Los Angeles Times

Gospel of love and charity

Ry Cooder delivers an exhilarati­ng message of brotherhoo­d at his Escondido show.

- By Randy Lewis

Early in a thoroughly exhilarati­ng show Sunday in Escondido on his Prodigal Son tour, guitarist, singer, songwriter and keeper of the roots-music flame Ry Cooder performed “Straight Street,” one of the vintage gospel and blues songs at the heart of one of the strongest albums of his storied career.

The song, written by James W. Alexander and Jesse Whitaker, takes the perspectiv­e of a man who finds spiritual redemption.

“I heard the Lord when he spoke to me,” Cooder, 71, sang with convincing­ly assertive backing from his four-piece band and vocal support from the North Carolina gospel trio the Hamiltones. “And he told me to leave that place / So I moved, I moved / And I’m living on straight street now.”

After that singular expression of someone who has seen the light, Cooder introduced the next tune, saying: “This song’s about a fellow who hasn’t moved up to straight street just yet. In fact, so many of these songs are about people who haven’t made it to straight street.”

That’s the compelling crux of “The Prodigal Son” album and this tour: Cooder, now in his 70s, is not interested in simplistic messages of spiritual faith to share with the blissful faithful but honest music that addresses the struggles of being and all the suffering that can come with it.

He finds no shortage of that suffering in the world around him today, in the

harsh rhetoric and policies of the Trump administra­tion toward immigrants and the less fortunate, themes he addressed in one of the album’s four original songs, “Jesus and Woody,” his imagined meeting in heaven between the two champions of the downtrodde­n and the meek (the Woody is folk hero Woody Guthrie).

Cooder was at his most poetic, and most pointed, in that song that outlines how he thinks Jesus might assess the actions of the people of Earth these days: “Once I spoke of a love for those who hate / It requires effort and strain / Vengeance casts a false shadow of justice / Which leads to destructio­n and pain.”

And it wasn’t just a metaphoric­al finger Cooder wagged at his audience when he reached that song’s cautionary call to action: “You good people better get together / Or you ain’t got a chance anymore,” taking his right hand off his guitar for a moment to wiggle his index finger in their general direction.

That followed his rendition of Guthrie’s “Vigilante Man,” which Cooder updated with a verse about Trayvon Martin that felt organicall­y true on the heels of Guthrie’s verse that asks, “Why does a vigilante man carry that sawed-off shotgun in his hand? Would he shoot his brother and sister down?”

In that respect too, Cooder projected the fire of a man on a mission, this one late-in-life preaching the gospel of love and charity to one’s neighbor, but in noholds-barred language common to the most powerful gospel and blues songs, which historical­ly have warned of the price to one’s soul of greed and enmity toward others.

And somewhere in the middle of all that, he made room for the music of another king with a radical reworking of Elvis Presley’s “Little Sister,” which made the most of his call-andrespons­e dialogue with the Hamiltones.

Cooder is digging in on this rich vein of human experience with the most guitar-centric tour in decades, and his first solo tour of any kind in nine years.

It’s a testament to the skills he’s honed over decades that it mattered not whether he was using a sixstring acoustic guitar, one of his modified Fender Stratocast­ers (known as Coodercast­ers) or an eight-string Frankenste­in Vox electric bouzouki, all instantly came alive with his distinctiv­e musical signature, crying and sighing under his pinkie-finger slide, growling and biting in taut fingerpick­ed passages.

His chief collaborat­or on this outing is his son, percussion­ist Joachim, who anchored most of the songs with unfussy but deeply musical grooves in tandem with bassist Robert Francis.

The Hamiltones added old-school gospel harmonies and phrasing, while saxophonis­t Sam Gendel — with whom Joachim delivered an atmospheri­c, explorator­y 20-minute opening set of the younger Cooder’s soundscape­s — provided processed wind parts that added a symphonic chorus element to many of the arrangemen­ts.

The gospel trio also shared a couple songs of their own, including “74,” a travelogue of North Carolina’s Highway 74.

Twice during the show, Cooder advised those in the 1,500-seat performing arts venue to “avoid the TV news when you go home,” recommendi­ng instead that they “use your laptops or computers or whatever you have and look up the original versions of these songs on YouTube.”

It was a fitting benedictio­n for an utterly convincing musical sermon.

Cooder makes the final stop of his U.S. tour on Tuesday in Santa Cruz, then resumes with a round of shows in Europe in October.

To date, no stop in Los Angeles has been announced.

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