Artist: Godspeed You!
Black Emperor
Venue: Mohawk (outside)
Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 14 September 2015
Opening Act: Xylouris
White
Setlist [Edit 2017.10.23: Updated upon release of Luciferian Towers]:
1. Hope Drone
2. Peasantry or 'Light! Inside of Light!'
3. Lambs' Breath
4. Asunder, Sweet
5. Piss Crowns Are Trebled
6. Bosses Hang [originally known by fans as "Buildings"]
7. Moya
8. Anthem for No State [originally known by fans as "Railroads"]
9. The Sad Mafioso
1. Hope Drone
2. Peasantry or 'Light! Inside of Light!'
3. Lambs' Breath
4. Asunder, Sweet
5. Piss Crowns Are Trebled
6. Bosses Hang [originally known by fans as "Buildings"]
7. Moya
8. Anthem for No State [originally known by fans as "Railroads"]
9. The Sad Mafioso
I have a bad history
with getting really excited about a band just after they've broken
up. Take, for example, my fascination with The Smashing Pumpkins, who I became a fan of in 2001, less than a
year after they'd split. Or consider Siouxsie & the Banshees, who I found out about just after their final
reunion tour in 2002. Well, it turns out that I bought my first
Godspeed You! Black Emperor album (actually, it was their EP) in
2004, about a year after they'd split up.
Sometimes, though, you
get a second chance. Obviously, it's debatable whether The Smashing
Pumpkins are quite as good the second time around, but at least when
it comes to GY!BE, one could almost believe they didn't disappear for
seven years. It's not that their two post-reunion albums don't show
growth from Yanqui U.X.O. (2002),
but it's more like
they just needed a break and then decided to take the next logical
step forward. Long gone are the days of vox populi spoken word
segments and tracks with multiple individually named movements. The
band still prefers lengthy works with large-scale dynamic buildups,
but now there is even less focus on specific words and ideas and more
of a sense of depth,
imagery, and heaviness.
While
the band has always expressed themselves well without words, seeing
them live only proves the point further. The eight instrumental
members sit or stand on stage in something of a circle with no vocal
mics anywhere to be seen. They start and stop playing like they could
do it even if they weren't
deliberately facing each other and avoiding eye contact with the
audience. There's one extra element that brings it all together: the
ninth member, not be found
on stage, but rather about five feet to the
right of where I was standing
on the first balcony. Karl Lemieux patiently manipulated three slide
projectors and racks of bits of tape throughout the entire show, and
it's his work (along with whomever else produced the images) that
contextualizes the music and makes the implicit messages a little
more, shall we say, explicit.
Initially,
the slides were mostly just vague, scratchy scrawls with the
occasional
appearance of the word "hope", lending a name to the band's
post-reunion regular opening drone. This may have gone on a little
long, but it certainly set
the mood for
the subsequent performance of the entirety
of the new album, Asunder, Sweet and Other Distress.
Even though this rendition
was not substantially different than the studio recording, it is
still a powerful experience and certainly enhanced by the visual
material, which shifted towards themes of urban decay and abandoned
houses. (Certainly this wouldn't be a critique of unbridled American
capitalism, would it!?)
This
performance was also special for a historical reason. The band has
been performing the material on this album since 2012, when it was
known by fans as "Behemoth" due to appearing to be a
single, continuous 45-minute work. It was at this same venue in that
year that the band played one of the first versions of this work, and
a high-quality (authorized!) fan recording widely circulated the
following
day. (See here;
it's still freely available for streaming and download.)
The
second half of the evening was a mix of very old favorites ("Moya"
from the aforementioned Slow Riot for New Zerø Kanada
EP and "The Sad Mafioso" from their debut album F♯
A♯ ∞) and two new songs,
continuing their longstanding trend of debuting new material on the
road years before releasing studio versions. The old songs were no
surprise but great to witness live. "The Sad Mafioso" was
extended substantially,
building from the opening sparse, wayward guitar notes and droning
soundscape to a massive, heavy, rocking beast.
The
two new works were the highlight of the night: they were entirely
unpredictable even while still working in the band's familiar modes.
The first opened with pretty bass chords followed by chiming,
interlocked guitars before expanding outward. Slides depicted
unfinished or abandoned buildings and stock market tickers, seeming
to indict senselessly destructive real estate speculation. The second
started with folky violin and picked guitar patterns. It
built up very slowly with a slow tempo, but eventually changed
direction entirely with heavier guitars and a faster pace. It
ultimately felt like a very long piece; recent concert recordings
indicate it is about 22 minutes long. (See here
or here,
for example.) The slides for this piece mostly followed train tracks
through a wooded countryside. The emotional message was less clear to
me, but the music was good enough that I didn't mind. [Edit 2017.10.23: These songs appear as "Bosses Hang" and "Anthem for No State" on the 2017 album Luciferian Towers.]
There
is only one other thing I can really criticize about the show: the
mix. For the most part, it was as great as most shows I see at this
venue or almost anywhere in Austin. However, the low end was overdone
and a bit muddy. Mixing a band with two bassists, three guitarists,
two drummers, and a violinist is probably a bit of a de facto
challenge, although in practice the only part left to be desired was
the distinction and clarity of the two bassists. I could usually hear
one or the other, but rarely both. The resulting morass of low-end
excess actually felt physically weighty and almost sickening. I had
to give up my spot and sit down at one point because I couldn't take
it. Now, I usually enjoy the physical element of live music (when I
have appropriate ear protection at hand, of course!), but on this
occasion I think there was a flaw in the sound design.
A
word about the openers: I was interested in seeing this collaboration
between Cretan lutenist George Xylouris and former Dirty Three
drummer Jim White, but as
the set times weren't posted
until 6pm and the opener went on at 7:15pm, there was little I could
do to see the full set. Of the 15 minutes I did see, it seemed like
they held promise, but it's hard to say more than that. Xylouris'
lute sounded way cooler than I would have expected, but his voice
didn't do much for me. Meanwhile, White's drumming was maybe just a
bit too unhinged. Perhaps I looked too closely, but I thought the
timing wasn't always as sharp as I would've expected. Still, I wish I
could've seen the whole thing.
Scores:
Godspeed
You! Black Emperor: B+
Xylouris White: B-
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