From Roots Music to ‘80s Pop Hits, Spindletree Does It All
(Except Free Bird)
By
Chris Manson August 23, 2007 Issue

The first
time I went to see this acoustic duo they didn’t even have
a name. Four months later Kari Dokken and Dan Hall are calling
themselves Spindletree. They have their own fancy logo on buttons,
a website (www.spindletreemusic.com), and have logged plenty of
hours in and around South Walton. When I caught their act before,
they did some really inventive renditions of ‘80s stuff
like Madonna’s Like a Prayer and Cyndi Lauper’s Time
After Time.
Happily, the scope
of their songbook has not suffered from these “legitimizing”
efforts. They still walk that not-so-fine line between the well-known—John
Lennon’s Watching the Wheels, Carly Simon’s You’re
So Vain, Chris Isaak’s Wicked Game, John Denver’s
Take Me Home Country Roads—and the obscure (neofolkies the
Weepies). There’s a nice original song by Dokken entitled
Disaster. Hall sings Decatur from Sufjan Stevens’ acclaimed
Illinoise disc and Jesus, Etc. by Wilco. For a moment I regret
trading in my copy of the Jeff Tweedy and company’s Yankee
Hotel Foxtrot CD, but I like Spindletree’s version better.
“I come from
a jazz and indie-rock kind of background,” Hall says. “Kari’s
the one that makes the ‘soup.’” Kari, who insists
she’s no “music snob,” likes just about everything.
She seriously considered working up a rendition of Hannah Montana’s
Best of Both Worlds when I suggested it.
Dokken strikes me as
a performer who would absolutely refuse to sing any song she didn’t
believe in. “That’s pretty much true,” she says.
“Even if it’s a pop song, it’s gotta have some
meaning behind it. That’s kind of what music is all about—expressing
yourself.” She grew up listening to everything but current
music. The first singer who really made an impression on 23-year-old
Dokken was Patsy Cline.
Tonight, Dokken and
Hall express themselves at Grayton Beach’s Gravel Road restaurant,
the kind of intimate venue where people walk up to the musicians
and initiate conversations right in the middle of a song. They
are completely unplugged, and sometimes it’s hard to hear
the vocals over the clanging of silverware and glasses. But these
two clearly enjoy what they do—they bounce and tap their
feet, smile and laugh, bruise their thighs with tambourine slaps…never
stand still.
Dokken credits Bob
Steeno for awakening her musical passion. “Nine months ago
I decided I wanted to learn how to play guitar, and he gave me
lessons,” Dokken says. “But he told me I had to sing,
too, and learn one song a week. He would get me onstage with them
at Pandora’s—I fell in love with it.” Dokken
actually started much earlier but wasn’t allowed to do solos
in her high school chorus. “I was told I had a ‘background’
voice,” she laughs.
“She has a phenomenal
voice,” Hall says. “To me, there’s no song she
can’t sing. It’s a good foundation to work from.”
Dokken also has a natural
gift for phrasing other writers’ songs to fit her style.
“We try to make a song our own.” I feel obligated
to clear up any questions as to whether she is related to a certain
front man of a certain semi-famous El Lay hair-metal band that
shares her name. “He’s a distant cousin of mine,”
she says of Alone Again singer Don Dokken. “I never met
him. He’s like a weird relation—three times removed.
I did get a free oil change once because of the name!”
The female half of
Spindletree handles rhythm guitar duties pretty well, but it’s
Hall who displays the truly fine fingerpicking tendencies. He
grew up in Tennessee and has played all his life, though he insists
he never made a dime from it until he moved here. “Everyone’s
supportive here, unlike Nashville where it’s cutthroat,”
Hall says.
As Spindletree’s
second set winds down, Kari sings the old gospel song Wade in
the Water. It’s the most satisfying thing I’ve heard
all night, until Hall wraps things up with his version of the
Buggles’ MTV-initiating Video Killed the Radio Star. I never
really thought of that as a song before now. And I haven’t
laughed so hard in a long time, either. I can’t wait to
see what Spindletree does next.
Chris Recommends:
• DVD—This Is Elvis (Warner) Includes both the never-before-on-video
theatrical version of the film plus the expanded home-video edition.
• This Bird Has Flown: A 40th Anniversary Tribute to the
Beatles’ Rubber Soul (Razor and Tie) Unlike many full-length
Fab Four tributes—the recent, pointless Meet the Smithereens
and Judy Collins Sings Lennon-McCartney come to mind—this
is adventurous and fun.
• Big Waves: Five Decades of Surf Rock (Starbucks Entertainment)
Essential tracks from Dick Dale, Duane Eddy, and the Marketts,
along with some fairly obscure stuff that you’ll wonder
how you managed to live without.
• DVD—Buck Owens: Live from Austin, TX (New West,
also available on CD) Pretty short, but--The Best of Hee Haw aside--there’s
not a lot of Buck available on DVD.
• DVD—Eliza Gilkyson: Live from Austin, TX (New West,
also available on CD) Recommended especially to fans of Patty
Griffin and Lucinda Williams, as well those few troubled souls
who are not familiar with Patty and Lucinda.
• Scorpions: Gold (Hip-O) Two discs of the German rockers’
career highlights, including the resounding we’re-all-brothers
anthem Wind of Change. All the proof you need that Scorps were
the true inspiration for Spinal Tap.
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