REK
by Happyheart on 8/18/24VBC Mars Music Hall - HuntsvilleHis voice takes me to a warm, happy place. The show was so good that I wasn’t even mad that he didn’t sing Merry Christmas From The Family. I will go every time he comes to town.
Venue
Gruene Hall
Venue
Billy Bob's
Add-Ons
Venue
“The road goes on forever ...”
It’s not always easy to sum up a career — let alone a life’s ambition — so succinctly, but those five words from Robert Earl Keen’s calling-card anthem just about do it. You can complete the lyric with the next five words — the ones routinely shouted back at Keen by thousands of fans a night (“and the party never ends!”) — just to punctuate the point with a flourish, but it’s the part about the journey that gets right to the heart of what makes Keen tick. Some people take up a life of playing music with the goal of someday reaching a destination of fame and fortune; but from the get-go, Keen just wanted to write and sing his own songs, and to keep writing and singing them for as long as possible.
Earlier this year, Keen played a handful of sold-out theater dates with Lyle Lovett, just two old friends swapping songs on acoustic guitars like they used to do on Keen’s front porch in College Station. But the lion’s share of his concert schedule still finds him playing full-tilt with his seasoned road and studio band: Brotherton on guitar, Bill Whitbeck on bass, Tom Van Schaik on drums, and Marty Muse on steel guitar. “I’ve been with this band for 20 years now,” Keen says proudly. “I used to think that was just sort of an interesting fact, but now it’s almost a total anomaly — that just doesn’t happen much. I always felt like once you lock into the right bunch of people, you try to do the best by them that you can. So we’ve been able to stay together a long time, and I think one thing that makes it worthwhile for people to come see us as an act is the fact that it’s not like we’re trying to work it all out onstage — we’ve already worked everything out.”
As for what they’ll be working on next, well, Keen’s fans probably won’t have to wait very long. Despite the fact that 2014 will mark the 30th anniversary of his first album, No Kinda Dancer, Keen’s primary focus remains — as ever — more on the road still ahead than the road behind him.
“We take everything one year at a time,” he says, “but I am hell-bent and bound to make a record this year. I really don’t know what I have in mind as far as what it will be, but what will happen is I will go off to my ‘Scriptorium’ for three or four days to write with no distractions, and I’ll have a record by the time I’m finished. I’m locked into this idea, and I know for a fact that I’m going to get a new record out ... unless I get hit by a bus or get run over by my own bus!”
His voice takes me to a warm, happy place. The show was so good that I wasn’t even mad that he didn’t sing Merry Christmas From The Family. I will go every time he comes to town.
My experience was great. If anything could have been improved it would be the searing at the tables. 4 seated at a table made for a little crowded. Being short on the back seat 3 and 4 makes seeing difficult. Guess this is just being short as an advantage but should be warned! The opening act was awful. Booze n entertainment does not work. A shot a song!
REK still has it. Played most of Fresh Green Onions and of course closed with all his big hits. Worth every minute and every penny.
Great performance. So glad he started touring again. Very disappointed when I heard he wasn't touring anymore a couple years ago. Every song was a classic.
REK seemed like he's aged quickly. Vocal a little muddled, along w/ sound system in general. Acknowledged he wasn't happy about being unretired. Pretty short show at 1hr 30min, with no warmup artist. Still a good show, but less energy than previous shows I've seen.
Saw REK three times this summer. Always entertaining with his stories, humor and of course, his music. He remains phenomenal. The band is spot on. Those guys have played together for a long time. See ya soon REK.
The show lacked energy start to finish and that was on him. I'd seen him in Covington a decade or so ago and he was very good. This time, he mailed it in. A 90-minute show, a perfunctory one-tune encore. Fittingly, the encore was I Gotta Go. And he did, as quickly as he could rise from his chair. A frontman, seated for the entire performance. Never seen that from anyone but a pianist. I won't see him again, even as I love his music.
Great show! Ludlow Garage is a fantastic venue! Feel lucky to have seen Robert Earl Keen!
The room arrangement is a little unique, very good acoustics, very comfortable seating.
Amazing solo performance from more than a legend he likes his fans and they love him back you could here a pin drop during REK'S performance at a venue that that fits his songs of tale