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Live Shots
OCTOBER 5, 1998:
BAUHAUS
State Palace Theater, New Orleans, September 20
Perhaps it was some sort of tempestuous millennial fluke that brought the feuding
members of what was originally called Bauhaus 1919 back under one roof, but as with
the decade's earlier (yet equally unfathomable) Sex Pistols reunion, the impossible
has apparently, suddenly, become the norm. It's been 20 years since their formation
in Northampton, England, and 15 since Peter Murphy, Daniel Ash, David Jay, and Kevin
Haskins called it quits amidst a flurry of self-recrimination and insoluble ego washouts.
Certainly, the intervening years have been productive, what with Murphy's solo outings
and Love and Rockets ongoing attempts to define themselves and their Bubblemen alter
egos. Still, the very idea of the original godfathers of gothic rock returning to
the stage was until very recently a notion reserved for those imbibing a dram too
much homebrew absinthe. And yet here they were. Again. As with all the dates on Bauhaus'
"Resurrection Tour," New Orleans' State Palace Theater was sold out, awash
not in the predicted squalls of tropical depression Frances, but thoroughly overcast
in black crepe, mesh, patent leather, etc. Of all the American whistlestops on Bauhaus'
tour, the ancient port city captures Bauhaus' existential gloom and black-clad debauchery
more than any other, though judging from the 2,000-plus audience's somewhat subdued
reactions, the dreaded "gother-than-thou" attitude was also apparent. On
a dark stage lit solely by the cathode glare of a large black-and-white monitor showing
the chiseled, cadaverous visage of Peter Murphy, Bauhaus opened with 1980's "In
the Flat Field." Cheers and exultations greeted the band's arrival as the spots
went up to reveal Haskins and Jay (cheerfully dubbed "Thing One and Thing Two"
by a hennaed bombshell in front of me) and the perpetually cool Ash, whose blue-black,
spikey-haired coif put one in mind of Captain Sensible circa 1982. Keeping the patter
to the occasional brief "Thank you," Murphy & Co. ran diligently through
most of the greatest hits featured on the new "Crackle" compilation, throwing
in the occasional deep cut ("Severance," "Boys") for good measure.
If anything, the Return of the Four re-established the waning adage that the more
things change, the more they stay the same. From the spare, funereal pace of "Hollow
Hills" to the double encore of "Ziggy Stardust" and on to the inevitable
closer, "Bela Lugosi's Dead," it was London's Marquee 1980 all over again,
with nary a wrinkle or age spot in sight. The night's biggest surprise -- other than
the lack of a full moon, which one suspects is part and parcel of the band's rider
-- remains the sudden removal of David Jay's seemingly welded-on sunglasses, revealing
not glowing, cataract whites, as expected, but normal, organic visual apparatus.
Who knew? -- Marc Savlov
NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS
House of Blues, New Orleans, September 21
It was the song the seething, sold-out coven had been waiting the entire black mass
to hear. A song whose first recorded versions, by Walter "Furry" Lewis
in 1927 and "Mississippi" John Hurt in 1928, came at least 70 years after
it had become part of the public domain. A song of African-American origin that became
associated with New Orleans in 1959 after a native son of the state, Lloyd Price,
based his version -- a number one hit -- on that of another of the city's singers,
Leon T. "Archibald" Gross. A song about a cold-hearted killer leaving a
bloody trail to hell: "Stagger Lee." Or "Stack O'Lee," "Stacker
Lee," and even "Stackolee." For Nick Cave, on 1995's exorcism of demons,
Murder Ballads, it was just plain "Stagger Lee." Just plain. That's
a laugh. Without a doubt one of the absolute most profane versions of that song ever
recorded, Cave's typically dark and ferociously feral interpretation includes lines
like, "I'm a bad motherfucker don't you know, and I'll crawl over 50 good pussies
just to get to one fat boy's asshole." And when he sang that line live, you
could hear every word of it, because Cave, often compared to Leonard Cohen by way
of Tom Waits, enunciates every single word he sings. Standing at the foot of the
stage throughout most of the 90-minute performance, Cave spent the entire show punctuating
every phrase with the index and middle finger of his right hand pointing into the
audience like Stagger Lee's .45. The audience, looking up at him in awe from the
floor, down on him with glee from the balcony -- the House of Blues built as if for
the theatre -- took each bullet as if it were an honor to go in front of such a firing
squad. The 18 songs, each of them murder ballads in their own way, heaved with Cave's
bellowing baritone, whether they were the controlled cacophony of epic dramas like
"Do You Love Me," "Tupelo," and "Red Right Hand," or
more somber and reflective fare like "Into My Arms," "Lime-Tree Arbor,"
and "West Country Girl" from Cave's stunning 1997 prayer book for heartbreak,
The Boatman's Call. At the halfway mark, when Cave introduced the thundering,
crashing "From Her to Eternity" with, "This is a very old song -- the
first song we tried to work on wasn't it, Mr. Bargeld?" the show went farther
into the red than one would have thought possible. For one, Cave's longtime backing
band, the Bad Seeds, anchored by guitarist Blixa Bargeld, proved themselves absolute
masters of tension and its total and complete manipulation. Even ballads like "The
Weeping Song" and "The Ship Song," played back to back, were taut.
By the first encore, "Plain Gold Ring," featuring a haunting violin solo
by the Dirty Three's Warren Ellis, the crowd was at near-frenzy. They called for
"Jack the Ripper," but got Cave and Bargeld dueting as if lovers on "Where
the Wild Roses Grow" then "Jack the Ripper." They stomped and
screamed, demanding a second encore and getting "Henry Lee" before "Stagger
Lee." And how did the last song of the evening go down? Like human sacrifice
-- a person being torn in two -- Bargeld screaming bloody murder into the mike as the
band pushed wave after wave of chaos through the stacks of amps. Finishing at exactly
midnight, the first stroke of morning on Cave's 42nd birthday, the seldom touring
band of hellions disappeared like a child's innocence, leaving one to walk home in
a city where someone can point to some house on some dark corner of Royal Street
and say, "That's the most haunted house in New Orleans." Like the original
owner of that house, Madame Delphine LeLaurie, who was chased from the city for torturing
and killing slaves, Nick Cave's version of "Stagger Lee," in all its dark
and evil glory, belongs to New Orleans. -- Raoul Hernandez
SON VOLT
Antone's, September 23
Sit your ass down. Son Volt did and it was a revelation. The band came out for
its Wednesday night acoustic show at Antone's and took to the chairs. And for a band
that, based on its last two appearances in town, was in danger of irrevocably getting
labeled the "bore corps," it was a wise move, because once seated the fact
that Son Volt kingpin Jay Farrar has no stage presence to speak of became a non-factor.
Of course, you couldn't see the band unless you were in a three-person radius of
the stage, but with Farrar playing sideman to his own material, that wasn't a big
deal. The "acoustic show" billing was a bit of a misnomer anyway, the only
difference sound-wise from their usual show being that Farrar played an acoustic
guitar. The Boquist brothers were fully plugged in and drummer Mike Heidorn rocked
out as much as he has since No Depression. New material, including "Driving
the View," "Dead Man's Clothes," and "Carry You Down" from
the forthcoming Wide Swing Tremolo sounded far more vibrant than last year's
flat offering, Straightaways. After closing the hour-long seated set with
"Windfall," Son Volt then came back out for another six or seven song electric
set sans chairs and demonstrated the other advantage of the partially seated
format: They hadn't wasted any energy standing around for that first hour, so they
actually looked alive during "Karyatid Easy" and "Route 4." The
band did two quickie encores, one of which had them sounding more like (no lie) Black
Sabbath than Gram Parsons, but anybody who bothered to look around the room at any
point during the night had to know they weren't done. With Doug Sahm wandering around
Antone's all evening, it was a given there'd be a reprisal duet of "Give Back
the Key to My Heart" from the Uncle Tupelo swan song, Anodyne. Afterwards,
Farrar almost, almost, almost cracked a smile. Who'd have thunk the smartest thing
the band could ever do was simply pull up a chair? -- Michael Bertin
LENNY KRAVITZ, SEAN LENNON, OZOMATLI
Austin Music Hall, September 25
Over the years, starting with his 1989 debut, Let Love Rule, Lenny Kravitz
has taken a lot of shit. Too retro! cry the critics with the release of every
new disc. Spot the influence! they say. Sly Stone, James Brown, Prince,
the Rolling Stones. Yeah, so? Everybody does that. "The same thing that
I'm put down for, groups like Oasis and the Verve are praised for," said Kravitz
by telephone days prior to his show at the Austin Music Hall. Selling out soon after
tickets had gone on sale, Kravitz's first show in Austin since a mainstage slot at
H.O.R.D.E. '96 was the hottest ticket in town on a fall semester Friday night that
showcased nothing but quality shows (Mike Watt, Creeper Lagoon, a private Art Alexakis
show at Steamboat). It couldn't have had anything to do with the fact that Kravitz
held that Southpark Meadows' H.O.R.D.E. like Che Guevara come back to life to lead
the revolution? Nah! The 2,000-plus people at the Music Hall, a drunken horde
to make Hunter Thompson start hallucinating gnashing lizards wading knee-deep in
blood, were obviously there to see the mewling Sean Lennon, who received the best
response of his 35-minute set when he announced the last song; actually, the kid
wasn't that bad, some of the harder-edged material from his debut Into
the Sun soaking up a little of his milquetoastiness. Really, though, the boy
didn't belong on the big rawk bill, especially not following opener Ozomatli, a 12-piece
multi-racial Latin hip-hop collective from L.A. that tore a seriously groovacious
swath through 30 years of funk. Then again, this throng was only there to see Kravitz,
and when he stepped out in front of a dozen white spotlights, sans dreads
and decked out in army fatigues and sunglasses -- the Mod Squad look -- fists
in the air like it was a Black Panthers rally circa 1972, it was easy to see why.
Backed by what looked like extras from a 20-year-old Pam Grier B movie -- a shirtless,
weight-room swollen saxman and a guitar/drum tandem whose Afros were larger than
most hedges, as well as a trumpet player, and a backup singer -- Kravitz wasn't exactly
evoking the swing era. Establishing a continuous, analog groove incumbent on one
decade in particular, the Seventies, Kravitz and Co. weighed down the show's first
hour with one 10-minute tune after another, mostly jams like "Live," "Supersoulfighter,"
and "Straight Cold Player," all from the new album, 5. "Last
night we went out to catch Hot Buttered Rhythm," said Kravitz before actually
kicking out of that gear. "I thought [Austin] was all cowboys and shit. I was
wrong." With that came one anthem after another, the show accelerating pace
and building momentum: "Rock & Roll Is Dead," the swaying midtempo
rock 'n' soul of "Don't Go Put a Bullet in Your Head," "Can't Get
You Offa My Mind," and of course, "Let Love Rule." "This is the
most rocking show of the tour," he shouted to his adoring mass. "I never
want to leave." Thirty minutes later, after two full hours and encores including
"Fly Away" and "Are You Gonna Go My Way," he did, amidst a roar
rarely heard from Austin's jaded audiences. Too retro? Probably. But not one person
in that sweating and sated mass cared. Critics be damned. "If I'm too new, if
I'm too old, if I'm up the middle, wherever I am they're going to complain,"
Kravitz had remarked during our interview. "I'm just that guy." Yes, and
that's why audiences love you, Lenny. -- Raoul Hernandez
ELLIOTT SMITH
Waterloo Records/Liberty Lunch, September 26
It was inevitable that Elliott Smith, whose songs abet Matt Damon and Minnie Driver's
libidinous gazes in Good Will Hunting, would become a heartthrob himself.
"Awwwooh!" gushed a chorus of young women as Smith picked out the first
few bars of John Lennon's "Jealous Guy" at his Waterloo Records afternoon
in-store performance. That Smith would cover John Lennon was also inevitable, despite
his denials that the Beatles influence is threaded throughout his songs. The digital
cameras were pointed at the aisles overstuffed with well-mannered fans as often as
they were at the man responsible for this gathering; fitting, since Smith's ascendancy
as a pop star is getting as much ink as the music itself, everyone asking whether
he's worth all the hype. Smith performed alone and acoustic at the in-store, starting
off, it seemed, a bit nervous; after both of the first two songs, he sheepishly asked
everyone if they were doing all right. The songs, "Clementine," "Angeles,"
off of his earlier, sparser, drug-addled albums, were unsurprisingly stark and resplendent.
In fact, Smith not only pulled off "Waltz #2" from his new album XO
without the benefit of drums, piano, and strings, he did it more powerfully -- the
guy's guitar playing sounds like three people playing at once. As the set wore on,
Smith, upping the intimacy level with the sweaty and oxygen-deprived masses, started
taking requests, and closed, as was only appropriate, with "Waterloo Sunset."
Later that night, openers Quasi had the sold-out crowd at Liberty Lunch hooked even
before Smith joined them on guitar and bass. Janet Weiss' drum kit and ex-Heatmiser
Sam Coomes' Roxichord (keyboards-cum-harpsichord) were set up adjacent to each other,
giving neither one more prominence. Their gimmick, though they downplay it in interviews,
is that they're divorced, and their songs, presumably, are about each other; with
song titles like "Our Happiness is Guaranteed," "I Never Want to See
You Again," "You Fucked Yourself," and "I Give Up," what
else are we to think? This Portland duo makes discord work for them, though; their
high-strung pop is thick and mesmerizing -- Coomes' Roxichord recalls a little girl's
music box, only the little ballerina inside is alternately twirling on overdrive
and head-banging to Weiss' propulsive drumming. When the trio came back onstage,
it was Elliott Smith in the spotlight with a calmed-down Quasi backing, playing more
straight-ahead rock and repeating only a few of the songs performed at the in-store.
The accompaniment was technically perfect: Weiss and Coomes' backing vocals matching
Smith high note for impossibly high note, the drums and bass beautifully fleshing
out some songs, but diluting others. Smith's intensity level, at least live, is optimum
when it's just him. As if answering to that sentiment, the encore was Smith alone
again, with a hollow-body, de-fuzzed electric guitar, finishing with George Harrison's
"What Is Life?" No Beatles influence, my ass. People who missed either
the Waterloo in-store or the Liberty Lunch show missed half of the whole picture
of Elliott Smith, but either half answered the question whether he's worth all the
hype with a resounding "yes." -- Kim Mellen
The Hank Williams Birthday Bash
the Continental Club, September 27

Dressed most like Hank Williams: Ethan Shaw
photograph by John Carrico
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Sounded most like Hank Williams: John Daisley
photograph by John Carrico
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