Music DVD Reviews: Delbert McClinton, Live from Austin TX and John Hiatt, Live From Austin TX

Delbert McClinton is one of those singers who make everything look easy. His buttery voice seems to issue from his smiling lips and fill a concert hall with no effort. He's followed up his initial push - courtesy of John Belushi and Saturday Night Live - and his 1980 top ten hit "Givin' It Up For Your Love" with an indefatigable touring career, interpreting great blues, soul, R&B and lounge tunes all over the universe and becoming a noted songwriter as well.

This DVD, issued by McClinton's label, New West, captures a 1982 Austin City Limits performance by Delbert and a tight nine-piece band. The outfits and haircuts are amusingly dated, the rather stodgy camera work a little less amusingly so - but then, they shot things more simply in those days. ACL was (and is) essentially "just" a TV show. The deep, crystalline sound of the original recording process is the main thing.

The price is modest, so the lack of extras shouldn't be a deal-breaker for fans, but it is a little disappointing, especially since McClinton has remained very active in the new century, with a new CD and an important part in an upcoming documentary.

Highlights include a funky "Shaky Ground," a sweet and slow "Jealous Kind," the Texas swing of "Lipstick, Powder and Paint," and of course "Givin' It Up." Casual or new fans will be interested in McClinton's treatment of "Take Me to the River," "Turn On Your Love Light," and the Otis Redding chestnut "I've Got Dreams to Remember."

Moving from a smooth-as-a-baby master of interpretation to a stage-awkward and unabashedly goofy songwriting genius: the altogether more rough-hewn John Hiatt hit the ACL stage eleven years later. (Note for theme junkies: if you haven't heard McClinton's version of Hiatt's "Have a Little Faith In Me", one of the most beautiful songs ever written, you really ought to.) Anyway, for Hiatt in 1993 theACL set is lit, and the concert shot, more artfully, while Hiatt's soul patch and bassist Davey Faragher's swinging dreads confirm that we've pushed ahead into the grunge era of the nineties.

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Article Author: Jon Sobel

Jon Sobel is Co-Executive Editor of Blogcritics and lead editor of the Culture section. As a writer he contributes most often to Culture, where he reviews NYC theater; he also covers interesting music releases and writes a semi-regular review round-up of independent albums. …

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