Joan Osborne and pianist Keith Cotton wowed a sold-out crowd at Anthology Friday night. Though it seemed she was fighting a sore throat — drinking hot tea and clearing her throat between songs — Osborne's singing was not affected. She had impressive range from the opening notes of “St. Theresa” to the closing notes of her encore, the Grateful Dead’s “Stella Blue.”
In between, she covered every genre of music, from jazz to pop, blues to ballads, rock to R&B. She sang a couple new songs from an as-yet-unreleased album entitled Love and Hate, including the title track, co-written with Cotton. She sang a cover of Van Morrison's “Tupelo Blues” as well as an unplugged version of the Funk Brothers’ “What Becomes of the Brokenhearted.” And, of course, she sang her self-described “only hit,” “One of Us.” After the show, Joan and Keith hung out and signed autographs and posed for pictures with fans.
Joan Osborne and pianist Keith Cotton wowed a sold-out crowd at Anthology Friday night. Though it seemed she was fighting a sore throat — drinking hot tea and clearing her throat between songs — Osborne's singing was not affected. She had impressive range from the opening notes of “St. Theresa” to the closing notes of her encore, the Grateful Dead’s “Stella Blue.”
In between, she covered every genre of music, from jazz to pop, blues to ballads, rock to R&B. She sang a couple new songs from an as-yet-unreleased album entitled Love and Hate, including the title track, co-written with Cotton. She sang a cover of Van Morrison's “Tupelo Blues” as well as an unplugged version of the Funk Brothers’ “What Becomes of the Brokenhearted.” And, of course, she sang her self-described “only hit,” “One of Us.” After the show, Joan and Keith hung out and signed autographs and posed for pictures with fans.