Getting down with Dondero
October 8th, 2007 by Wade Tatangelo in News
Singer/songwriter plays wee hours of the morning at New World.
CONCERT REVIEW
Photo by Shanna Gillette
David Dondero,
Sat., Oct. 6, New World Brewery, Ybor City.
David Dondero’s name rarely gets spoken without mention of Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst. Both artists are singer/songwriters with a penchant for old-timey, strummed instruments and a knack for lyrics that weave poignant tales with telling details and imagery that often skews toward the surreal. Their plaintive vocal delivery is similar as well.
Oberst, who has cited Dondero as an influence, signed him to his Team Love imprint, which put out Dondero’s albums South of the South (2005) and his new one, Simple Love. Although Oberst has the larger fan base and enjoys greater critical acclaim, Dondero’s music, which I got hip to in the early ’00s thanks to WMNF, has always resonated with me in a more meaningful way than Bright Eyes’.
Seeing Dondero perform Saturday at New World Brewery in Ybor City cemented my appreciation for the dude as both a musician and all-around nice, down-to-earth guy.
He writes everyman songs about heartbreak and hangovers and empty pockets. Listening to Dondero deliver lyrics about being down and out, his voice quivering with emotion, you can’t help but feel the 38-year-old draws his inspiration from life, his life, not the lives of others.
During the four hours that led up to Dondero’s performance (more on that later) he chatted with many of the patrons. The conversations I had with him found us discussing stuff like credit-card problems, bad debt and when it’s time to file for bankruptcy. Turns out Dondero, despite being a lauded tunesmith who has been recording for venerable indie labels for the past decade, still makes the kind of money earned by alt-weekly journalists, school teachers and restaurant servers — basically, the same kind of people who attended his show Saturday.
“I don’t have anything that’s worth anything,†Dondero admitted. “I own one guitar. That’s it.â€
Whereas his studio work benefits from spot-on trumpet or banjo, Dondero performed with just his voice and an acoustic guitar on Saturday. And while he’s no virtuoso ax man, his use of reverb effects nicely augmented his Dylan-esque (think “Visions of Johanna,†“Desolation Rowâ€) ballads. Speaking of Dylan, both he and Dondero were born in Duluth, Minn. Dondero told me this before during a relaxed conversation before his show.
During his set, some members of the audience sat around the stage area mouthing the words. What distinguishes Dondero from other singer/songwriters is that his tunes take you somewhere — but not in a pedestrian, travelogue sense. They’re stories that are moving and often fascinating, riddled with pop-culture references and feelings ranging from despair to hope.
Dondero’s not a nihilist. His subject matter is often bleak, but there’s always that promise of rebirth. “I know it will get better with a brand new time zone,†he sings on the number “Leave the Drivin’ to Them.â€
Unfortunately, Dondero didn’t get to perform until 1:15 a.m. By then, several people I had spoken with who had planned to stay for his set had the hit the wall and gone home. In fact, the crowd had noticeably thinned by 2 a.m., at which point Dondero was only about three-quarters through his show.
It was closing time when he finished. Employees were shooing patrons out the door during a period typically allotted for discussing the night’s entertainment.
I’d love to get some feedback on this: Is there really a need to have the headliner go on later than, say, 11 p.m.? After all, the Velvet Revolver/Alice in Chains show that took place the same night at Ford Amphitheatre ended by 11:30.









October 16th, 2007 at 3:23 pm
Fuck yeah, flapjack! I’ve been bitching at Jack S. for years about this exact issue and it falls on deaf ears. He knows his audience, he says. He caters to the service crowd, who’re getting off work at midnight.
Well, fuck that! I’m 44 years old, obviously a huge music fan. I’d be out a couple of times a week if I thought I could get home at a reasonable hour. But 7 am comes awfully early (my husband has to get up at 5:30, you won’t see him at many shows at all…he went to Centro/Isbell but left after Centro) and I just can’t deal without enough sleep. Once you get to a certain age, you just can’t bounce back like you did in college. I’ve got kids to take care of. Middle school teachers don’t like to hear that the reason Justen is late to school is because his mother was out at a bar too late the previous night.
There are many music fans my age and older who came to music at the beginnings of punk/new wave/alternative (that’s a 10 years span there) who are now comfortably middle aged but haven’t lost their passion for music, new music, and live music. They’ve got money to burn but no place, really, to do it. I’ve even suggested doing 2 shows, one early and one late, for the more popular bands, or having the ‘headliner’ go on earlier and finish up the night with the support acts. There are creative ways to bring music to the people who want to hear it, What can I do, except start booking shows myself (no thank you.)
Doesn’t Harrell have a sig line, ‘go see some band you haven’t seen before’? Once again, same thing. Need to be at a time when we can get to them.
OK, sorry for the cursing at the beginning. This is one of my biggest pet peeves.
Jennifer