Monday, August 19, 2013

THE POET SPEAKS: PATTI SMITH & PHILIP GLASS tribute to ALLEN GINSBERG





According to the blurb "Two of the pillars of contemporary music come together for an intimate evening of poetry, music and song in tribute to their friend, the great Beat Generation poet Allen Ginsberg.

Punk poet and provocateur Patti Smith performs both her own and Ginsberg’s poetry, with accompaniment and solo pieces for piano from founding father of minimalism Philip Glass.
Renowned as one of the originators of the Beat movement, Ginsberg tirelessly championed the work of his friends Jack Kerouac and William Burroughs. His raw, visceral poems, including Howl, Kaddish and Wichita Vortex Sutra, range from forceful fury to profound spirituality.
As a backdrop to the evening’s event, Smith and Glass have curated a collage of images, paintings and photographs, projected live on stage, that reveals the richness of Ginsberg’s achievements."

This was one of the most eagerly awaited events during the whole festival.

The first reading was from "Notes To The Future" , a version captured in the video below:



This super 5 star review from the Independent newspaper records the proceedings.

 
"“Allen, despite Allen, contained multitudes,” said the New York punk priestess Patti Smith of her late friend, the beat poet Allen Ginsberg. Cut to five words, it was possibly the most profound tribute Ginsberg received during this 90-minute joint homage from Smith and his friend and collaborator Philip Glass. Even when the music and poetry weren’t necessarily about him, Ginsberg’s presence hung in the room.
Partly this was because a slow-rolling feed of sepia-tinted old photos, Ginsberg inevitably wild-eyed and masked behind an electrified beard, was projected in the background; mostly it was thanks to the rich sense of transference between these three marquee names and their art, much of it responsible for a large swathe of late 20 century North America’s counter-cultural consciousness."

The Guardian also reveled  in the event , if you look at the comments sections you will find the glory of the Internet in which Philosophers;Poets; Musicians and wankers can meet on equal terms.


"The show is called The Poet Speaks, which applies to both Ginsberg and Smith. There's no question of mimicry here: Smith is a magnetic performer and spoke Ginsberg's words in her own vivid voice. Through the fiery verses of Wichita Vortex Sutra and Footnote to Howl, her flat vowels rose from conspiratorial whisper to urgent drone; to rich, earthy drawl. At times she lapsed into half-song, following Glass's shifting chords; elsewhere, her voice cracked with emotion that still felt fresh.
Despite her punk-priestess moniker, Smith is as warm as Ginsberg was provocative. She sang her own folksy songs with guitarist Tony Shanahan, and read poems by Robert Louis Stevenson. Stevenson is one of her childhood favourites, and his awe for the natural world was another link between her, Ginsberg and his hero, William Blake."

Last word goes to Patti reciting Howl.




PATTI SMITH at the ORAN MOR GLASGOW


Having been commissioned to bring her unique tribute to Allen Ginsberg to Edinburgh , Patti Smith could not resist the chance to pay another visit to Glasgow at short notice.And how lucky we were  she decided to come for this short notice sell out show.

The video below is taken from the concert , featuring one of her classic poetical songs called "Pissing In a River"



She also read a moving extract from her book about her youth "Just Kids" , requested from a member of the audience , of which several seemed to have a copy.



Her voice is getting more and more powerful with age , making her songs from merely lyrical to gritty heartfelt performance poetry.Another deeply penetrating song from her tour is " Barefoot"



By far my favourite piece of hers on this tour is the live acoustic jingly-jangly version of "Beneath The Southern Cross" which transports one to a special transcendent place that only the finest music can.





Saturday, August 10, 2013

MARK THOMAS at THE STAND EDINBURGH






Mark Thomas is in his activist mode for this project.The humour is a little similar to his Election Manifesto tour , funny though , by the very nature it invites audience participation , a little bit of ridiculous mixed in with the sublime , giving an impression of puerility that dissipates some of the hard-hitting ideas.

This review from the Telegraph captures quite well the mood of the performance.


"As with The Manifesto, his engaging attempt to galvanise the public into suggesting things that would make life better, the show is being constructed on the hoof, with Thomas keeping us updated on his activities. By September, when it tours, there will be more to report – but even as it stands, hours of pranksterism have been funnelled into a 60-minute set. Thus far, Thomas (at times helped by willing cronies) has already undertaken quite major stunts – invading the Apple Store on Regent's Street with an Irish ceilidh band to protest the company's tax arrangements and photographing policemen while on duty.
At the same time, he has unleashed more subtle forms of havoc: subverting promotional displays on supermarket shelves and introducing a campaign of “book-heckling”, which involves slipping strips of paper bearing sarcastic one-liners into books on sale in chain-stores. The slip for Dan Brown? “The person who bought you this hates you.” As that gag suggests, Thomas's earnest commitment to fighting the corporate power is tempered by a strong sense of the ridiculous and a welcome degree of self-irony. He admits to getting a bit Victor Meldrew in his old age – a zesty but sometimes testy 50."

This video review is spot -on in describing the project thus far , and how a lot of non-activists from middle England would relate to a lot of his views , which can be a very good entry point to his more profound serious ideas getting into the discourse of those not reached by other social justice radicals.Someone which may suggest Mark Thomas is well ahead of his detractors.



By far the best act of dissent he done so far is captured in the video below:


STEWART LEE at THE STAND EDINBURGH

Stewart Lee begins a massive tour stretching from now until well into next January to practice and showcase new material for an upcoming TV series.

The themes he picked today were the Tories and UKIP , with half an hour on each.Seeing as he is just starting out in developing the material it seems to be already well honed and should be a smash hit when it comes out early next year.

The person i was with really appreciated the challenge for the audience to think through the topics deeply before coming to universally grounded conclusions.A genuine mixture of satire and critique delivered in a casual , yet deeply penetrating way.

In a recent Oxford lecture he attracted a lot of attention to the process of comedy in which "Stewart discusses the fantasy that stand-up comedy is spontaneous rather than written, and describes the evolution of stand-up over the last few decades. His talk takes in a wide range of subjects from the first app he ever came across to a discussion of the value of culture in society."

You can see the full lecture in the video below: