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Indie has long done crossovers into more classical styles of
music, just as it has into every genre, but the development of the Brooklyn
independent music scene into an established presence in recent years has
enabled indie to take greater advantage of New York's classical community. And there might not be an institution
more classical than Lincoln Center.
So as part of Lincoln Center's ‘American Songbook’ series, on Friday,
January 29th at the Allen Room, the institution invited in St. Vincent, one of
the indie artists most capable of uniting the two spheres (and the other most
capable artists served as guest stars...).
Singer/songwriter Annie Clark (QRO interview), a.k.a. St. Vincent, has long been involved with
the more classical side of alternative music, from her participation in massive
indie-ensemble The Polyphonic Spree (QRO album review) to her own backing band, which includes flute,
horns, and violin. The ‘cabaret’
feel of her St. Vincent debut, Marry Me (QRO review), evoked the piano nightclubs of occupied Europe
(most especially with single "Paris Is Burning"). She also moved from the somewhat less-than-classical Dallas
to Brooklyn, just across the East River from Manhattan, home of Lincoln
Center. So playing as part of the
Center's ‘American Songbook’ series was a natural fit.
The series is held at Lincoln Center's Allen Room (QRO venue review), which is
actually located not in Lincoln Center proper, but a few blocks south, inside
the Time Warner Center on Columbus Circle. The ‘ultra-classy auditorium’-like venue, on the fifth and sixth floors of the building, looks out onto Central Park West, going north -
buildings to one side, park to the other, as the backdrop to the stage. Clark called it "a giant LCD screen
behind us, with a really beautiful picture of a city behind us. I'm not sure what city..." The lights of the Big Apple, buildings
as well as traffic, and the darkness of the park at night, helped make the
concert feeling like a real ‘evening’, a real ‘evening out’ (even if only the tables
up front were able to have drinks during their show).
Clark opened with "The Strangers", the opener to her 2009
sophomore St. Vincent release, Actor (QRO
review), and that most recent record dominated the set list, especially the first half. Actor was actually
something of a step away from the more classical sounds of Marry Me, giving Clark more of a chance to "shred" with her
guitar, and had been criticized for it.
But at Lincoln Center's Allen Room, the classical influences were upped for
Actor, and the set was the better
for it. Tracks from the record
like "The Strangers", "Save Me From What I Want", "Black Rainbow" and
especially later song "Marrow" exceeded their delivery on their record. But Clark also didn't shrink from the
shred, letting it out on songs like "Actor Out of Work" and "Your Lips Are Red"
(the only piece of the night from Marry Me, but one of that album's best) - those expecting a quiet night were
going to have to plug their ears (did indeed see at least one woman do that
during a few of Clark's loudest axe-moments). Maybe best summing it up was the title to the second song of
the night, "Just the Same But Brand New".
"Just the Same" was followed by Actor stand out "Laughing With a Mouth of Blood", which
featured the first of a "bevy of guest stars", Justin Vernon, a.k.a. Bon Iver (QRO
album review - with whom Clark had performed on the Saturday prior
at a special BrooklynVegan-arranged benefit for Haitian relief - QRO event
listing). The alt-folk singer/songwriter has had his own classical
touches (though his hair that night looked like he'd just rolled out of bed...),
from playing Broadway's Town Hall (QRO venue review) to just recently having been a part of Merkin
Concert Hall's ‘New York Guitar Festival’ (QRO event listing).
Vernon later returned, this time with Bryce Dessner of The National (QRO
live review), the band that has led the
way in ‘Brooklyn indie-meets-Manhattan classical’ (including curating two
upcoming festivals in the vein, both featuring St. Vincent, Big Ears and Music
Now - QRO Festival Guide). Dessner & Vernon joined Clark on
stage for "Roslyn", a song written by Clark & Vernon ("over the internet -
we Skyped the song together...") that "ended up, sort of randomly, in a teen
vampire movie about abstinent teens."
But whatever you think about the series where "the subtext really is
that teens should be abstinent, or they're going to die, if you really read the
novel...", "Roslyn" is a beautiful song (and the soundtrack that it's a part of
shouldn't be given short shrift, either - QRO review), and was done beautifully by Clark, et al - though
it's a bit more of a Bon Iver song than a St. Vincent one.
But "Roslyn" was the start of Clark's expansion at the back
half of the evening. She followed
it up with her pick from ‘The American Songbook’ ("Oh wow, that's a pretty
giant collection of songs I could pick - ‘American’ and ‘Song’..."), where she
went "a little bit closer to home, to Brooklyn, circa 2006," to cover "Mistaken
For Strangers", from the album Boxer (QRO
review), by that very National - though Dessner didn't join Clark
for the performance, and while she credited the band ("Thank The National..."),
she never mentioned that Dessner is in The National (maybe assumed the
crowd knew? Classical & indie
scenes can both be very ‘in the know’...).
Clark and her band took the darkly subdued piece and converted it into a
female & flute-led orchestral, granding tragedy. Maybe not as pitch-perfect as the exquisite original, but
original and impressive in its own right.
However, it was with the following song where Clark &
guests hit their peak, thanks to a little-known New York artist named David
Byrne. The Talking Head has really
dived into today's indie music scene, from working with Dirty Projectors (QRO
album review) on a contribution for
Dessner's own charity compilation, Dark Was the Night (QRO
review), to opening up the 2009 music
season at Prospect Park Bandshell (QRO venue review), and even being seen in the crowd (QRO
photo) at shows like Warp Records' 20th
anniversary event (QRO live review)
last fall at Terminal 5 (QRO venue review). Indeed, he has been
something of the ‘bridge’ between the classical and indie worlds, thanks to his
going-on-thirty years of work in both - when Clark announced, "There is another
super-radical guest for tonight," indie & classical minds may have guessed
that it was going to be David Byrne (or just noticed him off-stage, in the dark
but with bright-white hair), but that didn't make his appearance any less
sweet.
Byrne came to the stage (with Dessner & Vernon coming up
as well, to sing back-up) to perform a piece he and Clark had been working on
together, "Breathing" (after jokingly asking the crowd, "Did you see the couple
having the fight over there?" [in the apartment building whose windows were
clearly visible in the Allen Room's ‘giant LCD screen’] "[Did you see] The kid watching porn?..."). What began as Byrne's signature
talk-singing big, with world influences, saw beauty added when Clark chimed in,
with Byrne's energy that defies his years.
Clark has always had great banter and chatter with the crowd
(QRO live review), and while the classy
setting did dim that somewhat, she still shined through with comments like
those about the view, Twilight: New Moon, ‘American Songbook’,
and more. After Clark mentioned
that it was a full moon, someone cheered, with which Clark responded, "Yes,
applause for the earth, and the planets...
Yes, I'm in full support of that."
And before "Your Lips Are Red", after announcing it was their last song
and receiving ‘awws’ from the crowd, she mock-confessed, "That's a lie, let's
be honest. Let's all just be
complicit in the lie, for now..."
And St. Vincent did return, for "The Party", before bidding
adieu. The whole set was perfectly
timed, at a little over the seventy-five minutes that the program had informed
everyone of beforehand (QRO photo) - just long enough so you felt like you got a whole
experience, but not so long that you were squirming in your chair (other than
the short encore break, there was "no intermission" - something else the
program let everyone know). St.
Vincent & friends brought indie to classical, Lincoln Center brought
classical to indie, for a holy evening.
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