I've expressed plenty
of skepticism for full-album concerts in the past, but I wasn't about
to miss an opportunity to see Peter
Murphy and David
J play together on their first tour together
since the last Bauhaus
shows in 2006. Although I have seen Murphy play some Bauhaus classics
over the years, I missed
my chance to see J's rock outfit at Levitation a couple years ago.
If this is as close to seeing a reunited Bauhaus as I can get, I'll
take it. These are two of my favorite artists and I've written a lot
about both of them over the years.
Artist: Peter Murphy
with David J
Venue: Columbia Theater
Location: Berlin,
Germany
Date: 27 November 2018
Opening Act: Desert
Mountain Tribe
Setlist:
01. In the Flat Field
01. In the Flat Field
02. Double Dare
03. A God in an Alcove
04. Dive
05. Spy in the Cab
06. Small Talk Stinks
07. St. Vitus Dance
08. Stigmata Martyr
09. Nerves
10. Burning from the
Inside
11. Silent Hedges
12. Bela Lugosi's Dead
13. She's in Parties
14. Adrenalin
15. Kick in the Eye
16. The Passion of
Lovers
Encore 1:
17. Telegram Sam [T.
Rex cover] →
18. Ziggy Stardust
[David Bowie cover]
Encore 2:
19. Severance [Dead Can
Dance cover]
A band with a name like
Desert Mountain Tribe could really go either way. At first,
the roughly growled vocals and heavy sound had me worried that they
were some bland hard rock band. However, I detected some nice psych
and drone touches that piqued my curiosity. And then after just two
songs, Peter Murphy appeared on stage! He sang two songs that
coincidentally had bits of gothic rock guitar. He may have had to
read some of the lyrics, but his soaring voice really made the songs
hit home, and the audience was clearly thrilled. After he left, the
band veered into a more Krautrock
direction. I was oddly reminded a bit of Jesus
& Mary Chain (simultaneously coarse but
cool) and U2
(simultaneously grandiose but melodramatic). I liked their blend of
styles, even if the individual songs didn't make a strong impression.
They were great at building up their jams and maintaining a driving
energy.
[Desert Mountain Tribe with Peter Murphy.]
I
had always heard that Bauhaus were
a powerful live band, and their live albums and bootlegs are
reasonable proof of this. Seeing them live,
or even half of them, is the
real deal. Most of their
songs (and particularly the opening trio of In the Flat
Field) are propulsive,
expansive,
and dramatic. On stage, they
were all the more captivating. Peter
Murphy was in his
element. He danced and moved with natural grace and perfectly played
the role of a messianic
glam-rock vampire.
He connected with the crowd, sang every note with effortless ease,
and filled the venue with his stage presence. His action was all the
more enhanced by the stark, theatric stage lighting.
The
band backed up Murphy just as well as any recording of Bauhaus that
I've heard. David J appeared cool and restrained, but his
performance was spot-on. I've never seen him play bass, let alone
fretless bass, but you'd never guess such a solid bassist could also
be a folky singer-songwriter and guitarist. Frequent collaborator
Mark Gemini Thwaite played guitar and joined J for the backing
vocals. Unlike when
I saw Thwaite with Murphy in 2009, when I criticized him as "no
Ash, let alone Mick Ronson", this time around he was almost a
match for Daniel Ash's erstwhile guitar flash. Drummer Marc Slutsky
was also a suitable fill-in for Kevin Haskins; he was able to
replicate both the energy of the intense songs and the unusual
rhythms of weirder tracks.
[Peter Murphy, David J, and two Marks.]
Choosing
the strangest Bauhaus album is difficult, but In the Flat
Field might take the cake. After
blasting through the first three tracks, the band had to tackle six
rather unconvential
songs that had been largely ignored since circa 1981. "Dive"
and "The Spy in the Cab" remained lesser tracks, but the
band's patient meditation of the bizarre rhythm of the latter was
enlightening to behold. (It took me years to realize that it was J's
bass making the bleep sound and that that was basically the entirety
of his part.) For "Small
Talk Stinks", Murphy
brought out a megaphone, presumably just as he did on the studio
recording. He was clearly have fun with it in a way that was never
quite apparent in the sarcastic bite of the original. He also used
the megaphone to introduce "St. Vitus Dance", another
opportunity for play and dance. "Nerves" required a sampled
piano, but the taut precision and eventual release worked
nonetheless.
With
only a brief pause, the band continued onwards as if they hadn't just
played an entire album from start to finish. The first post-Flat
Field pick was "Burning
from the Inside", which has never been one of my favorites.
While I could again appreciate the meditative simplicity of it, it
always seems to go on too long. But after that, every song they
played was a winner.
Murphy,
J, and company mostly stuck to the beloved classics from the original
incarnation of Bauhaus,
but they also threw in "Adrenalin", a solid rocker from
their reunion album Go Away White (2008).
"Bela Lugosi's Dead" might be an obvious choice, but I'd
never seen any member of Bauhaus play it in full, and it was a dark
delight. Murphy even used some sort of delay pedal to modulate the
snare in a manner quite
similar to the recorded version, except in stereo and to a much
greater extent. "She's in Parties" gave Murphy a chance to
play a melodica and even a bit of electronic percussion at the end.
Meanwhile, J played a spirited take on one of my favorite dub jam
basslines. "Kick in the Eye" was another funky
highlight.
For
the encore, the band gave us a rendition of one of Bauhaus' first
covers, the excellent "Telegram Sam".
It was played in the same
tense, amped-up style as
their studio recording. Much to my surprise and delight, just as on
the 1998 live album Gotham,
they segued right into their (rather faithful) version of "Ziggy
Stardust". Bauhaus might not be Bowie,
but they did the best version of the song I've heard that didn't come
from the Spiders from Mars. This was a rather transcendental
experience.
That
seemed like a fitting end to the night, and some of the audience
departed, but to my surprise, the house lights did not come on. After
a bit of a wait, the band came back and offered
"Severance", the somber Dead Can Dance song that first
appeared in Bauhaus' setlists during
their first reunion in 1998. It
was a beautiful performance
with
a grand crescendo.
Murphy's vocals were sublime.
This
was an awesome show. I really wasn't sure how they'd pull it off, but
Murphy and J were at their prime, and their bandmates were an
excellent support. I've never seen Murphy perform at this level.
Perhaps J's presence spurred him to greater heights, or maybe Murphy
is just particularly well suited to the Bauhaus spirit, but whatever
the cause, this show surpassed my high expectations.
[Peter Murphy and David J.]
Scores:
Desert Mountain Tribe:
B+
Peter Murphy with David
J: A