With a blast of trumpet from the audience, Devotchka was not subtle about beginning its April show at the Black Sheep in Colorado Springs.
Devotchka's eclecticism seems innately suited to their homebase of Denver. The crossroads on the edge of the Rocky Mountains, the last stop before the terrain gets tricky, fits music that's hard to pin down.
They gained wider recognition after their album How It Ends formed the backbone of the Little Miss Sunshine soundtrack. a little movie that has aged quite well.
As for Devotchka, the band can never escape that legacy. They will always be intertwined with Little Miss Sunshine. For the movie’s 20th anniversary, they embraced it, even if singer/guitarist/theremin player Nick Urata said they planned to use those songs as an engine to bring new material on the road.But the Little Miss Sunshine connection was the draw for many. I spotted my neighbors, as well as someone once I knew and had no desire to acknowledge. My neighbors were excited for the LMS songs and would have been happy if Devotchka just played the soundtrack. But the high quality of the music, the diversity of instruments and how they build their songs makes almost everything they perform interesting to an audience. They’re a band of multi-instrumentalists who manage to never seem gimmicky.
I already mentioned Urata. Jeannie Schoeder plays upright bass, a tuba wrapped in blue lights, and the flute. Tom Hagerman primarily plays the violin (with a lot of swift pizzicato passages), as well as accordion and piano. Shawn King mostly drums but adds another instrument or two as necessary.
For Devotchka, everything comes back to the 2004 album How it Ends, which formed the core of the soundtrack for Little Miss Sunshine (and prevented the soundtrack from receiving an Oscar nomination since it was previously released music).
How it Ends is an album of varied moods, and my favorite arrives on The Enemy Guns. Driven by a grungy, percussive guitar and whistling, it shapes the Hoover family’s last desperate stretch through L.A. before reaching the pageant. It should come as no surprise that they are friendly with Calexico, another favorite, and opened for them at Denver’s Leavitt Pavilion back in June 2022.Like almost every song, the percussive and horn-heavy We're Leaving would fit any southwestern roadtrip.
How it Ends opens the movie, as Olive repeatedly watches videos of beauty queens being crowed. The prominence of minor keys and inherent sadness in these songs always fit the movie perfectly, as the family barely holds it together through all their struggles and losses. Yet in the center is a blissfully oblivious young girl who still has hopes, and that pushes the family onward.
The melancholy strumming that begins You Love Me has a painful yearning that loses none of its potency live. Quickly the music swelled into the more expansive sound that is the core of Devotchka.
Urata even pointed out that they brought the toy piano down from Denver, which meant that the breakup song Too Tired was coming.
The eclecticism will always keep drawing me to Devotchka. Perhaps I have heard the songs live before - they have a way of always feeling fresh. That won't change the next time they trek south on I-25.































