Oh me, oh my, love that country pie, and oh me, oh my, the influence of Devendra Banhart and Will Oldham is now as long and thick as their beards. Actually, Brightblack Morning Light’s Nathan Shineywater and Rachael Hughes were opening for Oldham when Banhart was making the leap from homemade cassette to Young God. But in the autumn of 2006, around when they landed a primo spot opening for Os Mutantes at the Fillmore and then walked onto the cover of Arthur like it was a throne lying in wait for them, the applause for and catcalls about their group really began to fly back and forth. Spiritualized acolytes old enough to have gone high-igh-igh with Spacemen 3 the first time around praised Brightblack’s "heroin-gospel" sound, while other older folks who’d seen one too many white people claim an American Indian great-grandmother cried foul. Younger fans espoused nature love as their more cynical peers held their noses that is, with whichever hand wasn’t masturbating an iPod with carpal tunnelridden thumbs. At the end of last year, as rock critics assembled top 10 lists, there were many rivers to cross some leading to the Walkmen’s cover of Harry Nilsson’s Pussycats and yet just about all roads led to the Rhodes-dominated sound of Brightblack Morning Light (Matador). This show should offer some hints about the follow-up. (Johnny Ray Huston)
BRIGHTBLACK MORNING LIGHT
With Women and Children, Mariee Sioux, and Karl Blau
March 3, 8 p.m., $14
Great American Music Hall
859 O’Farrell, SF
(415) 885-0750
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