Your chance to catch Sean Rowe in concert is March 31. Don’t blow it.

Sean Rowe, gifted with a voice that arrives from sacred ground, where there are crafty ghouls and virgin angels, lots of frightened men and well-tested women, thrown into a vocal arch that borders on brilliant. Courtesy Photo


Upon meeting singer-songwriter Sean Rowe for the first time at WXKL in Concord a couple years back, I jumped right into being the fool, calling him, accidentally of course, Sean โ€œRowโ€ (like what you do with your boat), not โ€œRowe,” which rhymes with “cow,”ย  on air. I felt like punching myself in the neck when the heavy bearded and burly, Rowe, corrected my reference.ย  Kindly, of course.

Reminded me of a time when I wrote a literature paper on the American poet Emily Dickinson at Plymouth State College.ย  Cover page, right there in bright blue pen ink I had written โ€œEmily Dickerson.โ€ย  I thought it looked great.ย  The professor simply circled the incorrect last name and wrote: ย โ€œNot a great start.โ€

I took a โ€œDโ€ on that paper.

Battling back from my poor start with Rowe, who comes from upstate New York, I got to talking to a man that was serious about his art, being a musician, someone gifted with a voice that arrives from sacred ground, where there are crafty ghouls and virgin angels, lots of frightened men and well-tested women, thrown into a vocal arch that borders on brilliant.

His reason for coming to Concord, as he will on March 31 to the Capitol Center for the Arts, was to knock out a segment of my radio show, Granite State of Mind, and then play a house concert at my buddy’s home in Manchester.ย  My friends planned this intimate gig for weeks, not long after hearing Rowe bust out a version of Richard Thompsonโ€™s classic, โ€œ1952 Vincent Black Lightning.โ€ย  Mind blowing.

His voice alone will stagger your senses, but his guitar-playing is frighteningly good.ย  The weapon he plays is a mashup of kickback and resin, stinky finger-flying burning licks, echoing on forever and forever.

Seeing him perform in such a setting โ€“ a small living room dressed in white Christmas lights โ€“ was a touch mind-blowing.ย  I teared up from emotional exhaustion at one point of the night, leaning against a door jam, naked in humility witnessing this spectacle of song.ย  We just knew this would never happen again.ย  Heโ€™d never return to this house. Rowe was a regional all-star, sure, but then he had his song, โ€œTo Leave Something Behind,โ€ featured on the soundtrack to a movie called โ€œThe Accountant,โ€ and everyone got a whiff of Rowe.

Deservingly so.

The singer, who could easily play a character in Game of Thrones, is also blessed with that โ€œthingโ€ that just matters when youโ€™re a performer.ย  A real presence. His look, rugged but unplanned, casts a tremendous shadow of strength on stage.ย  Rowe morphs into a brawling baritonist, charging the wall when heโ€™s performing, leaning into every line with his rounded shoulders, his strong chin, giving life to the words, the story behind the sound.

Youtube Sean Rowe and you will find yourself in a bevy of terrific stuff, originals like โ€œMadmanโ€ and โ€œSignsโ€ will take you to task.ย  The songs he has chosen to cover are done with an originality that makes each remake sound brand new.ย  โ€œLong Way to the Topโ€ by AC/DC is downright greasy. ย โ€œLuckenbach, Texasโ€ turns a warm can of beer into gold dust.ย  โ€œSomebodyโ€™s Babyโ€ by Jackson Browne has you rooting for the street rat romantically pining for his muse.

Catch him if you can Sunday March 31 in Concord at 7:30.ย  Tickets are $20. You wonโ€™t regret it.


Rob Azevedo can be reached atย onemanmanch@gmail.com


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