John Stirratt was
born in New Orleans, Louisiana, and grew up in nearby Mandeville. He performed
with the Hilltops, a band that
included his twin sister Laurie Stirratt
and her husband Cary Hudson. During
this time he met and befriended the band Uncle
Tupelo and joined that band in 1992. After vocalist Jay Farrar left Uncle Tupelo in 1994, the remaining members founded
Wilco. Stirratt circa 1998 wanted to
work on some songs that he knew would not become Wilco songs. He met producer/engineer/multi-instrumentalist
Pat Sansone in a New Orleans
recording studio, they worked on the songs together and by 2000 formed the Autumn Defense. In 2001 the duo
recorded its debut album, The Green Hour.
Sansone joined Wilco in 2004, giving Stirratt and Sansone more opportunities to
collaborate. The Autumn Defense is now based in Chicago and the group's fifth
album, Fifth, was released on January
28, 2014.
At the Highline
Ballroom tonight, the Autumn Defense showed that it stands apart from Wilco.
John Stirratt and Pat Sansone are somewhat invisible in Wilco behind band
leader Jeff Tweedy, but they were very
much in the forefront in the five-member Autumn Defense tonight. While Wilco is
largely driven by Jeff Tweedy's alt-country vision, the Autumn Defense focused
on a 1960s/1970s adult contemporary sound. Stirratt and Sansone took turns
singing lead on the songs, and the songs all featured multiple part harmonies.
Here is the first area where the band needed work; while the recording studio is
designed to correct any damage, the live stage does not offer these privileges.
Tonight neither individual sang well, and together they were worse. Fans may
have overlooked the less-than-stellar vocals in favor of the warm and gentle
pop grooves of the songs. The songs occasionally incorporated brief folk and country
licks, but largely they were delivered as soft, sweet and sunny tunes with
obligatory catchy choruses. Yet, for all their signature imprint, the songs
lacked bite. They became much like the bland music one hears in the background while
visiting retail stores. This may appeal to shoppers, but in rock clubs an
audience often expects a livelier and more innovative performance.
Visit the Autumn Defense at www.theautumndefense.com.
Visit the Autumn Defense at www.theautumndefense.com.

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