
Lila Downs/ Photo provided by Cindy Byram PR
You can go home again. Especially if you're a now-successful,Grammy-winning musician bred in the Twin Cities.
Two such stars made emotional, triumphant homecomings Sunday in separate concerts – vibrant Mexican singer-songwriter Lila Downs and blues-rock hero Jonny Lang.
Downs, a University of Minnesota alum and daughter of the late university art professor Allen Downs, showed a full house at Ted Mann Concert Hall why she deserved the Grammy for best Mexican regional recording she won in February. A radiant, energetic and joyful performer, she proved to be a striking, versatile vocalist, the right combination of power, clarity, richness, range and ethnic pride.
This was a special, very personal concert to honor her father, including an exhibition of his art in a nearby U of M gallery. Her mother came from Mexico, cousins traveled from Des Moines and a sister she'd never met also attended. Several of her father's former students were in the audience, as well, so Downs asked them to share stories.
One woman recalled how shy Lila was at age 6. "Just trying to get a picture of you was hard," the concertgoer said. "I'm so proud of you."
Downs certainly made the audience, her family and the U of M proud on Sunday. She performed many selections from her Grammy-winning album, "Pecados y Milagros." Most of the songs were in Spanish, as she sang about drinking Mezcal (some students talked about how Allen Downs taught them how to drink tequila), cockroaches and marijuana, chocolate and chili sauce, and chickens..
Accompanied by her excellent sextet, Downs also offered a couple of selections in English, both with very pointed messages. "I Would Never," about refusing to turn her back on his love, had a country-gospel groove, and the folk-styled medley of "Pastures of Plenty/This Land Is Your Land/Land" took a serious look at borders and immigration.