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       CONCERT JOSEPH PARSONS & ROSS BELLENOIT De Engelstede, Engelbert NL 
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      December 13th, 2009 Going to a concert without a little bit of 
adventure on the way, that hardly ever happens. On this Sunday the good new bus 
company takes over from the bad old one, in two Northern provinces. At the bus 
station I see the brand new buses, there's a shift change, so one driver is 
explaining to the other how the new bus works. We don't have to pay, that's 
nice! When too many bleeping sounds are heard from the cockpit, the driver stops 
the bus to sort it out and then everything goes smoothly. The connection is 
still bad though, riding into Groningen I literally see the other bus pass us by 
- as in 'bye-bye'. But the shops at the train station are open, so I easily kill 
time reading a couple of music magazines at the book shop. After almost an hour 
I can continue my journey to Engelbert. As I've never been there before, I ask 
the driver to tell me where I should step off. Well, he gets into an animated 
conversation with one of the other passengers and oops... forgets all about it. 
Rural area, very dark and somewhat foggy, so I can't really figure out where I 
might be. But when the clock of the bus shows me I should have been in Engelbert 
by now, I ask the driver. And... you won't believe this: he actually turns the 
bus on somebody's driveway, goes back and drops me off right in front of De 
Engelstede!! 
      
      
      De Engelstede turns out to be a delightful very old 
café, not much has changed in eighty years. Probably alarmed by the big bus 
stopping up front, Joseph Parsons immediately walks to the door to greet me. 
It's so good to see him again, last time was more than three years ago already - 
with Tom Gillam at De Witte Bal in Assen (scroll down for the review). And this 
very wet Fall often reminded me of the similar wet Fall of 1998, when I first 
saw Joseph play and became a fan immediately! Tonight Joseph plays with Ross 
Bellenoit, he is also featured on that great new 2-CD "Slaughterhouse Live". But 
first there's time for a delicious dinner and some conversation, while owner 
Jaap plays a CD by a band of local heroes: Taneytown. I make sure to get a copy 
of Joseph's CD "Falling" and have it autographed, together with "Slaughterhouse 
Live". Joseph appreciates the airplay - well, it's probably been the first time 
I played a full double CD in my shows 'RadioGirl' and mostly 'Music Hall Live!' 
Speaking of: in walks Thomas Kaldijk, he also loves to play Joseph's music in 
his show 'Blueprint' (Radio Parkstad, Veendam). There are not many people here 
tonight, but these are the real music lovers! Jaap's set-up is more of a 'living 
room concert' and he happens to run this great place, there's even a Marilyn 
Monroe statue in the corner, perfect scenario... 
      
      
      The first song is "Tell Me Hello", very 
appropriately. Ross plays lapsteel on this one - I love lapsteel... Joseph plays 
his acoustic guitar, he looks good and happy, still at least ten years younger 
than he really is! I've seen many of his concerts over the years, always the 
highest quality, from rocking with band to intimate acoustic performances and 
this feeling of being in the living room with friends on a quiet Sunday evening 
inspires him to be more personal than ever before. He tells a funny story about 
meeting his wife (he married the mother of his son earlier this year) and plays 
brand new "Heartbeat Away", he tells about growing up in the South, followed by 
the song "Taken By Surprise" and asks if anybody has a request. Not yet. So he 
goes on with "Shades Of Gray", Ross puts down his electric guitar and plays 
lapsteel again. On beautiful quiet "Anyone" he does tricks with the tremolo and 
on "Heavens Above" he even plays both instruments: the electric guitar plus a 
lapsteel solo! Wow, this is such an impressive song, about Hurricane Katrina and 
'a guy who's trying to get back into New Orleans'. Joseph -with his great 
voice- can basically do anything, the ballads, the uptempo rock numbers and the 
intense personal stuff. "You Lied", that is one of his best older songs - it 
grabbed me right away, way back when... A drink spilled by Ross ("Man down!") 
causes a funny intermezzo, when Joseph does an imitation of the stage, drowning 
in whiskey. 
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      ![]() The song "Sun Gonna Shine" was written when Joseph 
visited a friend in New York and watched children playing from the apartment 
window. Followed by a rousing "King Of Baltimore" and "Sitting On Top Of The 
World", written during a stay with Elliott Murphy in Paris, Elliott even helped 
him finish writing the song. Everybody holds his or her breath during the 
introduction of "Dume Room", it's some kind of relaxed rap over acoustic guitar 
and lapsteel, going back to the time when Joseph was eighteen and took his 
sister's car for a road trip from New York to Los Angeles. It could just as well 
be a story from a movie... And the "Dume Room" lapsteel solos, wonderful. The 
gentlemen have to skip the drumfill that originally starts off "Shine", the 
story is touching: Joseph says that people who are true to themselves, not 
pretending to be anybody else, have a certain glow, a shine around 
them. 
      
      
      When Joseph asks again for requests, I ask for 
"Shy", my all-time favorite Joseph Parsons song. I leave it up to him if he 
plays the '5am-version' or the 'solo-version'. He says he has probably played it 
once live, I tell him about that time in Amsterdam - with the band, like ten 
years ago. His memory goes back only nine years! I'm also pretty sure he played 
"Shy" that very first night I saw him in Hamburg. Anyway, he plays my request 
and I'm totally happy! Ross is smiling from ear to ear, improvising on his 
guitar - he obviously loves it when he can learn a new song. "Children In The 
Sun" is also accompanied by a personal story about growing up, being a bit of a 
bad boy... "Myriad Of Things" is another old song, that recently received a new 
treatment. Now the lapsteel solo gets its own applause. Oh yes, a lapsteel can 
rock like any electric guitar! Ross will be leaving for snowy Philadelphia 
tomorrow morning and the last song is "Skipping Stone", about the life of 
traveling musicians, being away from home, meeting fine new people and being sad 
again to leave in the morning. 
      
      
      Joseph jumps from the stage and makes it a point to shake everybody's hand to thank the music lovers for coming out. Very nice, more artists should do that... even Elvis shook hands! As Joseph and Ross still have a long drive back to Hamburg ahead of them, there's not much time left to talk. But there's a promise that Joseph will be back in the Spring. Anybody who wasn't here tonight, definitely missed out on something special!! I'm lucky: Thomas is kind enough to give me a ride and I wave at Joseph in the parking lot: no more bus for me tonight! --- 'Thanks!' to Jan Janssen for the pictures.  
      
      
      Written by Johanna J. Bodde - December 14th, 2009 - 
for Insurgent Country, Germany. 
      
      
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