Live: Steve Earle and Allison Moorer

POP MUSIC REVIEW

The singer-songwriter roams his 21-year-deep catalog in a Royce Hall show. His wife, Allison Moorer, lends her voice too.

Singer-songwriter Steve Earle offered up all sides of himself Wednesday at UCLA's Royce Hall, illuminating the best and worst of humanity in a two-hour show so authentically gritty at times he seemed to actually kick up dust while stamping his feet in time with his songs.

The veteran Texas-bred musician, activist and writer inhabited the many roles he's played over the years: hard-luck troubadour, sadder-wiser substance abuser, chagrined suitor, angry humanitarian, guilt-ridden father, renewed romantic. Alternately confessor and storyteller, he sang a lot of songs and talked a little politics, touching on everything from the state of the union to the plight of immigrants and organized labor.

Earle mostly just accompanied himself on acoustic and steel guitars, banjo, mandolin and harmonica, but was joined later in the set by opening act Allison Moorer, his wife. Her 35-minute performance was a lovely complement, as she also stood on the stage with just an acoustic guitar and drew mostly on her recent album, "Mockingbird," featuring versions of tunes by favorite female songwriters.

She opened with the title track, her own composition, a bluesy folk ballad that showcased her beautiful voice and incredible control. Moorer radiated serenity and poise, yet fearlessly delved into the intense emotions of such diverse selections as Patti Smith's "Dancing Barefoot," Jessi Colter's "I'm Looking for Blue Eyes," and even Joni Mitchell's "Both Sides Now," a song that arguably never needs to be sung by anyone else, ever.

"I work real hard at not being a cynic," Moorer said lightly, before closing her set with a truly moving take on Sam Cooke's 1964 R&B ballad "A Change Is Gonna Come," evoking the historic civil-rights movement while underscoring her own observation that America needs some real change, and hope, right now.

Just before Moorer returned for Earle's set, he introduced her with the sweetly infatuated "Sparkle and Shine," from his 2007 album "Washington Square Serenade." The couple embraced adorably before duetting on such numbers as the love song "Days Aren't Long Enough," also from that collection, a New York City-centric work that reflects their recent relocation to Greenwich Village.

Earle also brought out DJ Neil McDonald for other new tracks, including "Down Here Below," a talk-sung tune that contrasted the freewheeling life of New York City's celebrity red-tailed hawk Pale Male with the struggles of "us mortals" on the streets beneath the bird's flight paths.


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