a lot I have not tried / I don’t understand why I’m still not satisfied,” he sings before embarking on a virtuosic Wurlitzer excursion inside the simmering syncopation of “Satisfied.”

Conn has been known to call his oeuvre “drinking music for thinking people,” but that summation might not leave room for the elegant ache of “Annalee” and the delicate exploration of the long-faded relationship at the heart of “Forever Seventeen.” His opening lines can be both arresting and inviting, as in “Doing The Best I Can,” and his songs’ bridges are magnificently transporting, as in the string-led break on the confessional “You Don’t Know.”

Like the top-shelf players on Flesh and Bone, the multi-instrumentalist knows how to gracefully support a song and a singer. He’s toured Europe with legendary bluesman Albert King, played on “The Tonight Show” with acclaimed vocalist Shelby Lynne, and joined rock ’n’ roll icon Levon Helm onstage at the famed Ryman Auditorium. Conn has also played on 10 Grammy-nominated albums with artists from Bonnie Raitt to Sonny Landreth, and was the founding musical director of eTown, the weekly performance showcase heard on hundreds of public radio stations.

The songwriter also knows that sometimes success comes a little too late, as he sings in his new album’s opener, “Famous,” which shares a south-Louisiana feel with “Around and Around,” which matches mysticism with a raucous second-line groove. Conn plays accordion on the latter track, alto sax on the title cut, and melodica on the surging, cathartic “Let Me Cry.”

“Good Times Are Coming” is a novella-like companion to “Down On Rigolette,” from 2003’s Steve Conn, and it offers a different perspective on the tragedy and triumphs of the original tale. Flesh and Bone closes on an ethereal, elegiac note, floating away seemingly “Without A Trace,” but Conn’s latest collection of insightful songs and tour-de-force performances assures you that he won’t be disappearing anytime soon.

Sonny Landreth's Biography

A percussive burst of acoustic resonator guitar pushes the narrator on a journey “between the life I left and the edge of next” in the title cut of guitarist, songwriter and bandleader Sonny Landreth’s 14th album. As the singer feels the wind at his back, a rising bass line intersects Landreth’s vocalizing to stretch the fingerpicked tune into Far Eastern melodicism.

The south Louisiana artist’s groundbreaking work has long mixed familiarity with experimentation, and his latest 10-song collection stretches from hard-edged electric instrumentals to wistful acoustic ballads. The project’s range is the fruit of a renewed collaboration. Producer RS Field – who helmed Landreth’s trio of breakout albums – joined the six-stringer and co-producer Tony Daigle to finish the record.

“His brilliance and creative energy recharged us,” Landreth said of reuniting with Field. Most of the tracks were recorded live at famed Dockside Studios on the Vermilion River south of Lafayette, La. “We came up with new and better ideas, and that’s what you want,” he added. “It couldn’t have gone better.”

A quartet of instrumentals highlights the expressive power of bassist David Ranson, drummer Brian Brignac and multi-talented keyboardist/songwriter Steve Conn. The sultry, slow zydeco pulse of “Lover Dance With Me” features Landreth trading in his signature glass slide for his guitar’s tremolo arm and a rotating Leslie speaker cabinet. “Mule” follows, with its tailgate rhythm bouncing through a his-and-her tale of unrequited love.

“Groovy Goddess” takes the listener into harder-edged jazz-rock territory, showcasing the slide guitar prowess that has twice landed Landreth on the cover of Guitar Player magazine. “Honestly, I think the purest form of music is improvised,” the bandleader says. “When it flows, it’s exhilarating. It just seems to come out of nowhere and connect your heart and soul to your fingertips.” Blacktop Run comes on the heels of Landreth’s Grammy-nominated double album Recorded Live In Lafayette, which features an acoustic disc and an electric disc. The new record brings both sides together without concern for how the layered tracks might be arranged for the bandstand. “Different approaches can influence one another – and for me, that just makes it more musical, more interesting,” Landreth explains.

The first of two Conn compositions follows with a new arrangement built around a guitar tuning Landreth developed but had not yet used in the studio. “Somebody Gotta Make A Move” also features its composer on Wurlitzer electric piano and Hammond B-3 organ. “I could see this one becoming a blues standard,” Landreth says. “That’s the mark of a great song.”

“Beyond Borders” picks up the pace and features Conn in a role originally envisioned for Carlos Santana. Landreth composed the instrumental for From The Reach, his 2008 release featuring guest artists Eric Clapton, Eric Johnson, Vince Gill and others. “It’s complex,” Landreth says, “and now seems tailor-made for Steve.” “Don’t Ask Me,” the second Conn cut, delves into existential mysteries with humor via an acoustic, back porch Delta feel. Brignac played cajón, Ranson played ukulele bass, and Conn stretches out on accordion.

“The Wilds of Wonder” is a cinematic tribute to the brave folks working on the front lines of our planet’s environmental crises. And the shape-shifting instrumental “Many Worlds” builds on the previous number’s rich textures to bring the record to its final cut, “Something Grand,” the first Landreth recording in years without a guitar solo. That last tune, he says, “is a song of redemption. And though it’s between two people in a relationship, it also speaks to life’s larger challenges.”

After two Grammy nominations, multiple appearances at Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival and wide-ranging acclaim from fellow players and fans worldwide, Landreth is looking forward to playing the new material live. He’ll continue mixing electric and acoustic settings onstage, with Daigle bringing the sounds and concepts of the recording studio to venue mixing consoles.

“It’s all about telling the story,” Landreth says, “and as long as I can find my way up that path, I’m all in.” As the songwriter’s narrator sings in the title number of Blacktop Run, “A new day is dawning and I have never felt so alive.”

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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

Spirits Food & Friends, 1200 Texas Avenue, Alexandria, United States

Tickets

USD 53.04

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