Kudos to the booking agent who had Naomi Wachira on the bill Sunday night at the Tractor Tavern with Valerie June. I was happy to finally catch Wachira live, and doubly gratified to be within earshot of June.

Naomi Wachira
  • Sean Jewell
  • Naomi Wachira

Wachira finished her set with “African Girl,” a song she referred to as her soul anthemโ€”something I thought was a curious thing to say about a songโ€”but if you can imagine being so deliberate, so certain, so confident with words, then you can begin to imagine the level at which Wachira sings. With songbird-like vibrato and the ability to wrestle the breath from every note, she sang and played guitar for a mostly solo opening set (a backup singer accompanied on a couple of songs). Sheโ€™s a local treasure to be certain, and was the perfect opener for Valerie June.

June is a west Tennessee (Memphis, by way of Jackson) songwriter who stumbled into singing and taught herself to play guitar and banjo. Still, it was about an hour and a half, and many banjo songs into her set, when she announced โ€œI donโ€™t know how to play this thing, I just make it sound how I want it to, I mean, itโ€™s mine, right?โ€ And she was right. June has writers tripping over themselves to compare her to everyone from Erykah Badu to Joni Mitchell (I mean, at least dig a little, sheโ€™s more like Rosetta Tharp meets Francine Reed), and people want to include the names of her recent producers when talking about the sound of her new album. But itโ€™s clear listening to her music live that Valerie June is playing exactly and only how Valerie June can, which, luckily for us, is a virtuosic roots-country filled with ragtime and blues.

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