The Riverfront Times' Music Blog



Add to Technorati Favorites

Blogroll

Concert Calendar

Venues

Local Music Blogs

Show Review: Tom Waits at the Fox Theatre, June 26

Fri Jun 27, 2008 at 11:05:09 AM

(Not part of Roy's review -- but worth reading -- is this Craigslist post about rude crowd members. I sat right behind these dancing hippie assholes talked about in the post and agree 100% with what's said. -- Annie Zaleski)

The glitter fell but doom never did. So much the better for this -- how else can it be put? -- historic Tom Waits show at the Fox Theatre. Not that Waits didn’t try to summon all the spirits in the boneyard at the end of the junkyard at the end of the world. The hall roared when he gave “What’s He Building In There?” all his crypto-voyeurism, but his greatness has nothing to do with channeling Vincent Price. And who cares who “Mr. Stitches” is anyway? One can only take so much persona.


Photos from the show.

For all the prophecies of chaos and clusterfucks that heralded the anti-scalper gouge-fest that is the Tom Waits ticketing system, the Fox staff moved the sell-out crowd through the block-long lines on Grand like they knew what they were doing. To think I could I have driven to Memphis, chased some trucker speed with a half pint of bourbon, and made it back to St. Louis, stopping for all the coffee and cigarettes I could consume at every other truck stop along the way, for the same price as my VIP2 Row H ticket. I might have gotten some stories out of it, but none of them would have been history.

So if it’s true that Waits last played St. Louis 30 years ago (there’s apparently a photo of a young Tom on the walls of B B’s Jazz Blues and Soups; was it there that he played?), then the question of why he waited so long to return answers itself. One concert every five, even every ten is an event. Once in a third century changes everything, and your grand kids will want to hear all about it.

What you should tell them, first off, is that from a purely aesthetic vantage, Waits is much better on record -- or at least on the great records of the Island and Anti- years. It’s not a fair comparison, but that doesn’t mean it’s not inevitable. The performative power, the stage-as-the-world, is already there on the records. They are self-contained planets of sound, ideas, rhythms, beautiful and demanding black holes that take hold of everything and make everything vanish.

tw13.jpg
Photo Slide Show

You should also tell them to have that extra cocktail and cigarette because Tom might just start an hour late. But at 9:00 pm the house lights went down on the pawnshop basement stage – dominated by an iconic air horn and megaphone totem tree – and the band began grinding out “Lucinda,” the first of many obscurities from the great Orphans collection. With the opening lines, “They call me William the Pleaser / I sold opium, fireworks and lead / Now I’m telling my troubles to strangers / When the shadows get long I’ll be dead,” Waits established the ground rules: At this show, he would tell his stories, how and when he’d choose. You’ll get your “Johnsburg, IL” –- played at mid-set with all the fragility of his world –- but you’ll have to get through him first.

Closing in on 60, Waits is his voice, and his voice is a force. It’s one thing to bellow like Satan’s blues brother on a song or two. It’s another thing to do it for nearly two hours straight, no intermission. Without that voice, he’d be on the street, holding a sign and selling pencils from a cup. Or nearly, because there’s the rest of his genius, evident in every preacher, teacher, two-screw-missing drunk gesture, the way he grips the microphone stand like he wants to strangle it, in his get-up — bowler hat, faux shark skin suit – and in the band, moving in the shadows behind him, that he only seems to let do its own thing.

But he directs the players with the stomp of his boot, kicking up clouds of powder from his barker’s platform and dinging a bell on and off time, or a calming gesture of an open hand. They’re on lock from start to finish. His son Casey gets the time-warped signatures and lurching drive, even on a traditional kit, and keyboardist Patrick Warren and long-time bassist Larry Taylor [correction appended, 5 p.m.: Seth Ford-Young is the bassist] play like jazz men who refuse to play jazz, like rockers who refuse to play rock. Vincent Henry switches between harmonica, guitar and at least three saxophones, sometimes playing two at once, honking like he’s reading invisible soul charts, then just letting the free jazz peal. Omar Torrez, the newest member of the band, seems to have learned every guitar part from every record, and then said quietly to himself, “Fuck you, Ribot, Verlaine and especially G.E. Smith. Here’s how it really goes.” And his acoustic guitar work on “All the World Is Green,” as the red velvet backdrop changed to blue, was its own chromatic world of wonders.

The set charged on through “Down In the Hole,” “Falling Down” (sung like Otis Redding at the crossroads), “Black Market Baby” (with ska echoes), “Heigh Ho!,” “Get Behind the Mule” (the first song Waits played on electric guitar) and what’s now a centrifugal number for Waits: “The Day After Tomorrow.” Lightly plucked on acoustic, with Taylor’s bass carrying the melody behind him, the performance was more pained, more angry than on record. But those emotions are just trace elements. Waits isn’t really an emotional performer, which is not to say he’s stiff or vacant or cold (that would be absurd). But no song (or very very few) are meant to convey emotion, his or anyone else’s.

And no one believes he has lived the stories -- that’s not the point. The point is really that old Brechtian one he knows so well: It’s the theatrical alienation effect from start to finish. We don’t feel for Waits or his world. But we are immersed in it and we wonder at the pure force of will and at the spectacle of it. But for a moment, a song like “The Day After Tomorrow” dismantles the spectacle and leaves just the brute facts.

After a scatter shot “Cemetery Polka,” Waits turned to the piano, with hilarious monologues about eBay, sperm counts and things you can get arrested for in Oklahoma (including having the wrong hair cut or shooting the tie off a cop), and sang “Hang Down Your Head,” “Johnsburg” and the gorgeous “Lost In the Harbor.” He took the dusty pulpit again for “Make It Rain,” (with a shower of glitter sent down on the singer), a clattering rockabilly take on “Lie to Me,” “Singapore” (reworked in almost straight 4/4 time), “Dirt In the Ground,” “What’s He Building In There” (which should have been lit up by a light bulb lowered from the ceiling; Waits broke it with a few too many taps), “Sixteen Shells From a Thirty-Ought Six” and a clap-along “Rain Dogs” to close out the set.

There was just one encore: “Goin’ Out West,” “Anywhere I Lay My Head” and “Innocent When You Dream.” At the piano, the master of will, mood, lo-fi theatre, lyrical archetypes and impossibly true American stories asked the audience to sing along. Everyone submitted because everyone knows a once-in-a-life-time chance when they see and hear one.

-- Roy Kasten

Category: Show Reviews

29 Comments:

brian says:

I thought it was... quiet.

Twoey says:

Hells yes it was a mind-blowing set!! I'm a fairly recent fan, but now I'm a lifelong one. That was THE MOST amazing live show I've ever seen. Tom Waits commanded the crowd from start to finish--even though he didn't take the stage until 9pm, the moment the audience saw the figure with that distinctive walk make his way to the platform in the dark the crowd went wild. I loved his heckler response--"I knew if I left a pause you would fill it. You're like blood vessels--the building blocks of life. You need work as a team, but I can tell you've never worked together before. You need an elected official!" Some sound and technical problems, but that didn't stop Tom from giving a phenomenal performance. And for those of you who were there: "Even before we're born, we're already winners!!" I felt like a winner last night.

Greg R. says:

It was quiet for a rock show, but that's partly the nature of the Fox. However, you could hear everything, and Tom and his band delivered on all cylinders. Like a lot of St. Louisans, this is probably the first and only time I will see him live, so I will cherish the memory. Tom is really the consummate showman. His comic timing is as sharp as his musical timing, even when it's on the counter-beat.

jaime says:

- i cried in the first 10 minutes
- it *was* kinda quiet
- i'ma vote this show "most appropriate use of a smoke machine" ever
- on Ebay: "Dangerous for my whole family. I went on one day and I bought the last dying breath of Henry Ford... It was sealed really well."
- stoked to see his reverse bow-legged Grinch shimmy in person
- why does the tracheotomy voice soothe me so?
- glittler is pretty
- worth every penny, m'dears

Jonathan says:

Well, I'm not dead, even though now I can die having seen Tom Waits. Like so many of us there, I thought I'd never have the opportunity to see him in St. Louis.

The band was amazing, and I thought he performed a well-represented catalogue of songs. Also, I have a guy coming out to the house to install a foot-controlled bell in my living room for me to stomp on.

I did get the impression that the show was a bit rushed due to the late start. It seemed like there was supposed to be a longer middle section of just Tom & piano, and more of that would have been excellent, but hey, I AM NOT COMPLAINING. By the way, anyone know why it was nearly 9pm before Tom took the stage? My only theory is because he is Tom Waits, and he can do whatever he wants.

i suspect the show started late just because of the line to get in -- it still wrapped around the block, and we walked in at about 7:45 or so. and the venue wasn't nearly full then.

this part of roy's review:

"Waits isn’t really an emotional performer, which is not to say he’s stiff or vacant or cold (that would be absurd). But no song (or very very few) are meant to convey emotion, his or anyone else’s."

hit. the. nail. on. the. head. bravo, bravo.

i thought the show was very inspiring; having never seen him before, i didn't know what to expect. but to me the wonderful weirdness of it conveyed possibility, mystery and the sense that maybe you can hope for things outside of the norm.

Matt Harnish says:

Yeah, that sounds good & all, but where were the poorly made papier mache animal heads? Where was Fred Flinstone sparkin' a doob? Where was some old man who looks exactly like Matt from CBGB yelling at everybody & making waaaaay out-dated pop culture references while wearing short shorts? And sparkin' a doob. Sorry, folks, sounds like Green Jello was the clear winner in this concert battle. Srsly. Dumbest show I've ever seen. It was AWESOMEZ!

also, an addition to the henry ford comment: "it was a first edition."

and: "In st. louis, it's illegal to open a can of soda without the presence of a licensed engineer."

AVD says:

Eeee, I had forgotten about "presence of a licensed engineer." Awesome, as was the rest of the show, although I do wish it could have been a wee bit louder. It was just amazing to see him perform.

I cried a little too...

The hippie chicks who talked through the entire set despite glares of disapproval, then at the end climbed over the edge of the box seats to perch dangerously on the ledge, waving their arms and singing- and I use that term loosely- louder than Tom, not so awesome. That CL post was great.

Anna Blahut says:

"We are already heroes"

lee harvey says:

A girl gave me a Tom Waits cd sometime around 91. I do not remember which one it was exactly. It was on the sidetable and for whtvr reason I never put it in and I ended up using it for a beercoaster for, like, a year. Now, it feels the equivalent of dumping beer on some religious artifact. A couple years later I started listening and that was that. Here's the thing, he occupies a space in the musical world (and other worlds) that nobody else does or possibly could or ever will. It's sad, funny, weird all at the same time. It just sounds good. It's great....just like the show at the Fox last night.

One thing, there seemed to be some grumbling between people who thought it was too quiet and people who wanted others to shut up. Oh, and I wish the percussion was louder but I could be going deaf at this point.

James says:

I think that I said the word "Awesome" close to 25,000 times at Green Jello last night. It dissolved into nothing, just phonemes really.

I cried at Green Jello. Before they even took the stage. The MC hypin' up the crowd was so hilarious I laughed until I actually was weeping. I almost had to sit down on the floor. I urge *EVERYONE* who enjoys a spectacle to see them should they come back through. Don't worry about not having a good time, or not knowing any of the songs or even going by yourself.

The last 3 songs? They pulled up onstage all but about 20 of the ppl there to see them. It's the new background on my phone. It makes me beam each time I open it.

Wow.

Just....wow.

q:wwjwd?
a:1.
tt!i!
p?

Dan Durchholz says:

Roy

FYI: Waits' 1974 St. Louis gig was at Kiel Opera House, opening for Frank Zappa.

DD

Anna Blahut says:

I already wrote the girl who posted the story about the rude hippies. The two men sitting next to me were escorted out. First they were just drunk and obnoxious. Then, passed out and were snoring all loud. The one next to me kept breathing his bad breath down my neck and made it hard to hear anything else above the snoring. His friend next to him.... wow... apparently took his shoes off at some point. Put his FEET up on the guy in front of him. I shit you not! The guy in front slammed his foot away. 5 minutes later he did it again with BOTH feet. Luckily the guy on the other side went and got someone and perfect timing saw it happen. I'm glad they had to leave. The show which was already amazing got even better in their absence. I wish I could of heard the piano has been drinking or god's away on business though. Or that Tom Waits could be my personal story teller. His kids were so lucky to have him tell stories at bed time!

BTW any other pictures from the show? Either of the performance or the Fox theater? I thought they did a great job of moving the long ass line fast. If anyone has pics please send them to me or if you posted them online somewhere post the link? oweazzello@aol.com

Bill says:

CL poster must have been super distraced, because I never heard Jockey Full of Bourbon last night...

Roy says:

FYI/FMI: That wasn't Larry Taylor on bass last night. It was Seth Ford-Young (who can be heard on Orphans, among other joints). Way my bad.

Bob says:

That was an incredible show. And my theory for why it was quiet: It was Tom Waits and people knew to shut up and listen. Personally I was fine with this.

Really the only complaints were the late start time (guess that's what happens when you release tickets two hours before the show) and the percussion being slightly too quiet (I'm glad to see I wasn't the only one who thought this).

ken says:

great, brilliant. Just brilliant.

Does anyone have an "offical" set list from last night?

Lucinda
Way Down In The Hole
Falling Down
Black Market Baby
All The World Is Green
Heigh Ho
Get Behind The Mule
Day After Tomorrow
Cemetery Polka
Hang Down Your Head
A Little Rain (???)
Lucky Day
Johnsburg, IL
Lost In The Harbour
Make It Rain
Lie To Me
On The Other Side Of The World
Singapore
Dirt In The Ground
What's He Building?
16 Shells
Rain Dogs

Goin' Out West
Anywhere I Lay My Head
Innocent When You Dream

Robby says:

What instrument was he playing after the piano?

Ken says:

that was a old fashionan "pump organ" - we used to use one at the summer camp I went to as a kid. You use your feet to work bellows to push air over the organ reeds.

Scott Lasser says:

The only problem I had with the percussion was that the bongos were not mic'd very well. Other than that, I thought the drumming was perfect. In that setting, louder drums and even louder drumming would have just killed all of the other instruments on that stage.

On a sidenote: What's with all of the guys dressed like Tom Waits (i.e., the hats)? I'm a big Prince fan, but you wouldn't catch me at one of his shows wearing bright yellow assless leather pants.

Vega$ says:

Much more Fedoras then porkpies, I was dissappointed by that. And where were the derbys? TW had the only one.

mungo jerry

Lauren says:

I was told that Tom started late because he was waiting for the late comeres to get to their seats so they wouldn't miss the show.

TonyF says:

Hey:

I seem to recall Waits playing Wash U's
Graham Chapel in 1977


Re: Larry Taylor nobody who has seen Larry
Taylor could mistake him for Seth Ford Young
T.

Dan Durchholz says:

Roy

FYI: Waits' 1974 St. Louis gig was at Kiel Opera House, opening for Frank Zappa.

DD

Goddam, Roy Kasten, this is one heck of a well-written review. Maybe the best thing I've read from you, and that's saying a lot.

I don't generally have regrets, and there was no way I could have afforded it, but you sure did make me feel a twinge for staying home that night.

Why is it, by the way, that I know at least one third of the people commenting on this review?

tom c. says:

wrong durchholz: the zappa/waits show was at the ambassador theater, july 5, 1974. there were both early and late shows. mothers played different sets for both shows. tom waits played the same sets both times and got booed off the stage the second time around.

Doug Kingsland says:

Thanks Roy, though I almost wish you had issued a "may contain spoilers" alert as I am due to see TW here in Prague later this month. The strange thing is that he is playing a huge congressional center for two nights with unprecedented control (each ticket has a name and ID is required for admission) and I can't find two Praguers who know who the hell he is. Still, I haven't seen him since the Graham Chapel show and I'm seriously looking forward to it, especially after reading your review.

Post a comment

Comments may not show up immediately after submission. Please wait a minute after posting a comment for it to appear.




Riverfront Times Insiders

  • Local food, music and news blasts
  • Free Stuff