It’s simple to expertise musical whiplash on the Huge Ears Competition.
As you hop round Knoxville, Tennessee’s sweltering golf equipment and regal theaters, you could soak in jazz-funk textures at one present, trailed minutes later by avant-garde steel bombast. It’s actually a high-brow expertise not suited to everybody — however nonetheless, the four-day occasion by no means feels snooty.
What makes Huge Ears work is that each act on the invoice, from obscure indie artists to top-of-marquee heavyweights, feels linked on some intangible stage. Everybody right here is barely uncommon of their method, and that additionally goes for the handful of traditional rock artists who graced the lineup in 2026.
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After all, “traditional rock” is a slippery time period — and it’s even extra slippery at a competition like Huge Ears, the place genres are sometimes stretched out like Foolish Putty. This yr’s lineup featured British psych-funk veterans Cymande, commanding the Mill & Mine’s percussive, horn-driven grooves. On the opposite finish of the spectrum was Deerhoof, who bathed the identical venue in waves of superb dual-guitar suggestions, disorienting drum patterns and chirpy pop melodies.
Numerous marquee guitarists would have probably appealed to the open-minded traditional rock fan: innovator Fred Firth, who acquired his begin within the ’70s avant-prog band Henry Cow; Gary Lucas, who’s labored with each Captain Beefheart and Jeff Buckley; experimentalist Marc Ribot, whose collaborators embrace everybody from Tom Waits to Elvis Costello; folk-rock big Richard Thompson, jazz nice Pat Metheny and Wilco legend Nels Cline.
However Robert Plant and David Byrne — who carried out in individually ticketed occasions, with early entry given to pass-holders — naturally commanded essentially the most consideration. And each delivered, in true Huge Ears style, with units that couldn’t have sounded much less alike.
David Byrne (Friday, March 27; Knoxville Civic Auditorium)
Joined by 12 blue-clad musicians that snaked throughout the stage like a theater troupe marching band, Byrne alternated between Speaking Heads classics and up to date solo cuts in a set equally ecstatic, foolish and philosophical. Even outdoors of the songs, it was exhausting to not be swallowed up within the cinema of all of it — there was intricate choreography, vivid video backdrops, even between-song speeches that touched on every thing from his private residing quarters (2025’s dinky however charming “My Condo Is My Pal”) to the story of a lady who used to take LSD in a area close to a Yoo-hoo manufacturing facility (1985’s eternally strident “And She Was”).
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Few reveals attain this stage of communal pleasure. There have been high-fives aplenty and miniature dance events breaking out each different monitor, notably when Byrne and crew — together with a number of backing vocalists and percussionists — dug into the Speaking Heads stuff. “(Nothing However) Flowers,” an underrated slice of arty worldbeat from 1988’s Bare, felt like peaceable rise up, and the spongy synth-funk of “Burning Down the Home” reached real catharsis.
Robert Plant with Saving Grace and Suzi Dian (Saturday, March 28; Tennessee Theatre)
Plant and Byrne’s vibes couldn’t have been extra totally different. Byrne and crew reached a kaleidoscopic zeal, whereas Plant settled right into a ghostly, dust-blown Americana ambiance along with his present band, Saving Grace.
However there have been additionally apparent parallels. Like Byrne, the Led Zeppelin legend gracefully ladled out a handful of his outdated band’s tunes: a low-key people rendition of “Ramble On,” highlighted by some light accordion and the frontman’s extra restrained speak-singing; a menacing “4 Sticks,” that includes among the group’s most dramatic dynamic shifts; and a largely trustworthy (all issues thought-about) tackle “Mates.”
Cora Wagoner, courtesy of the Huge Ears Competition
But it surely’s fascinating how Plant and firm — together with singer Suzi Dian and multi-instrumentalist Matt Worley, who jumped round from numerous guitars to banjos — made the origin of every minimize irrelevant.
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Saving Grace reworked conventional music, indie-rock (Low’s “Everyone’s Tune”), Neil Younger (“For the Turnstiles”), psych-rock (Moby Grape’s “It’s a Lovely Day Right this moment”), gospel, blues, even solo Plant rockers that would appear incompatible with this rootsy remedy (“Calling to You”). But it surely all felt cohesive — the guitar solos that touched on surf and Celtic music and rockabilly, the electrical mandolins and baritone drones, the way in which “Within the Temper” effortlessly wove in a vocal chant from Zeppelin’s “The Ocean.”
Identical to with Byrne, it was the work of a traditional rock innovator persevering with to innovate — and within the excellent setting for such a job.
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Gallery Credit score: Nick DeRiso
