Over the course of five studio albums under their own name and a hatful of sessions with other acts (ranging from alt-country songbird
Neko Case to R&B wildman
Andre Ethier),
the Sadies have firmly established themselves as some of the finest pickers on the North American continent.
Dallas Good and
Travis Good's guitars conjure up a twangy netherworld hovering somewhere between California surf and Nashville twang along the broad plains of the Canadian prairies, and Mike Belitsky and
Sean Dean are a superbly malleable rhythm section, always giving the songs just what they need without getting in the way. What isn't as widely appreciated is how great a live band
the Sadies can be, but this two-disc set recorded during a two-day stand at Lee's Palace in Toronto proves that whatever these guys can do in the studio, they can do just as well (if not better) in front of a cheering crowd. Like many of their studio discs,
In Concert, Vol. 1 features an abundant helping of guest stars, ranging from
the Good Brothers (the country act led by
Dallas and
Travis' parents), former
Band keyboardist
Garth Hudson and members of
Blue Rodeo to
Jon Spencer,
Jon Langford of
the Mekons and
the Waco Brothers,
Gary Louris of
the Jayhawks, and frequent collaborators
Neko Case and
Kelly Hogan. Given the talent on-stage, it says a lot that
the Sadies not only don't drown in the wake of their "special guests," but sound fiery and fully in control for more than 110 minutes, and they can leap from the country gospel of "Higher Power" and the honky tonk fire of "1,000,002 Songs" to the blues-punk blast of "Back Off" (with
Jon Spencer adding his trademark spiel) and the flinty roar of "Memphis, Egypt" (as
Jon Langford briefly turns
the Sadies into
the Mekons) and land firmly on their feet every time. Also, while there's a cool assurance to
the Sadies' studio work, here the band isn't afraid to turn it up and draw sweat, and there's a level of excitement in these sessions that will please fans and surprise the doubters.
Steve Albini,
Ken Friesen, and
Don Pyle get the whole shebang on tape with high fidelity without sacrificing the energy of the musicians or the audience in the process. If the title
In Concert, Vol. 1 is meant to suggest
the Sadies have another album like this in the works, let's hope it hits the streets soon if it approaches this level of excellence: this truly captures a great band at the top of their form. ~ Mark Deming