Posts Tagged ‘laurie anderson’

Performance diary: tUnE-yArDs at American Songbook

February 12, 2012

Every musical education is necessarily idiosyncratic. Watching Merrill Garbus’s ebullient performance at the Allen Room with her band tUnE-yArDs, I had fun tracking the pieces of my own listening history that allowed me to even begin to comprehend her startling, wildly original musical attack. The first time I heard someone use looping to create a rhythm track was in the fall of 1980, when Laurie Anderson started performing “O Superman” (ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha) — now any number of solo performers have pedals at their feet and keyboards at their fingertips to conjure a digital orchestra. Garbus has a particularly goofy yet precise way of building tracks using her voice, a tomtom, a snare drum, and a high-hat with a tambourine parked on top of it. The additive principles of her compositions/arrangements remind me a lot of gamelan music, which I first heard at the Los Angeles Festival in 1990 but didn’t really understand until I started playing with a gamelan myself a couple of years ago. And the long-lined polyrhythms churned out by the rest of her band — bassist Nate Brenner and saxophonists Noah Bernstein-Hanley and Matt Nelson — unmistakeably refer to the Afro-beat sounds of Fela Kuti, whose music I heard for years but never really grasped until I saw Bill T. Jones’s dazzling stage musical Fela! That’s a pretty unorthodox lineage for a singer-songwriter, n’est-ce pas? Garbus is pretty ostentatious about her performance-art background and kooky self-presentation — she took to the stage with yellow and black stripes painted on her face and led the audience through mini-workshop exercises in communal toning and “breath of fire” in and amidst performing tracks from her breakthrough album w h o k i l l (especially exhilarating renditions of “Bizness” and “Gangsta”). She’s definitely one of the more eccentric entries in Lincoln Center’s enterprising American Songbook series.

At the end of the show, she invited ticketholders to join her outside in Columbus Circle, where some of her faithful tUnE-yArDs army assisted her in creating a tongue-in-cheek political/spiritual ritual wrapping the statue of Christopher Columbus with yellow-and-black-striped police tape only custom-designed to say “Occupy.”  Fun!

Theater review: Laurie Anderson’s DELUSION at BAM

September 29, 2010

“If storyteller is Laurie Anderson’s primary identity, right behind that is the questioner. Out of the oceanic wash of sights and sounds that add up to Delusion, every few minutes a potent question emerges: What is a man if he outlives the lifetime of his god? What are days for? Why is it always raining in my dreams? Dear old God, who are these people? And finally, most poignantly, Did you ever really love me?”

Read the entire review for CultureVulture.net here.

Photo diary: a stroll through MOMA 8-8-10

August 16, 2010

I always love checking out the atrium from above -- here you get the true minimalism of Yoko Ono's "Scream Piece"

I like that MOMA allows/invites visitors to photograph artwork in some galleries, like the "Contemporary Art from the Collection" show

I loved this piece by Fluxus pioneer George Macunias -- loved seeing the vintage household products, including one I never heard of but I love Brian Eno

the show features a bunch of old mixed-media favorites like Laurie Anderson's video for "O Superman" (with David Hammons' flag)

another classic: General Idea's AIDS wallpaper, based on Robert Indiana's banal iconic LOVE logo

the show includes several pieces by General Idea, the Canadian queer trio -- like this mock-up of an Olympic-style pavilion with naked boys in bondage

the witty legend is a performance in itself

Elsewhere in the museum: "Picasso Themes and Variations," including many rarely-seen, little-known drawings and etchings, like this one. Doesn't it look like one of Christian Holstad's erased-newsprint pieces?

this one also caught my eye -- you wouldn't necessarily nail it as a Picasso at first glance, which is one reason I like it

Performance diary: A Small Act, The Grand Manner, Laurie Anderson at Le Poisson Rouge

July 15, 2010


July 8 –
Andy’s job at the United Nations these days required him to compose talking points for UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon (above) to deliver at a screening of Jennifer Arnold’s documentary A Small Act, so he got invited to the screening at HBO and I tagged along as his plus-one. The film tells one of those classic inspiring stories. Decades ago, a Swedish schoolteacher named Hilde Back, who’d fled Nazi Germany as a child (her parents did not survive), signed up for one of those programs where a small monthly donation subsidizes the education of a specific child in Africa – in this case, Chris Mburu from a small village in Kenya. Mburu went on to the University of Nairobi and Harvard Law School and has worked as a human rights activist ever since. The film tracks his efforts to create a scholarship fund in Hilde Back’s name and the competition among village schoolchildren for the three available slots in a given year. As the title suggests, the essence of the film is to demonstrate how one small commitment has unforeseen resonance in the world. Arnold’s documentary tells that story modestly, with a minimum of generic sentimentality and an honest attention to the ambiguities and contradictions of cross-cultural philanthropy and the challenges of education in developing countries. Arnold, Mburu, camerawoman Jennifer Lee, and producer Jeffrey Soros were on-hand for a Q&A afterwards. And in lieu of goodie bags, HBO distributed $10 Good Cards, which allow you to donate money to your favorite charity via the website Network for Good (which they astutely market with the headline “When the people in your life don’t need more STUFF as a gift….”).


July 9 – I’m mildly interested in the story of Katharine (“Kit”) Cornell, one-time first lady of the American theatre, her gay director-husband Guthrie McClintic, and her lesbian lover Gertrude Macy, but A.R. (Pete) Gurney wouldn’t be my first choice of playwright to deliver that story with the panache, understanding, and dishy detail that would satisfy me. The Grand Manner, at Lincoln Center Theater, is based on the author’s brief meeting of these folks backstage at the Martin Beck Theatre during the run of Antony and Cleopatra, back when he was a teenaged autograph hound preceded by a handwritten note of introduction from his grandmother back in Buffalo. Out of this fleeting anecdote Gurney has fashioned a 90-minute drama whose central character is…Pete, the schoolboy. It is a typically tame Gurney drama. The actors show up and do well. Brenda Wehle gets to play Cornell’s tough protective butch girlfriend who says things to the kid like “I’m her great, good friend – do you know what that means?” Boyd Gaines as McClintic gets to stagger around saying “fuck” a lot (not the way we usually experience Gaines, who’s never been invited into David Mamet’s cherished circle). Kate Burton gets to, well, pretend to be grand while describing herself as “a dumpy middle-aged lesbian.” (Her best performance is actually being interviewed in the fascinating edition of the Lincoln Center Theater Review about her own family’s theatrical dynasty. Pick it up when you walk by the theater. ) Bobby Steggert plays Pete, and he’s charming. But oh, so tame.


July 13 –
When I heard that Laurie Anderson would be playing at Le Poisson Rouge, I thought it might be really great to see her in such an intimate club setting. But I forgot how much I hate concerts where you have to stand the whole time (after standing in line for 45 minutes waiting to get in). And the gig stood as a promo party for her new Nonesuch CD Homeland, which is not one of her most compelling outings. The songs are minor, meandering, not especially melodic. And the club environment didn’t seem to open up any new possibilities. In fact, weirdly, Laurie seemed to retreat, barely making eye contact with the audience, reading from the script on her music stand. Perhaps she needs the distance of a stage to connect, or seem to connect. Plus, these days she performs without visuals, and I realize only in retrospect that the visuals always added a poetic element that made her songs so much more than the sum of the words and the music. So it was a somewhat disappointing evening. But I suppose it’s the disappointment of a longtime fan whose mind has been blown many times by her wit and invention – how many artists can keep that up for three decades? She had a fascinating band that consisted of a keyboardist, a handsome sax player, three nerdy-boy backup singers (all dressed like Laurie in white shirts and skinny black ties), and one of my culture heroes, the legendary producer Bill Laswell, on bass (a sweaty night in Manhattan, and this stocky hipster was wearing a suit jacket and wool cap – whew). There were a few appearances of Fenway Bergamot, the name Laurie has given to the male character she creates by running her voice through a filter that drops the pitch an octave. And her encores were fascinating, weird, beautiful bursts of solo violin improve. The best songs in concert, as on the new album, were the up-tempo “Only an Expert” (see Laurie’s website for the results of a competition for best remix) and the mournful “Dark Time in the Revolution.” The latter, with its refrain of “they keep calling ’em, calling ‘em up,” seems to belabor the obvious point that wars are fought by kids – but it’s hard to argue with the truth of it, and the refrain gets more emotionally affecting as it goes along, and as the wars drag on.