Waterloo Region Record

Rateliff & the Night Sweats are on a mission from God

Band had an incredible journey to its second album

- RANDY LEWIS

Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats’ “Hey Mama,” a song on the band’s compelling sophomore album, “Tearing at the Seams,” gets at the idea of never giving up — physically, emotionall­y or spirituall­y — before putting everything you’ve got into the goal at hand.

That appears to be a cornerston­e principle for the Denverbase­d musician and his seven hard-working, hard-playing band mates.

Whether it’s being expressed by a parent to a child, a romantic partner or one friend to another, the song that channels both the Band and Van Morrison circa “Astral Weeks” is intended as a wake-up call to the recipient: “You ain’t gone far enough to say ‘At least I tried’ / You ain’t worked hard enough to say, ‘Well, I’ve done mine’ / You ain’t run far enough to say, ‘My legs have failed’ ... You ain’t run far enough to say, ‘It ain’t gonna get any better.’”

The soul-R&B-rock collective, which scored nationwide success three years ago with rave-up hit single “S.O.B.,” ranks as one of the most thrilling arrivals of recent years, its reputation stoked considerab­ly by the group’s incendiary live shows.

But Rateliff and company, as suggested by those words from “Hey Mama,” aren’t about to settle easily into self-satisfacti­on over their ability to move bodies onto a dance floor and put feet in motion.

“With everything that’s happening nowadays in our country and in our culture and in the culture worldwide, I think we need to strive and struggle to be more than the devices in our hands,” Rateliff, 39, said during a recent swing through L.A. that included two nights of shows at the venerable Troubadour club in West Hollywood.

The band plays Toronto’s Massey Hall May 18.

“Besides playing music, I want to build a sense of community,” Rateliff said, sipping his Paloma, a concoction of tequila and grapefruit, and seated at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in a dark booth next to the band’s bassist, his longtime friend Joseph Pope III.

The music on “Tearing at the Seams,” as it was on its predecesso­r, “Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats,” is an invigorati­ng latter-day incarnatio­n of vintage soul and R&B music that was the stock-in-trade at Memphis’ Stax Records label, not coincident­ally the reactivate­d imprint that signed Rateliff three years ago.

“I don’t want to alienate people about what they believe in and what their political views are,” Rateliff said, “but actually make people feel it’s important for us to come together — and that the person next to you is just as important as yourself, if not more important.”

It’s a tall order, something that Rateliff, Pope and fellow band members Luke Mossman (guitar), keyboardis­t Mark Shusterman, drummer Patrick Meese, trumpeter Scott Frock and saxophonis­ts Jeff Dazey and Andreas Wild take to heart, onstage and in the recording studio.

If their talk seems to echo the Blues Brothers’ signature claim to be on “a mission from God” with their music, it is.

Rateliff and his cohorts have noted the deaths in recent years of many of their musical heroes, a fact of life, however sad, that they’ve taken as a clarion call for a new generation to step up to the

plate and at least attempt to fill their shoes.

“Who’s going to take over for them?” Rateliff asked. “There’s a Kevin Morby song called ‘Beautiful Stranger,’” at which point Pope interjects in one of many exchanges in which one of them often finishes, or extends, the other’s thoughts, “He wrote it in response to the Bataclan attack” in 2015 in which terrorists killed more than 100 people in Paris.

“That’s the premise,” Pope said, “‘You’re a beautiful stranger and I’m going to be your cover’ — as opposed to responding in a violent way. It’s an incredible song.”

Added Rateliff: “He says at one point: ’Pray for Paris, they’re not going to scare us or stop the music.’ I want to be part of that. I’m not living my life in fear. I want to be the thing — we want to be the thing — that we need to be a community. A community of lovers and a community of friends is much better than a community of warriors.”

Lyrically, Rateliff often employs more poetically inclined, often-impression­istic lyrics that reflect his years plying the boards as a folk-informed singersong­writer. In many of his songs, people are seeking understand­ing about relationsh­ips that have failed, yearning for connection or railing against self-deception.

He had released several wellregard­ed solo albums — former Led Zeppelin singer Robert Plant is among his admirers — but none connected commercial­ly.

As he told The Times three years ago, he decided he was ready to quit music and return to his previous career as a gardener, but before throwing in the towel decided to make one more record tapping the classic soul sound that he loved growing up.

Something of a musical Hail Mary pass, the album became a surprise hit, thanks in no small part to some serious cheerleadi­ng on the band’s behalf by host and namesake of the “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.”

In a matter of weeks, Rateliff & the Night Sweats leapfrogge­d from scarcely attended club shows to sold-out theatres of 1,000 and 1,500 seats and more.

For close to three years, the group maintained a daunting schedule of concerts — 175 to 200 shows a year — during which Rateliff’s marriage collapsed while his profession­al career was booming.

Last year they started work on a followup album, this time working in a fully collaborat­ive fashion. For their debut album, Rateliff wrote most of the songs in isolation, at home in Denver, and recorded basic tracks with musician-producer Richard Swift at his studio in Cottage Grove, Ore.

The album’s coup de grace horn parts were added after the fact.

“As much as it seemed like that record came out of nowhere,” Pope said.

“I told Nathaniel and I’ve said it before: When he played those demos for me from his attic, I felt like I’ve been hearing this guy singing my whole life, from the time he started writing songs until now, and this feels to me like the most guttural, most transparen­t and natural thing I’ve ever heard him do.”

I think we need to strive and struggle to be more than the devices in our hands. NATHANIEL RATELIFF

 ?? MALIA JAMES TNS ?? Nathanial Rateliff & the Night Sweats’ second album, “Tearing at the Seams,” attempts to “build a sense of communty,”says Rateliff.
MALIA JAMES TNS Nathanial Rateliff & the Night Sweats’ second album, “Tearing at the Seams,” attempts to “build a sense of communty,”says Rateliff.

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