The muscles. The flutter. The gentleness.
They were all in abundance Friday night at the Dakota Jazz Club because Aaron Neville was in the house.
For nearly two hours, the pride of New Orleans serenaded a packed house in what felt like maybe the most splendid and intimate evening of non-singalong piano bar music you'd ever want to hear.
In other words, this wasn't Neville, 75, cruising through his catalog of hits. Rather, he took you on his journey (his word) of the music that mattered in his life.
That meant the set was heavy on one-man doo-wop covers (though he occasionally offered the bass-line bridges, in a playful way), rock and blues oldies, standards, and contemporary classics like "Ain't No Sunshine" and "Just the Way You Are" ("one of my favorite songs," Neville said). There were a few Nat King Cole numbers and a pair of Bob Dylan tunes and even some delightful goofs like John Sebastian's "Welcome Back" and the theme to the Mickey Mouse Club.
And Neville told it like it was, with little factoids about many of the selections or the stars who made them famous.
Accompanied by pianist Michael Goods and occasionally his own electric piano, Neville was friendly, spontaneous, humorous, informative and, above all, emotional. He seemed to be enjoying himself almost as much as the crowd enjoyed listening to him.
A distinctive stylist, he knows how to get inside a song, whether an unrequited love tune like Hank Williams' "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" (which ended with a yodel) or a political commentary like Dylan's "With God on Our Side" (which was delivered like an Irish reverie).