Pat Metheny returns with Side-Eye III+, a lean trio format that spotlights young rhythm partners and his core voice on melody and texture.
A Trio Built for Now
Raised in Missouri and shaped by the ECM era, he blends lyrical jazz guitar with folk warmth and a quiet experimental streak.
Songs Old and New, Lean and Warm
Expect a set that threads landmarks like
Bright Size Life,
James,
Are You Going With Me?, and
Question and Answer with newer sketches.
Crowds skew mixed, from guitar students comparing voicings to long-timers who know when the guitar-synth swell means the big theme is coming.
Trivia fans note that
Bright Size Life was cut with
Jaco Pastorius in Oslo for ECM, giving that record its glassy air.
He still carries his early 80s analog guitar synth sound, a brassy, human-like tone that often caps the night.
Another common arc is a quiet solo medley up front before the trio digs into faster material while the keyboardist covers bass with the left hand.
These song picks and production touches are informed guesses from recent lineups rather than fixed commitments.
Quiet Focus, Warm Cheers
Little Rituals Around the Music
You will see guitar nerds comparing picks next to couples in smart casual, plus younger players clocking pedal moves from a few rows back.
Shared Signals, Subtle Style
Applause spikes for the deep-cut themes, but the room often stays pin-drop quiet when a solo passage lands.
Merch runs classic and simple, with clean designs, vinyl reissues, and the occasional chart book that gets snapped up early.
When the synth tone blooms, a hush falls and then a quick burst of knowing cheers, an unspoken cue shared by veterans and newcomers.
Talk between sets drifts to favorite eras, from early ECM sounds to memories of
Lyle Mays shaping the old group palette.
Clothes skew dark denim, sturdy boots, and old festival tees, with a few tote bags sporting small-label logos.
It feels like a listening community that values detail and leaves space for the notes to land.
Strings, Circuits, and the Pulse
Song Shape Over Showy Moves
Pat Metheny shapes lines that sing, often starting with simple motifs before stacking harmony in clean steps.
Small Tweaks, Big Impact
The trio keeps the pocket light, with keys splitting duties between left-hand bass and right-hand chords so the guitar can float.
Drums favor crisp ride patterns and quick accents, pushing energy without crowding the melody.
He toggles from warm hollow-body sounds to nylon-string delicacy, then to the famed guitar-synth voice for theme statements.
On
Are You Going With Me?, he often uses a slow volume swell that makes the synth tone breathe like a horn.
Old tunes may appear at brighter tempos than the records, which nudges solos into shorter, more focused arcs.
A subtle quirk worth noticing is his occasional use of a lower-tuned baritone for solo interludes, adding weight without extra volume.
Visuals tend to be understated, letting the soundstage and dynamic shifts carry the drama.
Kinfolk of the Side-Eye
Kindred Ears
Fans of
John Scofield will hear the shared love of groove, blues tint, and open trio space.
Why They Fit
Bill Frisell connects through melody-first storytelling and a taste for quiet that lets small sounds matter.
Kurt Rosenwinkel brings a modern glide and long-line phrasing that mirrors the fluid side of
Pat Metheny.
If you follow
Snarky Puppy, you will appreciate the rhythm-section detail and the way textures bloom over patient builds.
Scofield and Rosenwinkel speak to the improvising core, while Frisell and Snarky nod to tone color and songs that breathe.
All lean into shows where interplay matters more than solos per minute.
That is the overlap that tends to draw this crowd in.