Love hurts. And when Tim Hockenberry sings a love
song, it is deliciously excruciating! His gravelly
voice growls out song after song with passion, pain, and
absolute focus. The Tim Hockenberry Quartet recently
jammed at the Empire Plush Room, and the local group
delivered a surprisingly casual yet always captivating
evening.
The Quartet consists of Hockenberry on keys and
vocals, Gawain Mathews on guitars, Bobby Vega on basses,
and Michael Fellows on drums. These talented musicians
provide superlative backup, and the sound levels were
precisely set, so they never drowned out the singing.
Though Hockenberry generously defers to the band, as
vocalist he commands the stage. Yet he keeps the
showmanship to a minimum, instead focusing attention on
crafting each song. His patter tends to be sparse and
minimal, yet it never feels unfriendly. Simply put, the
evening was about the beautiful songs, most of which
were written by Hockenberry.
Establishing a casual tone from the very start (15
minutes late, ouch) the Quartet hit the stage wearing
jeans! This was a clear departure from the Plush Room’s
standard cabaret fare where the performers are decked
out in elegant formal wear. Here instead was a relaxed
group of musicians jamming for fans, friends, and
family.
Hockenberry started the program with a mellow
composition titled “This Time by Me.” This soulful love
song provided the perfect musical vehicle for
Hockenberry’s heart-aching delivery. Immediately
following was “Howling at Your Window,” and howling was
certainly the operative word here as he wailed out a
surfeit of pain fed by the crueler side of love. In the
ensuing number, “A Little Harder for You,” an eager
paramour reaches out to a reluctant loved one. It
featured a heavenly guitar solo by Gawain Matthews. Next
up was a major highlight as Hockenberry got down with
the oh-so-funky “Built for Comfort” (Willie Dixon.)
Slowing a bit for “Surfacing” and “Your Lovin’ Arms,” he
then delivered the most melancholy version EVER of “I
Left My Heart in San Francisco.” You’ve never heard it
sung like this before—aching, yearning, burning, and
brilliant! Some great instrumental riffs
suffuse “Two Steps Back,” and a hot samba beat
propels “The One I Love.” Alone on stage for “Marie”
(Randy Newman) and accompanying himself on keyboards,
Hockenberry thrilled the audience with an image-packed
tribute to a lost love. A major re-tooling of “Girl”
(The Beatles) renders the song virtually unrecognizable,
yet still enjoyable.
Speeding away from a broken love at “100 Miles an
Hour,” the evening concluded. The Quartet re-took the
stage for an encore, “Should Have Been Love.” Then
Hockenberry, alone on stage, sang one more song, “Make
Me Understand.”
Composer Hockenberry provided the majority of the
evening’s music. If he uses his own life as grist for
these songs, then the man has had his heart shattered…at
least once! His subject matter returns relentlessly to
men who loved big and lost bigger. Many of the songs
share a common tempo, each thereby seeming too much the
same. But when the sound is this good, is that a
problem? He creates a tension within each song that
communicates boundless suffering at the feet of love.
And the audience is moved to respectful silence at the
intensity of the lyrics and melodies.
Keep an eye out for future performances of this
amazing local bluesman. Then pop a Prozac and bask in
the hot, soulful sounds of a howling heart. Hockenberry
promises that a CD (long-awaited by his fans) is
targeted for March. If it captures the soulful fervor of
the evening I attended, then it’s a Must-Buy!