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Pleasant Grove was at their best during their quietest, most melancholy songs. Though he'd gone seemingly unnoticed when he sat in on a song early in the set, Butcher got a warm ovation when Marcus Striplin announced he'd be rejoining the band for a few tunes. His mournful pedal-steel guitar licks, swirling in and out of the background, proved the highlight of slow songs like "Only a Mountain"; here's hoping the Butcher/Grove reunion wasn't just a one-off appearance.
But for me, the highlight was seeing Sarah Jaffe for the first time. That's not easy for me to say, because I am a Philistine chauvinist. Ninety-nine times out of 100, I would sooner pound chopsticks into my ear canals than listen to a chick with an acoustic guitar. Jaffe's arrangements are somehow simple and yet not, accented onstage with her pretty guitar flourishes and subdued cello, melodeon and drums. Her lyrics aren't hysterical diary entries or saccharine mash notes, and yet they're raw and frank in a way you wouldn't expect from a 21-year-old woman.
Dove Hunter, Jayson Wortham's post-Mandarin band, was a happy marriage of intricate guitar melodies, pedal-steel sadness, psychedelic Fender Rhodes electric piano and a chugging rhythm section.