Heart's career trajectory has wavered over the years, and the band
has taken a hiatus several times. Between 2007 and 2018, Ann Wilson released
several solo projects, including two albums and two EPs. This year, Wilson
bookended these releases with old music and new music. In May 2021, she
re-released four pre-Heart recordings from 1969 made with her first band, the
Daybreaks. A month later, she released Sawheat
8, a five-song EP recorded during the pandemic in 2020; the EP consists of
three new original songs plus covers of Steve Earle's "The Revolution
Starts Now" and Alice in Chains' "The Rooster." This month, Ann
Wilson and her touring band, the Amazing Dawgs, released a four-song live EP
called Howlen Live.
Wilson headlined at City Winery NYC on August 23 and 24, shows
that promised Heart classics and new solo material. Backed by lead guitarist
Tom Bukovac on lead guitar, rhythm guitarist/keyboardist Paul Moak, bassist Tony
Lucido, and drummer Sean Lane, Wilson showcased her iconic voice and a taste of
her new repertoire. Wilson possesses a lyric soprano vocal range which can
reach operatic ranges as well as banshee screams; at City Winery, she was
rooted somewhere in the middle, favoring saucy blues tones, but frequently scrunching
her face and soaring for the high-powered belting which built her career.
Although she was the primary songwriter for Heart, Wilson sang
only two original non-Heart songs in her set. She pleased the audience with six
Heart songs, and with a few of the classic rock covers by Aerosmith and Led Zeppelin.
The other covers were less impressive. Most importantly, however, she proved
that at age 71 her voice still gets the job done. Wilson was a voice looking
for the right song. When the combination was right, the performance was
spectacular. She succeeded as an interpreter of others' songs, but left a
dangling question: does she still have juice as a songwriter?
Wilson has stated in recent interviews that Heart has no immediate
plans to work on new music or perform live. In the meantime, she and her band will
continue touring through October, concluding with three shows in Seattle,
Washington, the city that birthed her music career. The current tour will
remind her fans that she can rock with the best, but she has yet to take the
next step at proving herself as an original song crafter outside of Heart.
Setlist
Set 1
- The Revolution Starts... (Steve Earle cover)
- Black Wing
- Love Alive (Heart song)
- Magic Man (Heart song)
- Isolation (John Lennon cover)
- Greed
- Forget Her (Jeff Buckley cover)
- Won't Get Fooled Again (The Who cover)
Set 2
- Crazy on You (Heart song)
- Permission (Sixx:A.M. cover)
- Straight On (Heart song)
- Even It Up (Heart song)
- Love of My Life (Queen cover)
- Dream On (Aerosmith cover)
- Barracuda (Heart song)
Encore:
- Going to California (Led Zeppelin cover)
- Black Dog (Led Zeppelin cover)
***
The Manhattan Beat covers New York City's live music developments as they happen. All photographs are by Everynight Charley Crespo, except when noted otherwise. For a list of Manhattan venues that are presenting live music regularly, swing the desktop cursor to the right and click on the pop-up tab "Where to Find Live Music." For a listing of upcoming concerts for live audiences, visit The Manhattan Beat's August and September 2021 calendars.

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