Amy Helm lives upstate in Woodstock but she is almost city folk. Drummer Levon Helm of the Band and singer-songwriter Libby Titus raised their daughter partly in Manhattan, and Amy attended Trinity High School in the Upper West Side. Amy later founded and played in New York-based Ollabelle for 10 years. It is no surprise that her brief tour supporting the June 18 release of her third solo album, What the Flood Leaves Behind, included a performance at City Winery NY on June 24.
Helm was eager to resume travel and live performances. Prior
to the launch of her tour, Helm announced on her media, "Summer is here
and the music is moving me to get back out on the road! No zoom links, just a
joyful noise with real people in real time! We've put together a handful of
selective dates this summer. Can't wait to see you out there."
Helm crossed the city line and brought the Woodstock sound
with her. Backed by lead guitarist Adam Levy, acoustic guitarist Storey
Littleton, bassist Zach Djanikian and drummer Tony Mason, Helm performed many
songs from her new project, along with a few songs from her previous albums.
The thread that unified her repertoire was that all the songs spun on the axis
of back porch, homespun-rooted music. Except for the injection of Levy's slowly
stinging leads on electric guitar, Helm's performance seldom aligned itself
with contemporary pop music. The compositions instead borrowed from vintage
folk, country and blues, an Americana that blended elements of all of the
above. Added to that was Helm's soulful and emotive singing, which periodically
leaned towards gospel.
Unlike her previous album, recorded in Los Angeles, her
current work was sorted in isolation in her Woodstock home and the recording
studio built by her late father. Perhaps this contributed to the calmer and less
commercial aspect of her current approach to performance. The charm was both in
the simplicity and earthiness of her music but also how disconnected it was to the
sounds of the city. Although situated along the Manhattan stretch of the Hudson
River, Helm's concert was like a trip to New York's rural Hudson counties.

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