I woke up Saturday with no solid plans aside from signing a lease and the possibility of moving into my new place. A few text messages later, it was decided: Another trip down south for live music. Moving could wait. Seryn and Sarah Jaffe have never disappointed me so I figured it was going to be worth $10 and the commute.
Understatement.
The night began with Jonathan Clark who fronts the band, Comrade, and he had two of his bandmates accompany him during a few songs. Granada Theater was already starting to fill up so his slow, deliberate songs were a bit drowned out by the crowd. I was able to find Comrade’s music online and am now a little sad that the full band didn’t play. Seriously, check out “Sociao” on their Myspace page and imagine what that would have sounded like at the Granada.
Now, imagine going from one man and his guitar to five musicians and multiple instruments. The wall of sound that emerged from behind the curtain was Seryn, a Denton band that emerged last year out of thin air and into Dallas Observer’s music awards ballot in no time. The crowd met their multi-part harmonies and spirited folk with open arms as I overheard this conversation:
Girl 1: Wow, what’s this band’s name?
Girl 2: Seryn (sir-RIN). Or Seryn (SER-rin). Um, I don’t know.
Girl 1: We need to look them up. They’re good.
As I’ve mentioned before, I’ve been a fan of Seryn’s (it is pronounced “sir-RIN”) since they were featured on DC9 in Space last year. I’ve been to a majority of their shows in Denton, and this show was hands down their best. And that’s counting their intimate show at St. David’s. I’m not sure if it was because everyone brought their A-game, the energy of the crowd, or probably the magical combination of both, but their voices and various stringed instruments filled the theater in such a way that caused mouths to drop, demos to sell out, and mental notes to be taken that their full-length album will be released in November.
Even though Seryn’s performance was worth the ten dollar ticket price (thanks for the affordable show, Granada!) I would have also paid a separate ten dollars to have seen Sarah Jaffe’s show on its own. She was just that good. Much like Seryn, I fell in love with Sarah Jaffe two years ago and have made it to almost all of her shows in the DFW area, saw her at SXSW this year, and also witnessed her beautiful performance at St. David’s. I always thought she was best served simple as her voice and lyrics alone are captivating. She proved she can be so much more than that.
The full-capacity venue was treated to the debut of her music video for “Clementine”, a song she admitted wouldn’t have made it to her latest album, Suburban Nature, if her mom hadn’t insisted. The screen stayed put for a video of Jaffe and a friend, dancing and goofing off to a dance song, and those that were close enough could see Jaffe’s legs under the screen, dancing on stage. She was ready.
After an intense intro leading into “Under,” I knew we were in for a treat. The treat of all treats. Sarah Jaffe would be pulling out all the stops, letting go, and really giving her fans something to talk about on the ride home. She’s played with the absolutely talented lineup before that consists of Scott Danborn (keys), Becki Howard (violin, backup vocals), Robert Gomez (guitar, accordion), and Jeff Ryan (drums), but the new arrangements of the songs were perfect for this event. She looked comfortable in her skin, behind her guitar, the electric bass, and even, soley behind the mic. The most memorable moment for me was when she performed “Hooray for Love” (which may or may not be the title of the song since it is unreleased) in which she managed to be the most vulnerable and fearless at the same time. She showed everyone that she doesn’t have to be behind an instrument to bring it.
As this was the “treat of all treats,” we were treated to an encore in which Jaffe started out by putting on a homemade shirt someone threw onto the stage for her. Perhaps it was the champagne, perhaps it was her good nature, or perhaps it just seemed fitting for the moment, but she wore that small shirt over her own as she closed the night out with singalongs as she covered Radiohead’s “Creep” then finished with her own, “Summer Begs”. It was a show I know I’ll never forget, and I have a feeling the crowd nor Jaffe herself will either.
(Comrade / website / myspace / facebook // Seryn / website / myspace / twitter / facebook // Sarah Jaffe / website / myspace / facebook)

















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