TYLER CHILDERS

Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2019

The Ritz, Raleigh


When Tyler Childers last passed through the Triangle in a June 2018 tour stop at Catโ€™s Cradle, he was already outgrowing the rooms he was playing. That show was sold out by April, sandwiched between the release of his breakthrough second LP,ย Purgatoryโ€”produced by Sturgill Simpsonโ€”and a big win for Emerging Artist of the Year at the Americana Awards.

Unfortunately, I hadnโ€™t yet fallen in love with Purgatoryโ€™s gritty Appalachian storytelling, which is set to a hybrid of honky-tonk, outlaw country, and string-band styles. So I missed the Cradle show (though I would catch him later that summer at FloydFest). But I heard rave reviews from a friend, who compared the energy toย The Avett Brothers playing the same room in 2005.

With an arena tour alongside Simpson looming in 2020, Childers playedย at The Ritz on Wednesday. It sold out far in advance once again, with resale tickets going for more thanย $200 late in the day. It seemed like one of the last chances to see him in a club.

The jam-packed crowdโ€”the type where well-meaning requests to squeeze past were met with a chuckle and a โ€œgood luckโ€โ€”seemed hellbent on drinking enough to ensure that area Lyft drivers would have plenty of extra cash for holiday shopping. After an opening set from Liz Cooper & The Stampede that was treated mostly as background music for boisterous conversation, I was feeling cramped and concerned that the well-lubricated audience would overpower Childersโ€™s gentler moments.

Opening with five straight from this yearโ€™s Country Squire, Childers and his blue-collar band were economical as they blazed through heavy helpings of his last two releases, occasionally stretching their legs. Aย funky intro to โ€œHouse Fireโ€ teased the crowd with extended vamping. Not surprisingly, the singalong reaction was considerable, as it was on the rowdy โ€œI Swear (to God),” which beganย a stretch that showcased the range of the six-piece band, now bolstered by keys to help recreate the lush layers of the latest album.

A peek at set lists for previous shows on this tour revealed that there had typically been a brief batch of solo acoustic tunes mid-set, but Childersโ€”perhaps reading the room and wanting to avoid disruptions like last week in Bostonโ€”opted to push through with full-band renditions of nearly two dozen songs.

Aย cover of โ€œLong Long Time to Get Oldโ€ by the obscure Canadian country-rock outfit Great Speckled Bird didnโ€™t resonate strongly, but even Childersโ€™s deepest cuts seemed to elicit a sizable reaction. Though it has only appeared on theย  2013 EP Live on Red Barn Radio, โ€œCharleston Girlโ€ seemed to transform more folks into honorary West Virginia citizens than any song since โ€œCountry Roads,โ€ and made that early-Avetts comparison ring true.

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Bio: Spencer Griffith lives in Raleigh, where he teaches school and writes about bands.

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