Category Archives: Southeast-Concerts

free stream and download: tom waits – “glitter and doom” @ the fox theatre/atlanta (07.05.2008)

free stream @ NPR “All Things Considered”

free download @: NPR “All Things Considered – Podcast”

i was there and while “stunning” a great compliment, it is simply an understatement. =)

Glitter And Doom: Tom Waits In Concert
Hear A Stunning Performance, Recorded At Atlanta’s Fox Theater

A trip through the world of Tom Waits can be disorienting. His ramshackle story-songs, with their creaky instrumentation and dusty poetry, usually leave listeners with more questions than answers, and his persona outside of his music revolves around a playful but guarded mix of fiction and reality.

To promote his latest tour, Waits offered the media an extended print interview — one he conducted with himself — and a taped press conference, featuring Waits seated at a table of microphones, answering questions amid bursts of flashbulbs and murmurs. Only at the end, as Waits donned a bowler hat and exited, did viewers see that the room was empty and the sound of the press corps was merely a record playing.

Both interviews were filled with more wildly imaginative stories and questionable trivia (was a sunken Japanese freighter really raised with 20 million ping-pong balls?) than actual details of the tour. But that’s the allure of Tom Waits: It’s hard to know what to believe, but the world he creates is enchanting enough to get lost in.

Here’s what we do know: Waits has dubbed his summer 2008 tour “Glitter and Doom.” It’s a trek through the lower half of the U.S. he describes as “PEHDTSCKJMBA” (pronounced “pess-kuh-JUM-buh), an acronym for each of the tour’s stops: Phoenix, El Paso, Houston, Dallas, Tulsa, St. Louis, Columbus, Knoxville, Jacksonville, Mobile, Birmingham and Atlanta.

For his Atlanta stop, recorded at the city’s historic Fox Theater on July 5, Waits delivered a stunning and epic two-and-a-half-hour performance, including songs he says he’s never attempted outside of the studio before. Backing Waits is a five-piece group featuring Seth Ford-Young (upright bass), Patrick Warren (keyboards), Omar Torrez (guitars), Vincent Henry (woodwinds) and Casey Waits (drums and percussion). “They play with racecar precision and they are all true conjurers,” Waits says. “They are all multi-instrumentalists and they polka like real men.”

Waits wraps his tour with seven stops in Europe, including his first-ever concerts in Spain and the Czech Republic, with a finale in Dublin on Aug. 1.

Set List
“Lucinda / Ain’t Going Down to the Well”
“Down in the Hole”
“Falling Down”
“Chocolate Jesus”
“All the World Is Green”
“Cemetery Polka”
“Cause of It All”
“Till the Money Runs Out”
“Such a Scream”
“November”
“Hold On”
“Black Market Baby”
“9th and Hennepin”
“Lie to Me”
“Lucky Day”
“On the Nickel”
“Lost in the Harbor”
“Innocent When You Dream”
“Hoist That Rag”
“Make It Rain”
“Dirt in the Ground”
“Get Behind the Mule”
“Hang Down Your Head”
“Jesus Gonna Be Here”
“Singapore”
ENCORE
“Eyeball Kid”
“Anywhere I Lay My Head”

many thanks to NPR and public radio for making music like this available.

ten out of tenn

this sounds like a good time…

Nashville, TN: Its no secret that the home of country music serves as a hideout for one of America’s most bustling music scenes. People move to Nashville aspiring to change it, only to find themselves chewed up and spit out by the spirit that gave us Johnny Cash, Woody Guthrie, and Bob Dylan. What rises from the dust are songs with ache and pain, hopes and sorrows, victories and defeats. But redemption is found in the community of people whose kinship runs much deeper than the music.

Ten out of Tenn is a compilation that shines a light on a few of the many Nashville artists who haven’t waited around for the world to hear about them. With TV being the new radio and beat up vans the new tour bus, this generation of American originals have taken full advantage of opportunities to take their music beyond the city limits of their adopted home town. Years of restlessness and work have allowed competition to give way to a community where late nights on the front porch are king.

Ten out of Tenn volume 1 was released in 2005 and partnered with Myspace and Paste Magazine for an extensive national tour. Volume 2 is partnering with American Songwriter Magazine for a tour set to launch on July 19 at Nashville’s historic Cannery Ballroom. The tour will feature a rotating lineup of artists sharing musicians and supporting one another. Tickets will go on sale June 13th.

Jul 19 2008 8:00P Cannery Ballroom – ALBUM RELEASE PARTY!!! Nashville, Tennessee
Jul 23 2008 7:00P Evening Muse Charlotte, North Carolina
Jul 23 2008 9:30P Evening Muse Charlotte, North Carolina
Jul 24 2008 8:00P IOTA Arlington, Virginia
Jul 25 2008 8:00P 8 x 10 Baltimore
Jul 26 2008 8:00P Blend Ridgewood, New Jersey
Jul 27 2008 8:00P World Cafe Live Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Jul 28 2008 8:00P 939 Cafe Boston, Massachusetts
Jul 29 2008 8:00P Canal Room New York, New York
Jul 30 2008 8:00P Grog Shop Cleveland, Ohio
Jul 31 2008 8:00P Martyr’s Chicago, Illinois
Aug 1 2008 8:00P Radio Radio Indianapolis, Indiana
Aug 2 2008 8:00P Headliners Louisville, Kentucky
Aug 3 2008 8:00P The Southgate House Newport, Kentucky
Aug 4 2008 8:00P World Grotto Knoxville, Tennessee
Aug 5 2008 7:00P Eddie’s Attic Atlanta, Georgia
Aug 6 2008 8:00P Workplay Theater Birmingham, Alabama

more information and you can listen to some of the music @: ten out of tenn-myspace

[taken from their myspace page]

tom waits – “glitter and doom” @ the fox theatre/atlanta (07.05.2008)

submitted by: bill ivester

still on a great ‘post-show’ buzz. i mentioned before that sometimes i fear i sounding like a “gushing fool” about particular artists. well, here we go again…

the show was was absolutely incredible, a great show/set, the acoustics in the fox are amazing and the mix was perfect, kudos to the guy running the sbd.

so, about 9:00 PM, the theater goes dark and slowly, dim lights begin to highlight the backdrop on the stage. you can sense, but not really “see” any movement. then, a white hot spot hits center stage, and seemingly out of nowhere… standing on a beat-up riser, in a dark “slightly worn” suit and a dark bowler hat, with a huge smile on his face is the reason that we are there, tom waits. hands straight up in the air, he starts stomping on the riser, the crowd is standing, clapping, whistling and screaming. white plumes of “smoke” start floating up into the lights from the riser. he stomps harder, smoke keeps rising and his smile gets bigger. he stomps and smiles, we clap and whistle, seems to be a fair trade.

and we’re off…

there were so many highlights it’s hard to know where to start. vocally, he was “on the mark,” with it being the last night of the tour, i guess he didn’t feel like he had to “save” his voice ( 😉 ) and before i start rambling too much, it seems appropriate to note that his band was fantastic, all great players (named below), tight and meshing perfectly with each other and with him. he has added a full time horn player and keyboardist and larry taylor had moved from his usual position on bass to “guesting” on lead guitar on a few songs (apparently only @ the atlanta show). other than taylor and his son casey on drums/percussion it was a completely different group of players than when i saw him a couple of years ago. i guess “the” highlight(s) for me would have to be “9th and hennepin” followed by a rocking “lie to me.” during the intro for “9th and hennepin,” a single bare unlit light bulb dropped out of (seemingly) nowhere right next to tom’s face. unfazed, he continued talking. as soon as he kicked into the song, the light, much to tom’s “surprise, and shock,” flickered on and became a prop which he mastered for the duration of the song, then “poof”…it disappeared much as it appeared.

“chocolate jesus,” “hold on” & “get behind the mule” were also pretty amazing and would have to be close seconds for me and the “innocent when you dream/hoist that rag/make it rain” trifecta was also pretty damn sweet. at the end of and extended take on “make it rain,” and with tom chanting (ie: screaming) a command to “make it rain,” glitter began to fall over him like rain (apparently from that same magical place that gave us the light bulb) covering his dark suit and bowler. very cool visually. towards the end of the set, regardless of your beliefs, if you weren’t ready to shout a big, loud “AMEN” or “MERCY” after he took the sold-out crowd of 4,000+ to church with “jesus gonna be here,” well then, you just weren’t alive and breathing to begin with.

along the way, he charmed us with a couple of subtle, yet hilarious stories about; $300,000 watches (or $9.95 CVS watches), condiments (or condom-mints) and alphabet soup (or nazi pas-ticas) as only he could, before closing the set with a rowdy and fun “singapore.” after a short break, he and the band returned and kicked off the encore w/a killer, extended ”eyeball kid” where during the chorus, he playfully swapped out his black bowler with one covered with tiny mirrors reflecting the spotlight all over the theatre. at the end of the song there was great little exchange between him, casey and the audience. then he sent us all home happy with the appropriate “anywhere I lay my head.”

he started the show with the big smiles and we left the theatre with them. again, seems to be a fair trade.

what a night. he’s as brilliant a showman and performer as he is a writer and musician, which says a lot. there was not a single lowlight/mediocre moment in the evening. hell, it was tom waits!

i found the quote below in “the columbus (oh) dispatch” it seems to describe him perfectly, much better than i ever could…

Waits may be one of the country’s best accidental musicologists. He rummages through an assortment of genres — blues, gospel, jazz, folk, Latin, beat-box and cabaret, to name some — and weaves them together into something new. Hearing one of his songs for the first time, one is almost positive that it’s an old favorite. Yet everything he does is remarkably original and fresh.

Add to that his unmistakeable lyrics — inspired in part by the Beat Generation and refined by his partnership with his wife, writer Kathleen Brennan — and it’s easy to see why he is one of the most important singer-songwriters of this age.

The showmanship is always a direct relation to the music. He opened in the guise of a revivalist preacher, booming out Lucinda, Way Down in the Hole and Falling Down.

His antics reached a peak later in The Eyeball Kid, an oddity of a song in which, for one verse, he donned a mirror-ball hat. As he revolved slowly in the interludes, his head became a makeshift light show.

When the songs slowed down and the thoughts grew deeper, though, he stilled his physical energy and flowed into such profound moments which held the audience absolutely still until their final chords.

In a sense, Waits is a medium, channeling the spirits of long-dead bluesmen, pioneers of rock and traveling minstrels. His voice, while aging, still can travel from a growl to a wail to a whisper in a split second.

Waits doesn’t create new worlds; he makes people rethink the past, present, and future. His song Time, sums it up: “… their memory’s like a train/You can see it getting smaller as it pulls away/And the things you can’t remember tell the things you can’t forget/That history puts a saint in every dream.”

on a personal note, it was also kind of a sentimental journey for me. many years ago, the fox (and atlanta in general) was where “i cut my live music teeth.” in my younger days, there was a time that i rarely missed any show of note there. my friends (and sally, my “ex”) and i were regulars. we saw it all. it was nice to be back there again, it has probably been 20+ years since i have seen a show in that beautiful place and it was just as sweet as i remembered it. lotsa good nights, good vibes and good memories for me in that building, it felt “good.” so to top off the night, just for the hell of it it, i decided to detour down piedmont, past the old “broadview plaza” and blew a kiss and say a “thank you” to the corner where the old “great southeast music hall” once stood. i also spent a lot of great nights with friends there and that was where, 30+ years ago, i was fortunate enough to see mr. waits perform for the first time and was introduced to the genius that is tom waits and i’ve been hooked since (btw, he was the opener for the comedian, martin mull who wrote a song about the old music hall called “i’ve played some shitholes, but this takes the cake” =) ).

the set:
lucinda > ain’t going down to the well
down in the hole
falling down
chocolate jesus
all the world is green
cemetery polka
who’s been talkin’* > ’til the money runs out
such a scream
november
hold on
black market baby
9th and hennepin
lie to me
lucky day
on the nickel
lost in the harbour
innocent when you dream
hoist that rag
make it rain
dirt in the ground
get behind the mule
hang down your head
jesus gonna be here
singapore
encore:
eyeball kid
anywhere i lay my head

*howlin’ wolf cover

the band:
patrick warren – keyboards
omar torrez – guitars
vincent henry – horns & acoustic guitar
casey waits – drums and percussion
seth ford-young – bass
sullivan waits – congas and clarinet (and selling t-shirts and books before & after the show…)

*larry taylor joined in on guitar on several songs.