After a really good opening set
by Darryl Purpose (with David James joining him on mandolin), Ellis Paul took
the stage at 8:45 p.m., kicking off his set with “I Ain’t No Jesus,” a sweet song, and one that I love more each time
I hear it. He has been opening his shows with it for a while, and it really is
a great way to start the night, setting a loving tone. It is also the song that
he chose to lead off the album. McCabe’s is one of my favorite spots in Los
Angeles to see live music, and it is a favorite place for musicians to play. “I love this place,” Ellis said after “I
Ain’t No Jesus.” “It’s partly because of you,” he told the audience, “but I think it’s because I buy guitars here,
and I end up spending more than I make at a show.” He also thanked a couple
that had sent a bottle of excellent Scotch to him backstage before the concert.
“Thank you for that. You’ve ruined the
show, but thank you.” He then described the time in Big Sur that provided
the inspiration for “Slingshot.” Ellis played harmonica on both “I Ain’t No
Jesus” and “Slingshot.”
“Five Alarm Fire On The 4th Of
July” is always a fun one to hear, and last night in particular was enjoyable,
for the crowd got really into it. In fact, one woman finished a line for Ellis.
The line is “Uncle Buck is rolling somethin’
he calls a monster doobie,” and he draws out the last two words, “mon-ster doo-bie.” A woman finished the
line by singing “bie.” “Thank you,” Ellis said to her. The
audience also sang along with the “We Are Family” section at the end. While he
offered introductions to most of the songs in his set, Ellis just jumped right
into “Election Day” without a single word of introduction. It was a good
rendition, and a song that the audience appreciated. We are all eager for the
next election and the end of this corrupt and incompetent administration. He
followed that with another timely and powerful song, “The Battle Of
Charlottesville,” and then “The Innocence And The Afterlife,” one of my
personal favorites from the new album. It is a song inspired by a conversation
he had with his daughter when she was five years old, a conversation about
death. After those songs, Ellis promised the audience the music would be happy
from there on out. “Well, that’s a lie,”
he corrected himself after a moment. “It’s
folk music.” Yet the next song was a happy song. He delivered a great,
mean, fiery rendition of “Kick Out The Lights,” with audience participation, of
course. This was the first song of the set that was not from the new album, but
it was after that one that he showed the audience the contents of the deluxe
edition of The Storyteller’s Suitcase.
Ellis then switched to piano
for a really good and passionate version of “Scarecrow In A Corn Maze.” He
followed that with a couple of tracks from The
Hero In You, one of Ellis Paul’s children’s albums, first mentioning that
he would be doing a children’s show in the morning. He started with “Thomas Edison,”
and followed that with the title track, which was actually a request and
dedicated to a guy in the audience who was celebrating his birthday. Ellis
stepped off the stage to perform it unmiked in the audience. Interestingly, he
followed that with “You’ll Never Be This Young Again,” perhaps a perfect song
for someone having a birthday, a song reminding us that it’s not too late to
chase our dreams, and urging us to start now. He concluded his set with “The
World Ain’t Slowin’ Down.” “It’s my most
well-known song, and it’s also about not wasting time,” Ellis said in the
introduction to the song. He performed this one unmiked and in the audience, the crowd singing it with him.
And that was how the concert ended. There was no encore. The show ended at
10:11 p.m.
Set List
- I Ain’t No Jesus
- Slingshot
- Five Alarm Fire On The 4th Of July
- Election Day
- The Battle Of Charlottesville
- The Innocence And The Afterlife
- Kick Out The Lights
- Scarecrow In A Corn Maze
- Thomas Edison
- The Hero In You
- You’ll Never Be This Young Again
- The World Ain’t Slowin’ Down
McCabe’s is located at 3101
Pico Blvd. in Santa Monica, California.
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