July 24, 2008

Photos by Steve Cross.
We might as well get it over with and just take a paragraph here at the
beginning to talk about how fucking pretty Old 97’s frontman Rhett Miller is.
The shaggy-haired crooner is movie star handsome. Tigerbeat cute. And
his boyish charm somehow made the cheer-sex he was having with myriad members of
the audience less than sketchy—he would lean back, let his eyes go all bedroom,
and then casually strike his signature mini-windmills on his guitar. We weren’t
the only ones who were impressed: A random (male) East Nashville barfly and
recent Old 97’s convert remarked to us, “I don’t normally say this, but the lead
singer is hot!”

OK, on to the music: In front of a very-full house, the four boys from Texas
played an energetic set that spanned their entire catalogue. Though they covered
nearly all of their new album Blame It on Gravity, the band still found
time for some deep cuts, including the irresistible barnburner “Doreen,” a
couple songs off Satellite Rides highlighted by the deliciously clever
“Rollerskate Skinny”—“I believe in love…but it don’t believe in me” won the
night in the sing-along category—and, during an encore that also included
“Timebomb,” Wreck Your Life’s opener “Victoria,” a song that in our
minds perfectly encapsulates the magic of this band. Sideman Murry Hammond also
got to sing quite a few, including the heartbreakingly spare “Valentine” and the
rollicking “W. TX Teardrops.”

Midway through the set, Miller introduced a song by quipping, “In a perfect
world, I could have sold this song down on Music Row—and lived on it for all of
six weeks.” He then launched into Hitchhike to Rhome’s epic
self-pity-fest “Wish the Worst.” In classic country-song style, the protagonist
lurks around his beloved’s apartment, drinking all her booze and crawling in her
bed, while begging to know where she’s been. With no answer forthcoming, he
moans, “I hope you crash your mama’s car / I hope you pass out in some bar / I
hope you catch some kind of flu / Let’s say I wish the worst for you,” before
returning to his desperate assertion, “I just wanna know where you been.”
When Miller throws himself into singing a song like that—letting his sweet
voice crack at the saddest parts and leap into the occasional howl, there are
few rock singers more fun to watch.

As the night wound to a close, we remembered to do our good deed for the
month. (Apparently mocking those who deserve mocking doesn’t count as a
humanitarian act.) We headed over to the merch table and bought a copy of Murry
Hammond’s solo record I Don't Know Where I'm Going But I'm on My Way.
Hammond recently told the Scene that every dollar he
makes from the album before it’s official distribution goes to Project Mercy, a
non-profit committed to building houses in Mexico. We left feeling pretty darn
pleased with ourselves.

Oh, and thanks to Steve Cross for the tip—Mercy Lounge has a new floor.

Nashville Scene