Allison Moorer

With Steve Earle and the Dukes. Wednesday, March 23, at the House of Blues.

Motörhead Agora Theatre, 5000 Euclid Avenue 8 p.m. Friday, March 18; $21 advance/$24 day of show, 216-241-5555
Guitars crackle, bass throbs, drums pound. The sound is a classic rock and roll grind: thick and drenched with electricity. The vocals, however, come from a different tradition and are a restrained series of observations; emotions are held back until the moment when release will mean even more. Allison Moorer has merged her country soul with the force of rock and roll on her latest, The Duel, and her music is better than ever.

First, let's acknowledge that rock and country have been dancing around with each other pretty much since the dawn of electronic amplification. Moorer's not inventing the wheel here, but she's come up with some of the most beautiful spokes for it in a good long time. Let's also point out that Moorer has been making terrific records since 1998, when her debut, Alabama Song, set out to make her a country star. Somehow that didn't happen, despite consistent artistic growth for the past five years. While The Duel is in one sense a refinement of her excellent Miss Fortune, there is a palpable sense of new freedom here.

As always, Moorer has co-written the songs with her husband, Butch Primm. They conjure up a cast of characters dealing with the pain of life -- sometimes by acknowledging it, sometimes by fighting it, and sometimes, of course, by trying to get away from it by any means necessary.

Moorer and her band expertly mix rock, country, and even gospel arrangements into these deliberate songs of woe. The band -- primarily Adam Landry on electric guitar, John Davis on bass, piano, and other instruments, and R.S. Field on drums -- dives into the emotional truth of each song, delivering a chills-up-the-spine level of thrills through a rare combination of raw energy and dynamic range.

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