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| Michael Glabicki of Rusted Root |
Singer/guitarist Michael
Glabicki formed his first and only real band, Rusted Root, around 1990 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Even from the
beginning, his vision was to make multicultural rock-and-soul music that fused
American roots music with rhythms from African, Latin American, and Native
American influences. The band sold more than 3,000,000 albums in the 1990s and
then for the most part faded away from visibility in the 2000s. Rusted Root is
comprised of Glabicki on lead vocals and guitar, Liz Berlin on backing vocals and percussion, Colter Harper and Dirk
Miller on guitars, Patrick Norman
on bass guitar and Preach Freedom on
drums. The band has released seven studio albums, the most recent of which is
2012's The Movement.
At the Gramercy
Theatre tonight, Rusted Root performed an overview of its 24-year career of
non-genre-specific polyrhythmic music. Balancing footholds in both jam band and
world music but not comfortably confined to either genre, the band coasted on
grooves rather than on predictable pop structures. Glabicki picked almost
gypsy-sounding leads on his acoustic guitar, and harmonized old-world style with
Berlin on numerous songs. The performance never really picked up steam,
preferring to chill in trance-like rhythm patterns that flowed from one song to
the next. The spell was broken with a three-song encore that jump-started with
a left-of-center cover of the Rolling
Stones' "Honky Tonk Women" and ended with the band's two biggest radio
hits, "Send Me on My Way" and a percussion-based groove that led into
"Ecstasy." If nothing else, the band performed honest music,
unrefined in that it was not packaged for commercial consumption and yet catchy
enough to encourage the audience to free-form movement in the small theater's
open floor.
Visit Rusted Root at www.rustedroot.com.

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