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July 16, 1999 |
At the first night of a three-night Knitting Factory stand, Chesnutt was feeling the love. The crowd chortled at every arched eyebrow and every tossed-off witticism. Half-hearted throwaways were greeted with reverent applause. At one point, someone even clapped when Chesnutt belched. The singer fawned in return: More than half of his set was made up of earnest audience requests.
Vic Chestnutt
But while unquestionably touching and often starkly intimate, the show wasn't stellar. Chesnutt played the majority of songs alone on a pale-blue electric Fender. And without the benefit of Lambchop -- the delightful Nashville, Tenn., band that backed him on "Salesman" -- the magisterial sweep of songs like "Replenished" was lost, as Chesnutt stopped in the middle of pieces or abruptly ended them with a quip and a shy smile. That made a four numbers played on acoustic guitar and piano at the end of the show the most warmly intimate and quietly affecting part of the entire show. Forced to tone down his singing to accompany his delicate piano, the songs -- "Sewing Machine," a song originally recorded by Brute, a Chesnutt-Widespread Panic project, and "Myrtle," from "About to Choke" -- beautifully conveyed the stark incisiveness apparent on his albums and mostly missing from the rest of the set. Toward the end of the show, a cell phone in the audience rang. "They want to sign me," Chesnutt quipped. "And they want to know if I can lose the wheelchair." When another phone rang again a minute later, he continued, "He'll lose the wheelchair. And he agrees to get breast implants!" Not surprisingly, no one in the audience seemed to mind. That quip received louder applause than any song all night.
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