Los Angeles Times

Benji Hughes reaches inside

Hanging with friends at the Bootleg, he turns on a dime from goofy to heartfelt.

- By Mikael Wood

A good half- hour before the end of his concert Thursday night at the Bootleg Theater, Benji Hughes was already looking ahead to his next gig.

The North Carolinaba­sed singer and his band would be in Los Angeles for a few days, he told the crowd, so anyone interested in having him play again — “birthday, house party, whatever” — should reach out.

“It’s not that difficult” to book him, he added, before explaining why he was using one job to solicit another: “All this juice out here is really expensive.”

Hughes, 40, is accustomed to such transactio­nal thinking. Though he’s something of a cult hero thanks to his brilliant and demented pop records — including a new one, “Songs in the Key of Animals,” released last week — it’s probably his work as a

songwriter- for- hire that pays most of his grocery bills.

Hughes has created jingles for breakfast cereal and booze, and he’s composed for movies and television. Remember John C. Reilly’s music- biopic parody “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story”? Hughes co- wrote “Let’s Duet,” a pitch- perfect spoof of the kind of tune Johnny Cash and June Carter used to sing.

What’s fascinatin­g about Hughes’ own music is the way that commercial instinct comes up against his more outré tendencies.

In 2008, following an earlier stint in the also- ran grunge band Muscadine, Hughes released his debut solo album, “A Love Extreme,” which lived up to its title with no fewer than 25 songs.

Among them are a handful of gorgeous ballads like “All You’ve Got to Do Is Fall in Love,” an old- fashioned tear- in- your- beer lament that Hughes sings with such wounded tenderness that it’s no wonder Jeff Bridges recruited him a few years ago to appear on the album Bridges made with T Bone Burnett.

But then there’s “Tight Tee Shirt,” a creepy, disco-kissed ode to said garment “on a real sweet girl,” and the bleary “I Went With Some Friends to See the Flaming Lips,” which winds up with the singer’s pal Mark taking “way too much MDMA.”

A similar tension animates “Songs in the Key of Animals,” which combines catchy but off- kilter synthpop songs like “Shark Attack!!!!!!!!!!” (“If you show up at Red Lobster looking like a lobster / They won’t charge you for anything at all”) with more of Hughes’ last- call piano- bar material, including “Take You Home,” a real beauty.

If Hughes were to focus on one or the other, you could envision the funny stuff or the sad stuff propelling him to increased visibil- ity. But the whole point of Benji Hughes is taking both of those sides together, just as it was with his clear predecesso­rs — sensitive oddballs like Randy Newman, Harry Nilsson and Warren Zevon ( the last of whom Hughes nodded to directly at the Bootleg by singing a bit of “Desperados Under the Eaves”).

At a moment when pop stars are encouraged to streamline their brands, Hughes lets it all hang out.

On Thursday, that philosophy extended to his stage garb — an open Hawaiian shirt through which his belly proudly bulged — and his freewheeli­ng banter, which, in addition to the high price of juice in L. A., touched on the Kevin Bacon drama “The Following ” and whether the driver died in the car crash that killed Princess Diana.

After every couple of songs, Hughes would dash backstage and come back several minutes later with a small cup f illed with who knows what. And by my count, he played exactly one tune from the new album he was ostensibly there to promote. ( That was “Freaky Feedback Blues,” which inspired an audience singalong despite the fact that the song had been out for only a few days.)

In this way, Hughes seemed to be tempting you to think of the show as no big deal, a piece of work to get through before moving on to something else.

But just as you let your defenses down, he eased into a quietly devastatin­g version of his song “Girl in the Tower,” in which he dreams of storming a castle to rescue his lover.

It was tragic. It was comic. It ended with an endearing stumble when Hughes’ drummer missed his guitarist’s cue for a dramatic finish.

Who wouldn’t want to hire this guy?

 ?? Brian van der Brug
Los Angeles Times ?? AT THE BOOTLEG Benji Hughes sets a relaxed atmosphere as he and his band roam his song catalog.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times AT THE BOOTLEG Benji Hughes sets a relaxed atmosphere as he and his band roam his song catalog.

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