Artist: David J
Venue: Chausseestraße
131
Location: Berlin,
Germany
Date: 11 October 2019
Setlist:
01. Not Long for This World [a capella]
02. The Auteur
03. Clandestine Valentine
04. Blue Eyes in the Green Room
05. Copper Level 7
06. Crocodile Tears and the Velvet Cosh
07. Feel Like Robert Johnson at the Three Forks Saloon
08. Missive to an Angel from the Halls of Infamy and Allure
09. Shelf Life [originally performed by Love & Rockets]
01. Not Long for This World [a capella]
02. The Auteur
03. Clandestine Valentine
04. Blue Eyes in the Green Room
05. Copper Level 7
06. Crocodile Tears and the Velvet Cosh
07. Feel Like Robert Johnson at the Three Forks Saloon
08. Missive to an Angel from the Halls of Infamy and Allure
09. Shelf Life [originally performed by Love & Rockets]
Encore:
10. The Dog-End of a Day Gone By [originally performed by Love & Rockets]
10. The Dog-End of a Day Gone By [originally performed by Love & Rockets]
This was a weird show
for many reasons. First of all, David was originally scheduled to
perform the following day at Bi Nuu (where I saw ChameleonsVox
two years ago), but that show was canceled for unspecified
reasons. However, I subsequently caught wind of this show at a much
smaller venue. There was no mention of tickets or a price anywhere,
just a claim that David would play at 10pm followed by a bunch of
DJs. I arrived early and the place was fairly empty, without anyone
at the door. David arrived, did a soundcheck, and then just hung out.
10pm came and went. Finally, at least 45 minutes late, the show
began.
The venue was small and
lacking any sort of stage. There was a DJ booth in the back but not
much else. The space was dark and sickly smoky. Getting the sound in
a decent state was clearly a challenge, although in the end it was
fine. The crowd was sparse and an odd lot. Most seemed like dedicated
fans, and yet several kept talking or coming and going during the
set.
David didn't seem to
mind, though, and he started his set with a dramatic flair by singing
"Not Long for This World" from the
2011 album
of the same name a capella. The rest of his set was just him and his
acoustic guitar in the typical folky singer-songwriter style. I
was hoping for some accompaniment, but David's
songwriting and performing
skills
are strong enough such that even
when unadorned, his songs are clever and varied enough to keep things
interesting.
Half
of the set came from David's new album, Missive to an Angel
from the Halls of Infamy and Allure,
officially released on
October 18, but already available at his concerts. A highlight of the
album (and the concert) is a new version of "The Auteur",
originally a b-side of "The Guitar Man" from 2002. Where
the original is country-inflected
and pleasantly lilting,
the new version is sinister
and foreboding. The subtlety of the original may have been easily
overlooked at the time, but this version, particularly
with Rose McGowan's vocals,
is an even clearer damnation of predatory Hollywood figures.
In
plenty of other regards as
well, the new
album hearkens back to
Estranged, David's
superb album from 2003 (one of the first albums I ever reviewed
on this blog!). In much
the same way, Missives
is rather accessible and yet
full of surprises. It's folk-oriented, but features rich, lush
instrumentation. It makes for a beautiful listen even if you don't
focus in on it. The only downside is that many of the lyrics continue
David's tiring trend of treating women only as sexual muses. Many of
the songs are nonetheless
clever, humorous, or earnestly thoughtful, like "(I Don't Want
to Destroy) Our Beautiful Thing", "Pre-Existing Condition",
and "(I Walked Away from) The Girl in Yellow". But others
are less subtle and lack that level of depth. Unfortunately, those
are the ones that David focused on at the concert. I wish
I could've instead seen the
meticulously crafted soundscape of "Mosaic" live, but
recreating that level of complexity was probably infeasible.
The rest of the show
came from across David's substantial back catalog, including his
classic "Crocodile Tears and the Velvet Cosh" (always a
pleasure) and two Love & Rockets songs: "Shelf Life", a
personal favorite from the latter-day Sweet F.A.
(1996), and "The Dog-End of a Day Gone By", originally a
pummeling rocker from Seventh Dream of Teenage Heaven
(1985). Naturally, these were highlights, even if neither was
perfectly performed.
The context of this
concert makes judgment difficult. The circumstances were obviously
far from ideal, and if I take all of that into account, it was
disappointing in comparison to what I was hoping to see at the
originally scheduled show at Bi Nuu. However, I appreciate that David
adhered to the notion that the show must go on, and although it was a
short set, he put on a good show for those 45 minutes. He clearly
wanted to make the most of it, regardless of the limited financial
gain to be had from such an intimate show. With a strong new album in
tow, and considering past
experience,
my bet is that the rest of his tour will be even better.
Scores:
The performance itself:
B-
The entire experience:
D
The album (Missive
to an Angel from the Halls of Infamy and Allure): B+
No comments:
Post a Comment