Almost exactly two
years ago, I saw ChameleonsVox
in Berlin, just days before I signed a job contract and finally
put the steps in motion to move here. It was a great show and I was
quite excited about the prospect of living in Germany again. I think
I've not been shy about my love for this town, and I've managed to
see a lot of good music in a mere two years here, so that show was a
good sign of things to come. Nonetheless, I actually considered
skipping this show, since it started late (10:30pm!) on the other
side of town, but I'm glad I followed my instincts and went anyway.
Artist: ChameleonsVox
Venue: Quasimodo
Location: Berlin,
Germany
Date: 14 May 2019
Setlist (Strange
Times):
01. Mad Jack
01. Mad Jack
02. Caution
03. Tears
04. Soul in Isolation
[including teases of David Bowie's "Be My Wife" and The
Beatles' "Eleanor Rigby"]
05. Swamp Thing
[including a tease of The Beatles' "Rain"]
06. Time / The End of
Time
07. Seriocity →
08. In Answer
09. Childhood →
10. I'll Remember
First Encore:
11. Monkeyland
12. Second Skin
[including a tease of The Beatles' "Please Please Me"]
Second Encore:
13. Nostalgia
14. Don't Fall
I somehow missed the
memo that this tour was specifically a tribute to Strange Times
(1986), The Chameleons' third and final album from their original
incarnation. Normally my first reaction to full-album performances is
to cringe a bit, but it seems to be increasingly popular and I can
admit that at times it does work. In this case, I wasn't about to
complain: Strange Times
is one of my all-time favorite albums! One
of my first reviews twelve years ago was of the album, which I
gave an A+.
Based
on my experience the last time I saw ChameleonsVox (and every live
recording I've heard from any version of the band), I wasn't at all
worried if
the band could do the album justice. The original sequencing of the
album was excellent, and the band were able to translate it to the
stage quite successfully. The ups and downs of the upbeat, driving
songs like "Mad Jack", "Soul in Isolation",
"Swamp Thing", and "In Answer" contrasted nicely
with the more ethereal and
contemplative songs like "Caution", "Tears",
"Seriocity", and "Childhood". "I'll
Remember" kept its place as a beautifully pulsing closure,
although the brief cacophonous end of the album was left out.
Thankfully,
the band were touring with a keyboardist, Danny Ashberry, so the many
keyboard layers that were absent when I saw them in 2017 were
rightfully restored. Longtime collaborator Yves
Altana was not present, but
Stephen Rice was a suitable replacement on drums. Chris Oliver and
Neil Dwerryhouse returned on guitars, and of course Mark Burgess
still leads the lot on bass and vocals.
There
were some subtle differences in the performance to the original
recordings. Burgess kept up his regular tradition of throwing bits of
his favorite songs (mostly Beatles
and Bowie)
into his own, and he also again played with some of the lyrics for
more topical relevance. Most notably, "Soul in Isolation"
on this occasion featured the lyric
"Lost in a Brexit
wilderness of pain / And all our leaders are insane". Musically,
"Tears" was performed somewhat closer to the original
acoustic arrangement, but with electric guitars. It also featured an
unfortunately rather annoying keyboard sample throughout it.
Additionally, the verses of
"Seriocity" were done with more prominent drums but without
the distinctive strummed bass chords (or even any bass at all, in
fact).
The
band gave us two encores with two songs each. Three of the songs were
from the first album, Script of the Bridge
(1983), and "Nostalgia" was the b-side of their first
single in 1981. These are all
good songs, and they were played with a great deal of energy and
enthusiasm, but I do wonder why they deviated from other recent
setlists, which have frequently included "Paradiso" (a
b-side of "Tears") and "Tomorrow Never Knows" (a
cover of The Beatles' song released as a b-side of "Mad Jack").
They also avoided anything from the Where in the World
EP (2017), which included new versions of a Strange Times
outtake and two tracks originally from the Tony Fletcher
Fletcher Walked on Water EP
(1987). It would've been cool to see some of the other songs from the
same era performed live.
That
said, I'm not at all
disappointed with what they
did play. "Swamp Thing" might be my favorite Chameleons
song these days, and they tore into it and had the audience singing
along. (Burgess oddly claimed
it was inspired by the fall of the Berlin Wall, despite that it was
written before that happened, although he's
also said before that he "regard[s] it as a true prophesy".)
"Tears" is another astounding song in any arrangement.
There was no song that they performed that they didn't do justice to.
Even if full-album performances might
be a gimmick, no one can be
upset with hearing one of their absolute favorite albums played in
full on stage with such
passion and commitment.
Score: A
No comments:
Post a Comment