
THE AVETT BROTHERS
The Avett Brothers have been coming to Bonnaroo for years, playing their first show in 2006 and building their way up to bigger stages with each subsequent appearance. Yesterday, they played the biggest of them all: the What Stage, a mammoth structure that rises four stories into the Tennessee air and spans the length of a middle-school football field. Welcome to the big time, boys.
Once a small, three-piece string band, the Avetts have grown into a full-fledged quintet, capable of playing old-timey folksongs one minute and lush, cinematic Americana epics the next. They hit the epics hard last night, kicking things off with an amped-up version of โWill You Returnโ and stretching the limits of familiar tunes like โKick Drum Heart,โ which was pushed into Zeppelin territory courtesy of Sethโs long, metallic guitar solo. Like a good sibling, Scotty Avett stepped back from the keyboard and let his brother enjoy the spotlight, only returning to center-stage once the solo had run its course.ย Momma Avett woulda been proud.
โLotta love in the field tonight!โ Seth remarked at one point, and he wasnโt lying. The crowd was packed with festival goers whoโd braved the late-afternoon sun — a vicious, wicked thing that loomed over the field like a solar Death Star, raining down heat and UV rays onto anyone who wasnโt desperate enough to seek shade in the Cinema Tent —ย and the mood elevated as nighttime approached, bringing some breeze and welcome cloud cover with it. Everyone seemed to know the words to every song, and when all 15,000 people shouted the refrain to โI and Love and You,โ it felt like a battle cry rather than a sad lament.
The Avetts toyed with their lineup constantly, dismissing drummer Jacob Edwards whenever he wasnโt needed and even going back to the founding trio for an a cappella rendition of โDown to the Valley to Pray,โ performed in honor of the late Doc Watson. Like most of the bandโs songs, โDown to the Valleyโ was charmingly rough, filled with ramshackle harmonies that didnโt always hit the mark. Thatโs sort of the point with the Avett Brothers, though. Theyโre a rough-and-tumble band, steeped in front-porch pickinโ sessions and boozy guitar pulls. You can take the boys out of the country, but even the What Stage — which its dizzying network of catwalks and scaffolds and Jumbotrons — canโt take the country out of the boys.
