Lyle Lovett brings music from new album to Cape Cod Melody Tent + other concerts worth a listen

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Cape Cod fans will be able to hear musician Lyle Lovett live again on Aug. 12, and bringing music from his first album of original material in 10 years. See the story below, and here are other ideas for seeing concerts this week:

► Also at the Melody Tent this weekend, performing at 8 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 14, will be comedian Joe Gatto, a founding member of the internationally known Tenderloins Comedy Troupe who is best known for TV shows “Impractical Jokers” and “The Misery Index.” Gatto also co-hosts the “Two Cool Moms” podcast and has appeared on others; https://melodytent.org/

► The MV Concert Series has teamed up with Patriot Party Boats, Inc. in Falmouth to give Cape Cod fans a way to experience live music at The Loft in Oak Bluffs and get back the same night. The service will be available leaving at 7 p.m. for $32 for select shows: Tom Rush on Aug. 10; Andy Frasco & The U.N. on Aug. 14; Dalton and the Sheriffs on Aug. 15; Bumpin Uglies on Aug. 21; and Low Cut Connie on Aug. 24. Concert tickets and information: https://www.mvconcertseries.com/.

Musician Tom Rush will play an Aug. 10 concert at The Loft in Oak Bluffs.
Musician Tom Rush will play an Aug. 10 concert at The Loft in Oak Bluffs.

► Music this week at Payomet Performing Arts Center in North Truro ranges from the Deadgrass band playing bluegrass-inspired reinterpretations that celebrate the music of Jerry Garcia at 7 p.m. Aug. 15 to reggae with Jamaican singer-songwriter and Grammy Award nominee Beres Hammond, who will perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 17; https://payomet.org/.

Kathi Scrizzi Driscoll

Lovett back on tour with Large Band

Musician Lyle Lovett just released “12th of June,” his first album of original material in 10 years, in May. In yet another example of the pandemic getting in the way of best-laid plans, Lovett had things all lined up for a much earlier arrival of his latest batch of music.

“We recorded these tracks in November of 2019 with the idea of finishing them in March of 2020,” Lovett said in an early June phone interview. “I did an acoustic group tour that started in January and ended on the 7th of March that year. I was going to spend the rest of the month working on the record and finishing it for a 2020 release. And of course, that did not happen.”

"An Evening with Lyle Lovett and his Large Band" on Aug. 12 at the Cape Cod Melody Tent will include music from the group's album released in May.
"An Evening with Lyle Lovett and his Large Band" on Aug. 12 at the Cape Cod Melody Tent will include music from the group's album released in May.

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Lovett is happy to be able to share the music and messages of his new material on tour with his Large Band this summer. The group will stop Friday, Aug. 12 at the Cape Cod Melody Tent in Hyannis.

“We’ll play material from across my catalog, but we will definitely feature material from this (new) album,” he said. “It’s always fun to have a new record out and it’s always fun to have a reason to play those newly recorded songs.

“We did six shows in four days in New York in May, the week after the album was released, and we had a great time playing together for the first time as the Large Band since August of 2019. So we had a great time all being together and it just made me really look forward to this tour.”

While Lovett did get to join his Large Band in the studio and record the basic tracks for “12th of June,” the pandemic had a huge effect on mixing and other work required from that point forward to finish the album.

“Chuck Ainlay, my producer in Nashville, would go through tracks and mix, and go through as we made edits and changes. He would email me everything he was doing and then I would listen on my own,” Lovett said. “It was just not the same. The back and forth is just not as much fun, really, because a decision that would take five minutes to make in the studio would end up being two or three days by email. So it slowed everything down immensely.

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“It’s just not as much fun listening and analyzing something all by yourself as it is working with people. So I missed the interaction. I missed the humanity in making the record, and … in the context of being isolated from the world anyway, it added to that feeling of isolation rather than helped to diminish it.”

New music has various inspirations

In the end, Lovett got to work in person with Ainlay in putting the finishing touches on “12th of June,” but that didn’t happen until early this year.

So better late than never, fans of Lovett finally have new music to enjoy. And while Lovett, known as one of music’s most literate songwriters, has done his share of excellent albums that lean toward country and feature a good bit of acoustic instrumentation – think his second album, 1987’s “Pontiac,” 1992’s “Joshua Judges Ruth” or 2012’s “Release Me” –  “12th of June” is his third studio album billed with his Large Band.

With this ensemble of talented musicians (it’s a 14-member unit for the summer tour), Lovett is able to greatly expand his musical reach. That’s obvious right from the start of “12th of June,” which opens with a version of jazz great Horace Silver’s “Cookin’ at the Continental,” a lively instrumental that lets the Large Band showcase their considerable chops.

Lyle Lovett's family inspired some of the music on his new album "12th of June."
Lyle Lovett's family inspired some of the music on his new album "12th of June."

Three duets with Lovett’s long-time vocal counterpart, Francine Reed, further cement the jazz credentials of all involved as they tackle two songs associated with Nat “King” Cole – the peppy “Straighten Up & Fly Right” and the bluesy ballad “Gee Baby, Ain’t I Good To You” – as well as the Dave Frishberg-penned standard “Peel Me A Grape.”

Lovett’s more country-leaning sound emerges on the ballads “Her Loving Man,” “The Mocking Ones” and the title track. “Pig Meat Man” puts a bit of soul and blues into the mix and “Are We Dancing” adds a string-laden ballad that is rooted in the pre-rock and roll era.

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The long gap between “12th of June” and Lovett’s previous album, 2012’s “Release Me,” he says, was largely the product of being between record deals and needing time to figure out how he wanted to release his next collection of songs. There was also a major development in Lovett’s personal life – his marriage to long-time girlfriend April Kimble in 2017, followed by the birth of the couple’s twins. Along with touring commitments – Lovett tends to play around 100 concerts during normal years – these factors absorbed a lot of time over the past decade.

Marriage and fatherhood figure prominently into the lyrics of the original songs on “12th of June.” “Her Loving Man” is a sweet tribute to Kimble and her intelligence, wisdom and warmth. The title song is a touching tune that imagines a father carrying his love for his wife and children into the next life. Lovett applies his trademark wry humor to “Pants is Overrated,” which was inspired one day when his children were resisting the idea of getting dressed.

To see Lyle Lovett

When: 7:30 p.m. Aug. 12

Where: Cape Cod Melody Tent, 41 W. Main St., Hyannis

Tickets: $44.50-$127

Reservations and information: https://melodytent.org/ 

This article originally appeared on Cape Cod Times: Concerts: Lyle Lovett brings new music to Cape Cod Melody Tent, more