moe. with Daniel Donato’s Cosmic Country at Rose Music Center at the Heights, Huber Heights, Ohio, July 19, 2024
moe. were deep in to “the Pit” when Daniel Donato stepped on stage with his hosts and prepared to show off more of the improvisational chops that powered his opening set.
Following the jungle groove of “Mar de Ma” and “Lazarus’,” which gave percussionist Jim Loughlin and drummer Vinnie Amico a marathon-worthy workout, the preceding “Four” cooled things down a bit inside the Rose Music Center in suburban Dayton, Ohio, and gave guitarist Chuck Garvey his lone turn at the mic on this July 19 before a small, Friday-night audience.
Then, as “the Pit” gave way to “Moth,” Donato settled in with the sextet and eventually got himself involved in a guitar duel with Al Schnier that turned so intense, the young Cosmic Country leader whirled around to flash a humongous, shit-eating grin in Garvey and bassist Rob Derhak’s direction. This was the end of moe.’s one-set, 130-minute performance, save for keyboardist Nate Wilson leading the band through the encore of Joe Walsh’s “Rocky Mountain Way,” to end a night with a band so hot, it skipped right over Garvey’s malfunctioning talkbox as if nothing had happened.
Twenty-seven years after playing the opening slot on the Furthur Festival, moe. are now the veterans lending their stage to such newcomers as Donato’s Cosmic Country.
And they delivered with an hourlong opening set that had the audience on its feet from beginning to end, as Donato played lightning-fast runs on his Telecaster without ceding a note or a bit melody for speed. He instead wrangled out twangy leads that were Garciaesque in their tone and approach to improvisation as the rest of the quartet laid down funky support on keys, bass and drums and at the mic.
“Weathervane” found clavinet adding a groove to the spacey interludes; while “Blue Skies” brought things down. But things rose right back up when Nathan Aronowitz stepped out from behind his keys to play lead guitar and sing “Sugar Shack” as Donato moved into a supporting role.
Having been through Derhak’s 2018 cancer diagnosis, Garvey’s 2021 stroke and the recent suicide of Derhak’s son, moe. are playing like a young band looking for a career path rather than a group with more than three decades under its belt and an established fan base of faithful moe.rons. They came out firing rapidly as Wilson lead them through an agressive, grinding rendition of “Yellow Tigers” and never let up as they flawlessly executed the quirky arrangements and shifting time signatures that mark their music. And Wilson, who joined in 2023, is an invaluable addition on lead and harmony vocals, keys and flute, giving the band a fuller musical sound and padding its work on the mics.
This tour is dubbed Best.Summer.Ever. And though the Grateful Dead are no longer on the summer circuit, the moniker suits the extra-hot moe., which is playing with the fire and vitality it did in the early days.
It felt like it did when moe. was playing bars in the early 1990s.
Grade card: moe. with Daniel Donato’s Cosmic Country at Rose Music Center - 7/19/24 - A/B+
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