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Ray LaMontagne back in the Trouble pocket
Two decades on from Trouble, Ray LaMontagne revisits the songs that introduced his hushed, soul-tinted folk.
Twenty years of Trouble, still tender
Born in New England and once working a pre-dawn shift at a Maine shoe factory, he quit after hearing Treetop Flyer on the radio. His debut was cut with producer Ethan Johns in quick, near-live takes, letting the grain of his voice sit right on top of the mix. Expect a front-to-back read of Trouble with likely standouts like Trouble, Jolene, and Hold You in My Arms, with a late-show nod to Empty.Pin-drop folk with soul edges
The crowd skews mixed in age, from day-one fans in well-worn denim to younger listeners clutching recent vinyl, and the room tends to stay very quiet between notes. Watch for a few tour quirks, like handwritten signs asking for low chatter and a short solo acoustic segment that resets the mood. A lesser-known note is that early versions of these songs were honed in tiny coffeehouses, where he learned to let silence carry weight. For clarity, these notes about songs and staging are informed guesses from past runs rather than anything locked in.Ray LaMontagne fans, scene, and ritual
This crowd values listening, so you will spot heads tilted forward, hands around a cup, and a gentle nod when a lyric lands.
Quiet rooms, warm hearts
Style leans simple and textured: flannel and wool, denim jackets, well-loved boots, and the odd felt hat from the early-2000s folk revival. A quiet cheer often greets the first notes of Hold You in My Arms, and couples sway with small steps rather than big singalongs. Merch trends toward letterpress posters, soft-wash tees, and a stack of Trouble vinyl that tends to move quickly.Small rituals of longtime fans
Between songs, you might hear a single voice say 'Thank you,' and then the room sinks back into silence for the next tune. Fans trade stories about hearing Trouble on a long drive years ago and compare different live takes of Jolene. It feels like a living-room show scaled up, with small rituals and a shared patience that lets quiet songs stay quiet.Ray LaMontagne under the lights, music first
The vocal is the anchor, a smoky baritone that can thin to a whisper, then bite on a single word to turn the room.
Grainy voice, soft fire
Arrangements tend to be spare, with fingerpicked guitar carrying the melody while upright bass and brushed snare create a gentle sway. Keys or pump organ add a warm bed, and a pedal steel or slide line might flicker in and out like a second voice. Live, he often drops the guitar to a simple alternate tuning or a low D on the sixth string to thicken the bottom, then uses a high capo to keep chords bright.Small moves, big dynamics
Songs like Trouble and Jolene sometimes get slower tempos on stage, giving verses more air and stretching the last chorus for a quiet release. He favors vintage-style microphones and steps back a half foot for crescendos, riding dynamics with the mic rather than volume knobs. Lighting stays in warm ambers and clear whites that lift for choruses and dim to near-dark for solos, mirroring the push and pull of the band.Ray LaMontagne and kindred company
Fans of Damien Rice will connect with the raw hush and the way silence becomes part of the rhythm.