Iris DeMent and Ana Egge |
I’ve been sitting with it for a week. One morning I wake up, and “The Sacred Now” jangles in my head telling me that’s the heart of the show. The next morning, “Heart Is a Mirror” says it’s the introduction that led to “Sacred’s” conclusion. I abandoned a draft.
We laughed.
“If I’m not talking, you can get to know your neighbor.”
As she sang about a father mechanic and his daughter who struggles to connect with him, as she danced around the room with her own daughter, as she remembered a moment when it seemed everyone in the world was transfixed by an eclipse (when ideologies didn’t matter, just our shared humanity), time and again Egge drew the room close.
Iris, Chris, Ana play |
DeMent began quietly, in a voice not that distant from Egge’s, “The home’s become such an angry place/Friends now wear an enemy’s face/The chasm’s grown so wide….”
She would talk about Mahalia Jackson as “a real woman” and identify the Good Samaritan as “the real one,” not the demagogue of the moment. She would even give voice to a character from Chekhov, after a quick tender story about her college professor with a trunk of dog-eared books. “The Cherry Orchard” would speak through a woman facing the end of everything she knows, as aristocracy gave way to capitalism, managing to find new life in death.
Darkness in light and light in darkness wove their way through the night, DeMent admitting, “there is no separating the good stuff from the bad,” Egge acknowledging “There’s never going to be a way to make this easy,” the two together saying, “Life is so hard, who isn’t scarred?”
Knuckleheads before the show |
Perhaps DeMent’s bravest statement came with the song “Goin’ Down to Sing in Texas.” Starting with the level of fear in a fascist state (not just the one in the title but increasingly the whole of the country and the world), the song pays homage to the Chicks for taking the heat for what they said about their Governor, the one who started not only the longest American war in history but the one just after it, the one that drew the most antiwar protest since Vietnam. She not only ripped the “war criminal” who lied about WMDs, and all his celebrity friends, but she called out, “Hey, Mr. Bezos, I’m talking to you.” She declared herself right by the side of all Americans taking a knee against police violence. This declaration--along with the Biblical promise that the very "rocks will cry out" at such injustice--drew the loudest applause of the evening.
Back when she first sang “Wasteland of the Free” in 1996 (a song she didn't need to sing this night to make the point), she railed against a world where “the poor have now become the enemy.” With “Texas,” she makes it clear what her enemy is.
It's the opposite vision of “The Sacred Now,” the song for which she brought Egge back to close the set. This Byrds-like rocker offered the perfect meeting place for these two voices (hell with Donahue’s consistent support, three voices). “We remember, then forget again,” they sang. “All is lost,” then, “some hope is found.”
But “those who stand to gain draw dividing lines,” DeMent sang. The enemies are those trying to separate this room the whole night’s been about bringing together. “We can’t speak,” she acknowledges, “but still somehow, we all share the sacred now.” The most political line in the whole song is “it’s not a dream, it’s the sacred now.” That, coupled with the encore, “Let the Mystery Be,” declared it time--to set ideological divisions aside and build what's possible out of this sacred space.