Music Weblog

June 12, 2009

Madame Butterfly

Filed under: Concert Review — abdulmajid @ 6:31 pm
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How does one explain the appeal of opera? Is it musicals for the snobs amongst us? Theatre for playwrights who have trouble with realistic dialogue? Or a specific artform with it’s own framework that forces composer & libertist to be at their artistic peak before they can create true opera? I am sitting in the Coliseum, London home of the English National Opera on a warm Friday night in early summer so unless I am a masocist you can guess my answer. Opera is somewhat like Haiku, in that there are fairly strict boundaries outside if which one should not stray but that if created artfully produce something of utter beauty. Haiku can in three short lines take one out of the world for a brief moment like all good poetry. Opera does the same & normally for longer; even Pagliacci & Cavalaria Rusticana are an hour each & I have not mentioned Wagner, a man who saw opera as a test of the true mettel of a person. Puccini falls somewhere in between. Madame Butterfly is 2 hours 45 minutes long but Puccini also invented the perfect three minute pop song with his catchy arias.

This production was created by Anthony Mingella, the late film director & is suitably beautiful using a minimal of props. This is a great opera but perhaps not the best to start with given it’s length. The English version is good but even so I found myself following the lyrics on the LED screen above the stage & the poetry of the sound comes in part from the Italian language.

This was quite a traditional production, albeit with the use of puppets for a few characters. It is hard to find fault with such a production & Butterfly herself sounded like am angel.

Un bel dei indeed.

May 30, 2009

Folk Music in Blackheath

Filed under: Concert Review — abdulmajid @ 6:44 pm
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Folk gigs are funny things. If it is traditional folk music then it tends to be an older crowd who discovered folk in the sixties & attend Cropredy. More mainstream folk music attracts a younger audience with a smattering of the old folkies who have stayed up to date.

Cara Dillon is more traditional than modern but with her good looks and more recent albums demonstrating her singer-songwriter skills rather than a reliance on reworking traditional songs a reasonable proportion of the audience is young. Although there is a lack of smart phones, which is unusual at gigs now.

The cabaret table arrangement of Blackheath Halls was quite odd, frankly bails of hay would be better suited than the bizarre Las Vegas in a school hall affair. However, folk music being traditionally a music of the people (no pun intended on either parts of that statement) it was pleasing to see Cara and her band had the same seats as the rest of us to sit on, although they did not have candles on red beize covered table. Frankly, the hall had the feel of an inter-village bridge tournament rather than a music venue. The fact that it was the hottest night of the year so far and there was no air conditioning helped to make it quite sticky and uncomfortable with a hint of the party after the village fête about the evening.

Of course having blathered on about her being a singer-songwriter she then proceeded to open with some traditional Irish folk songs! Performers hey, who can trust then. Third song in was a killer track from her eponymous debut album, “Black is the Colour”, which almost stopped time as the audience was caught up in the circling rhythms of the piano whilst her etherial voice filled the space with crystaline emotion.

The sound was not quite balanced properley at the start with the acoustic guitars drowning out her beautifully pure voice but it did improve thereafter, which particularly important for a voice like Dillons. A duet with John Smith was particularly good, although he was clearly influenced by the recently deceased John Martyn, their voices blended together like a good Irish whiskey that is a favourite of mine..

Her Northern Irish accent was not evident when she sang but came through sparkling with wit in her between song chats, which veered from how most of the folk songs were about badly behaved men to who was going to win Britain’s got Talent, the final of which was on at the same time as the gig. It was quite obvious where the talent was on Blackheath though.

Ultimately the test of a good gig is whether it transported the audience out of that time and place and into the world created by the melody and the lyrics. In that Cara Dillon and her band succeeded magnificently as the red beize tables and conference seats melted into the heat of a May night whilst the music took us to the Hill of Thieves in County Derry.

January 31, 2008

Radiohead Live at Earl’s Court, 27 November, 2003

Filed under: Concert Review — abdulmajid @ 12:00 am
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Firstly, let’s get something straight: all big venues are bad. Say it again, all big venues are bad. (more…)

January 30, 2008

The Flaming Lips at the Hammersmith Apollo 4 November 2003

First, thanks to Gaynor for the tip-off about the sound being appalling at the back of the Apollo (née Odeon), those of us in row Z (I kid you not) found that the Lips clearly had the best sound engineer in the business, every word that Wayne (not a very rock’n’roll name for someone who is) said came through loud and clear.

Second, a word on the two support bands; Steve Burns (from Brooklyn) was terrific. Very funny videos, catchy songs and bags of chutzpah (which is the correct term I believe), check out his website for some great QuickTime movies and a flavour of the man. Alfie, on the other hand, need to find themselves. The sub-Beatles Yellow Submarine graphics and the Gallagher-esq swagger of the lead singer were tiresome. In fact the whole lolloping around the stage like the aforementioned neanderthal was so hopeless that I really have to mention it again. (more…)

January 29, 2008

Bill Nelson “Painting with Guitars” at Windsor Arts Centre 4 October, 2003

Although I have been a fan of Bill's from 1981 it was only with last years gig at the Jazz Cafe, Camden that I finally managed to see him live. This subsequent tour was scheduled after the success of that show and the Windsor gig was the easiest for my wife and I to attend. Having said that we found Windsor okay but finding the Arts Centre was rather more tricky, so we missed the 1st half of the show which was a film that Bill had created. The staff at the venue were very helpful though even when we both tried to use the bathroom that was theoretically Bill's. (more...)

January 28, 2008

A mini review and a major moan about the evening with David Sylvian at a beautiful London venue (David Sylvian’s Concert at the Royal Festival Hall, London September 26, 2003)

Filed under: Concert Review — abdulmajid @ 9:52 pm

David Sylvian, his brother Steve Jansen (family name Batt) and a Japanese multimedia artist (Masakatsu Takagi) put on an intimate show for those of us privileged enough to get tickets. The venue is marvellous, giving a real sense of both the 1950s in which it was built and designed and the timelessness nature of the performance arena. (more…)

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