That is, there are not elements of Stax Records 45s synthesized with a modern sound it would be easy to mistake Thee Sacred Souls with something playing at the jukebox at Deep Eddy Cabaret. But Thee Sacred Souls were the main attraction as the sun set on Friday night.Ī true throwback - some might call it pastiche, but I'm feeling kinder - to ’60s and ’70s soul and R&B, the band takes its sound very seriously. Gypsy Mitchell played a pleasant set of psychedelic soul and funk after that. We caught Blondshell, who are going to be big and whose singer looked not unlike Portia from White Lotus from the edges of the parking lot. Still, there are always some gems who play the event. There is no need to re-litigate what South Congress has become, but the annual free concert series held in the Hotel San Jose parking lot features an increasing number of stoned college boys for whom golfing is their entire personality and floppy-hatted women doing goofy dances.
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