REVIEW: Avett Brothers @ Hill Auditorium

The Avett Brothers had an incredibly uplifting performance at Hill Auditorium yesterday evening. The two lead singers and brothers, Scott Avett on the banjo and Seth Avett on the guitar, make up the core of the larger band.  The group exhibits a hybrid of genres, considered anywhere between folk rock and bluegrass.

The repertoire of the Avett Brothers includes a refreshing combination of songs which entail the whole band, as well as folkier pieces that highlight just the two brothers and their own acoustic accompaniment.  In Hill Auditorium, the band filled the stage in its entirety, with extensive choreographed lighting, which danced upon the performers and the audience alike.  This concert seemed to market the band in a more poppy sense, with high volume projection, and great jumping energy from every performer, dancing their way through each successive song. I realized that I associate the Avett Brothers with calm guitar and friendly lyrics; a certain settledness inherent with simple folky arrangements.  However, it was exciting instead to experience the band with such overflowing energy, equivalent to that of a rock concert, yet with an arrangement of jiving string instrument players instead of electronics.

The Avett Brothers

It was nice to realize how excellent each musician is live, void of intonation issues, and with voices that retain such pure, full quality.  These aspects were especially heightened in the perfectly resonate hall that is Hill Auditorium.  On some of the slower tunes, which really focused on the vocal harmonies between the two brothers, I found myself in awe of the rawly honest texture of each of their voices.  Though brothers, Seth and Scott have perfectly complimentary voices, different in their tones and ranges, but similar in their casual friendliness. It is rare to find popular musicians who can bring even more to their live singing performances, especially when dancing is incorporated, than exists in their already ideal recordings.

But what pulled at my heart most was the overwhelming humbleness of the group.  Though often with sad and contemplative lyrics, each song never fails to instill hope in the listener with upbeat acoustics and interesting harmonies. When the band performed Through My Prayers, but first introducing it as a song about goodbyes, the sweetness of the group and audience really connected as the lyrics, “If you have love in your heart let it show while you can,” were delivered.  Presented as the song’s moral, the audience immediately started clapping in the middle of the piece, in kind agreement with the statement.  This is the epitome of the atmosphere at the concert – really serving as a celebration of love and life.

The Avett Brothers closed a packed concert of 22 songs modestly with Hand Me Down Tune, a relaxed song about songs. The audience stood clapping ecstatically, for what seemed like minutes, as the final piece came to a close.  Yet the encore was worth the wait, as they performed three additional songs. I walked away from a night with the Avett Brothers feeling mightily revitalized with a fresh spark of energy, as only such fantastic, relatable, and upbeat live performers can do.

 

Hill Auditorium, view from the balcony

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Eva Roos is a senior at the University of Michigan, receiving a Major in Art & Design with Minors in Environment and Music.

PREVIEW: The Avett Brothers at Hill Auditorium

The Avett Brothers are looking to conquer a college town, where folk music thrives just as well as hip-hop, and avid music fans search actively for gorgeous storytelling via guitars, pianos, and graceful lyrics.

So, it’s fitting that Hill Auditorium will showcase the four-piece band on February 12.

With brothers Scott and Seth Avett fronting the band holding a banjo and guitar, the passion for genuine, heartfelt music lies very visibly in its band make-up. A band of siblings hasn’t seemed particularly cool since the Jackson 5 or the Kinks, and the Avett Brothers present themselves with a similar sincerity and grassroots wholesomeness. Their songs are particularly hopeful and earnest, typically casting a balladic piano at the forefront, and guitar, banjo, cello, and drums accompanying vocals.

Leaving an outstanding 2012 including a Grammy nomination and a top-10 album, the band is touring until July 2013, playing alongside bands like Matt and Kim, Old Crow Medicine Show, Portugal. The Man, and Grace Potter and the Nocturnals. Their show at Hill Auditorium will beautifully highlight the band’s sound described by the San Francisco Chronicle as having the “heavy sadness of Townes Van Zandt, the light pop concision of Buddy Holly, the tuneful jangle of the Beatles, the raw energy of the Ramones.” This is the Avett Brother’s third time performing in Ann Arbor after headlining the Ann Arbor Folk Festival last year and playing at the Michigan Theater in 2010.

The Avett Brothers will play at 7:30pm at Hill Auditorium on February 12, 2013. Tickets start at $33.