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Pop Music Reviews : Surprise: Syd Straw Rises to Another Challenge . . .

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Singer Syd Straw must have a knack for placing herself in challenging situations. Three years ago, the loosely constituted group the Golden Palominos played to audiences expecting its on-disc stars such as John Lydon and Jack Bruce to front the band. Instead, they got Straw, and found it wasn’t a bad trade at all. Her current debut album “Surprise” finds her musical and lyrical vision riding herd over a fat roster of musicians who are known for packing their own encompassing visions, including Michael Stipe, John Doe, Van Dyke Parks and Richard Thompson.

Though confined to a short set before an unacquainted audience when opening for Adrian Belew at the Coach House in San Juan Capistrano on Sunday, the willowy, pig-tailed singer connected with a set that was nothing short of fearless in its mix of powerful, personally felt music and unfettered sense of play. Backed by a quartet that included Dave Alvin and X’s D.J. Bonebrake, Straw’s performance was both muscular and cerebral, with songs by such disparate sources as Sons of the Pioneers and X coming off as her own fresh possessions.

Straw’s lyrics and delivery can seem precious at times--”Unanswered Questions” sounded like an unholy cross between Carly Simon and T Bone Burnett--and on a couple of songs the arrangements seemed half-baked. But those were minor flaws compared to Straw’s fresh, informed take on popular American music, which draws on Stephen Foster rather then David Foster.

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Straw and headliner Belew also play two shows at the Roxy tonight.

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