For their first Twin Cities show in four years and debut appearance at Minneapolis' reborn Armory, Trampled by Turtles did a lot on Saturday night to remind Minnesota fans their heart is still up in Duluth.
They played a new song inspired by the harbor town where they formed 19 years ago. They brought along an opening act they met and cut their teeth with there.
And for the night's emotional centerpiece, the six-man acoustic string band brought out one of Duluth's most revered music legends to help pay tribute to his wife, whose funeral was held there three weeks ago while Trampled was still on the road.
All that, and the still-happy-together, hippie-ish strummers didn't even have the courtesy to play "9th and Hennepin" as a nod to Minneapolis when it came time to pull out a Tom Waits cover near the end of the nearly two-hour, sold-out Armory performance.
The Waits tune they did pick, "Old Shoes (& Picture Postcards)" — with the refrain, "Farewell to the girl with the sun in her eyes" — capped off a dramatic trio of songs that included Trampled's biggest and most heartful hit, "Alone," plus one other cover that ruled the night, Low's "When I Go Deaf."
Low's own Alan Sparhawk took the stage and took over lead vocals for the latter song, stoically holding it together while many in the crowd lost it. No one mentioned Sparhawk's wife and bandmate, Mimi Parker — who died of cancer earlier this month at age 55 — until after the song finished with a big chaotic and cathartic crashing of strings.
"We all miss Mim so much," TBT frontman Dave Simonett said, and then matter-of-factly declared, "Low was the coolest band of all time."
While the "was" in that comment unintentionally stung, the rest of Saturday's concert concertedly hit home just how much Simonett's own band remains an evolving, improving, thriving unit as it nears its 20th anniversary.