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Post details: Tom Waits - Edinburgh Playhouse, July 27, 2008

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Tom Waits - Edinburgh Playhouse, July 27, 2008

2008-07-28 13:48:40

Welcome to Waitsville. A place where bad jokes are good, Vaudeville never died, and the talk is of smoking monkeys, weasels and the mating habits of the preying mantis.

Continued...

Few musicians have built their own world as resolutely and completely as Tom Waits– that twilight carny town, pitched on a scrapheap in some flickering no-man’s land between Beat generation Manhattan and the Weimar Republic. Entering the theatre in a sweltering Edinburgh tonight, though, the sense of crossing some kind of border into another place, with its own laws, is more intense than ever.

In the same way that “free earplugs” became one of the most common talking points surrounding My Bloody Valentine’s recent tour, the ultra-stringent anti-touting measures in place for Waits’s two nights in Edinburgh, his only UK shows, have already provoked endless pre-show chatter. Outside the Playhouse, we line up like patient refugees while a man with a bullhorn orders us to have not merely our tickets, but also our photographic ID and credit cards ready for inspection. The fact that a great many are actually producing their passports at the door heightens the feeling of shuffling through some weird Checkpoint Charlie.

Inside, the faded Victorian grandeur of the Playhouse somehow seems a little grander, a little more faded than usual. The waiting stage lies bathed in a mix of deep blue, hard gold and intense red light that lets you take in the impressive amount of percussion instruments at the ready, as well as the weird, mushroomy assemblages of 1940s-era loudspeakers. The PA plays a sublime mix of music that suggests old radio waves bouncing back off satellites - jump blues, country, R&B, early rock ‘n’ roll, garage rock, gut bucket gospel. Still, it doesn’t distract from the fact that heat is already tropical, and by the time Waits has kept us waiting 30 minutes past the strictly appointed 8pm start, the buzzing, sweating crowd is growing restless. Slow handclaps break out, minds perhaps beginning to turn to the average £100 ticket prices. (An unconfirmed, but plausible story: when, off the record, a representative of the agency behind the tour was asked why tickets were so expensive, the reply came: “That’s just Tom Waits having a laugh.”)

Any hint of ill will, though, is instantly dispelled when Waits finally appears and mounts his private little dais at the centre of the stage while his five-man band take positions around him. Before he’s even opened his mouth, he’s accorded an ovation, which he shamelessly milks and orchestrates, standing in the spotlight and raising his trembling arms like a sideshow conjurer, directing the applause. As he kicks into a ferocious bastard blend of “Lucinda” and “Ain’t Goin’ Down The Well,” the crowd is already fully hypnotised.

And “kicking-off” is right. From the first, the lead percussion instrument is Waits’s stomping motorcycle boot. As he pounds the beat out, you realise the podium he’s standing on is coated in a layer of white powder – flour, perhaps, or talcum powder, or maybe ground-up bones - so that a cloud of pale dust rises around him as he stamps. In his weather-beaten black suit and bowler hat, he’s part silent movie slapstick clown, part Samuel Beckett ghost, part New Orleans voodoo funeral director. He never breaks from his patented “Tom Waits” character, but his ragged stagecraft is flawless. Sometimes he jerks like a machine-man; sometimes he rattle about like a zombified bag full of bones; often, he stretches and moves inside his music with the languid grace of a ballet dancer, walking between raindrops.

The hammering industrial polka is maintained into “Raindogs,” before he shifts gears abruptly with an unspeakably gorgeous “Falling Down.” On songs like this – and, later, a similarly bruised and beautiful “Bottom Of The World” – Waits and his band suggest the kind of music The Rolling Stones might have made if they’d ever allowed themselves to grow up. But, as they remind you by lurching straight into a delirious “Cemetery Polka,” crashing from marching mutant oompah into lyrical, looping, drunken sweeps and back, the Stones never took anyone on a trip like this.

Waits’s band – Larry Taylor (bass), Patrick Warren (keyboards), Omar Torrez (guitar), Vincent Henry (sax, harmonica) and Casey Waits (Tom’s son, on percussion, and sometimes joined by his younger sibling, Sullivan) – define the term “sidemen.” They settle into the shadows, anonymous figures almost, but their instruments become lead characters, storytellers as spellbinding as Waits himself. Together, they lead you through the backstreets, bars, junk shops, jazz dives, civic halls, cafes and fleapit theatres of a mongrel city, a place where the German, Italian, Spanish, Jewish and Gypsy neighbourhoods all merge into one. A place where Mariachi bands invite klezmer clarinettists to sit in for wedding gigs in Harlem, where guitars can sound like zithers, and where Lester Young or Lightnin’ Hopkins might stop by any minute, looking for help on a spaghetti western soundtrack.

Meanwhile, in his dusty halo, their leader is singing, growling, roaring, hissing and whispering as if, after years of distressing it, he’s finally got his voice the way he always wanted it, sounding like Louis Armstrong and Captain Beefheart getting together with a failed opera singer to sing Billie Holiday in 1930s Berlin.

Picking up his guitar to thumb out the thick, itching groove of “Get Behind The Mule,” Waits takes us from cabaret to roadhouse, with Henry wailing out waves of distorted mouth harp that would have astonished Howlin’ Wolf. A grotesque, meandering tale of circus freaks resolves itself into “Table Top Joe.” For “Jesus Gonna Be Here,” we’re in a tent by the muddy river, listening to a rogue preacher testify his customised gospel.

Then, moving to the piano with only Taylor’s stand-up bass for support, the mood shifts again, the theatre transformed into a tiny, late-night barroom, as Waits begins to ramble and rasp out more and more of his trademark showbiz-barfly shaggy dog stories:

• “Y’know what annoys me? When people say, ‘My cell-phone is a camera, too.’ I mean – why can’t something just be what it is and be happy about it? Makes me want to say, ‘My sunglasses are also a tricycle.’ Yeah, but I never do.”

• “Y’know why shrimp never give money to charity?” (“Why?” comes the crowd's foolish cry) “Yeah. Well, basically – they’re shellfish. (Pause.) My wife told me never to tell that joke again.”

• “I met someone who’d been there, and he told me what the moon smells like. Y’know what the moon smells like? Fireworks. Makes perfect sense. I mean, that’s where they all end up.”

And on and on he goes, dishing out patter like a washed-up Catskills entertainer. Of course, in between all the non sequiturs, he’s busy breaking hearts, breathing out exquisitely tender readings of some of his loneliest, most beautiful songs: “Picture In A Frame”; “Invitation To The Blues”; “House Where Nobody Lives”. During “Innocent When You Dream,” he leads the audience through a mass sing-along, the place sounding like a wartime music hall.

As he rises from the piano and makes his way back to his little stage, you can see that Wait’s thick black suit is drenched through in sweat. There’s just time to register the fact that, all around, people are sitting forward, literally on the edge of their seats, before he pushes the pace again, the group slamming into bone-shaking “Lie to Me,” and an immense “Hoist That Rag,” a long, fast, snaking, hard mamba.

“Hang Your Head” is burning blue soul. “Green Grass” manages to be sinister and gentle at once and finds room for a great whistling solo. On “Way Down In The Hole,” Waits mounts a successful, swampy campaign to reclaim his song from The Wire soundtrack, nailing down the beat by stamping on a fire bell and beatboxing like an asthmatic Rolf Harris. “Make It Rain,” follows, the band hammering out a slow, jagged pneumatic funk groove that builds mercilessly while Waits jerks and cries for his rain. It finally comes, when, in a flourish of pure, old school showbiz, a cascading shower of golden glitter suddenly pours down upon him from the rafters.

With the crowd on its feet again, baying again, Waits returns for a too-brief encore, laying out the sinister comic-book rumble of “Goin’ Out West,” and a weary, looping end-of-the-night waltz through “All The World Is Green”. Then, after two-and-and-half hours of booglarizing, beguiling and binding us in his unique spell, he’s gone, taking his world with him, and leaving us trying to find our way back to ours.

Astonishing, simply. And, in case you were wondering, worth every penny, and all the problems of passport control. Nights like this, performers like this, are as rare as rocking horse dung.

DAMIEN LOVE

SETLIST
Lucinda/ Ain’t Goin’ Down To The Well
Raindogs
Falling Down
On The Other Side Of The World
Shoot The Moon
Cemetery Polka
Get Behind The Mule
Cold Cold Ground
Table Top Joe
Jesus Gonna Be Here

Piano set:
Picture In A Frame
Invitation To The Blues
House Where Nobody Lives
Innocent When You Dream

Lie to Me
Make It Rain
Bottom Of The World
Hang Your Head
Green Grass
Way Down In The Hole
Dirt In The Ground
Make It Rain

ENCORE:
Goin’ Out West
All The World Is Green

Michael Bonner


Comments, Trackbacks:


Comment from: tom [Visitor]
I was there and every word is true.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-28 @ 18:03
Comment from: Gavin [Visitor]
Great review great night, a true musical genius backed by a wonderful band.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-28 @ 21:23
Comment from: Tom [Visitor]
Great review, absolutely spot on. It was a magical night.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-28 @ 21:32
Comment from: ian [Visitor]
the man is a musical theatrical genius....
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-28 @ 22:49
Comment from: fast eddie [Visitor]
tom just gets better and better, the band were fantastic, Make it Rain was the best finale to any show I have ever seen, I was tempted not to call for an encore but what you gonna do, My third Waits concert in the Playhouse The best.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-28 @ 23:54
Comment from: Richy [Visitor]
Just got back from the second night - absolutely unreal. Similar setlist, but this time he even played Tom Traubert's Blues. i was NOT expecting that. People were crying...absolutely magical. I think my life is now complete!
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 00:47
Comment from: Eyeball Kid [Visitor]
Great review of a great great great great great show. By the way, does anyone know what the melody his band kept going into during Cemetery polka was ?? They kept going into it during different songs (also during Circus, which, strangely, doesn't show up on your setlist, maybe I dreamt that track) I recognised the melody but I can't put a name to it and it's really bugging me. Thanks in advance to anyone who answers.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 01:19
Comment from: Dsmw [Visitor]
Yes I was there and indeed it was so,and again tonight (28th) Re-mortgage the house to see that again with no hesitation.And sell the kids.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 01:57
Comment from: Nick [Visitor]
Not every word is true in the review. Seth Ford-Young was on bass, not Larry Taylor. All the same, what a night!
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 08:00
Comment from: Luke [Visitor]
To the guy wondering about Circus, it was halfway through Circus when he went into Table Top Joe. Amazing gig... amazing. Got to shake his hand at the end and I giggled like a school girl.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 10:05
Comment from: David [Visitor]
1000 mile round trip, expensive hotel, 3 hour delay at the airport going home (thanks Easyjet) worth it all, didn't stop smiling for 2 hours, fantastic - from circus barker to balladeer the man is a genius, fantastic !!!
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 10:07
Comment from: Rob [Visitor]
I was at the second night and don't feel the need to ever see any band or artist live again (unless it's Tom Waits). I'm a cynical old bastard at times these days but this was astonishing, never seen anything like it.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 10:51
Comment from: Misha [Visitor]
To Eyeball Kid: 'Russian Dance' it was
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 11:27
Comment from: Tom traubert [Visitor]
We were there last night. What a guy, what a band. Superb.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 11:53
Comment from: Rich & Dad [Visitor]
Genius. What a great night and what a guy. Superb.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 11:54
Comment from: C [Visitor]
what a night, worth every penny. Wish I had held out for a Monday ticket though. Can't believe he played Tom Trauberts Blues! gutted.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 15:28
Comment from: Simon Rogerson [Visitor]
Been going to gigs for a long time, but this was something else. All these superlatives were well-earned. The man is extraordinary. Money doesn't matter.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 17:04
Comment from: EUG [Visitor]
I AM GOING TO SEE TOM IN DUBLIN JUST HAVE TO KNOW I PURCHESED 2 TICKETS AND HAVE MY NAME ON BOTH TICKETS I WILL HAVE MY ID WITH ME AND WILL BE BRINGING A MATE DID ANYONE HAVE A PROBLEM
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 17:08
Comment from: Alan [Visitor]
Well I've sang White Punks on Dope with The Tubes and Fixing to Die with Country Joe, but Innocent when you dream with Tom Waits............ still walking on air, the man is just in a different league to the rest of the music industry.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 19:16
Comment from: Martin [Visitor]
Just to point out that Russian Dance came in the middle of Raindogs - I didn't recognise the melody in Cemetary Polka - does anyone?
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 20:11
Comment from: Chris Paz [Visitor]
"The ermin, the mink and the weasel are all pretty much the same thing, so if you see a woman wearing an ermin or a mink, you can go up to her and tell her she has a nice weasel." Great songs, great banter, great performance.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-29 @ 23:12
Comment from: Eyeball kid [Visitor]
Thanks for the responses everyone really but none of those were what I meant, it's my fault for not putting it clearly enough but I was tired as Hell having just got back from the gig. The thing I'm talking about was a completely instrumental passage. During circus it was just kinda cheekily played a little now and then by the clarinet player in the background while Tom spoke but the main place you'd notice it was cemetery polka. The whole band kept going into it after each verse . Then there'd be two big hits of sound, Tom would go, 'sorry about that' and the guitar would start up playing the cemetery polka riff again. Thanks for the responses anyway, I LOVED that he went into a little of Russian dance and totally didn't expect that but the name of this melody they were doing is still bugging me. It's annoying because I could hum it and I know I already knew it but I just couldn't name it.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-30 @ 00:00
Comment from: Misha [Visitor]
To Eyeball kid - is it what you mean: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TTllZrsOCFo
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-30 @ 08:45
Comment from: Lucy [Visitor]
It was Sous le ciel de Paris, the Edith Piaf song. Apologies if my spelling isn't perfect in French. Under Paris Skies, anyway. Hope you can now relax
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-30 @ 09:19
Comment from: Gordon [Visitor]
Nothing more i could add to the review or the comments, suffice to say no live music experience has come close or could come close to what i experienced on sunday night. truly magnificent.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-30 @ 13:17
Comment from: Kendo [Visitor]
Been a fan for over 25 years. Seen many many bands but nothing has come even close to this performance. I was grinning like a loon all the way through the gig. Wasted and wounded that I missed the 2nd night though!!
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-30 @ 15:16
Comment from: Jitterbug Boy [Visitor]
Yeh - What a performance from a true legend!! - Attended the Sunday performance and the memory of Tom at the piano singing Invitation to the Blues will be with me for a long time!!
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-30 @ 18:43
Comment from: Eyeball kid [Visitor]
Thanks so much Lucy. You just saved me a lengthy stay in an asylum and some hefty electro shock therapy bills, that really was driving me nuts. I owe you big time (no pun intended). Anytime you need anybody bumped off or anything feel free to call in the favour. Thanks for the link misha, yeah that's the way they performed it when I saw them. Amazing stuff.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-30 @ 19:58
Comment from: Kaiser Jza [Visitor]
Just as great as the Hammersmith show (2003), but in a different way. Sometimes you can't get enough but I feel sated now.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-30 @ 20:57
Comment from: Kaiser Jza [Visitor]
sorry, 2004
PermalinkPermalink 2008-07-30 @ 21:00
Comment from: Brian [Visitor]
Did he play "Make it rain" twice? I don't remember that, but I do seem to recall that he played "Hoist that rag".
PermalinkPermalink 2008-08-01 @ 08:30
Comment from: Vernon [Visitor]
Yeah - the setlist has 'Make it Rain' instead of 'Hoist that Rag', but the review itself gets it right. Cut the guy some slack, though - it was so damned hot and humid and dark in there, I'm surprised anyone managed to scribble anything legible! Great review of a truly great night, etc, etc...
PermalinkPermalink 2008-08-01 @ 13:24
Comment from: Jarlath [Visitor]
Seth Ford Young played bass on this tour. Larry Taylor was unable to do the tour. Great gigs.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-08-05 @ 15:32
Comment from: M. Bender [Visitor]
It was 'Uncle Bill', not 'Cemetery Polka'; the interruptions were to signify the way in which family reunions lurch between politeness and treachery. For more than a few of the songs, he'd sing the lyrics to one while the band played the music to another.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-08-06 @ 12:46
Comment from: M. Bender [Visitor]
It was 'Uncle Bill', not 'Cemetery Polka'; the interruptions were to signify the way in which family reunions lurch between politeness and treachery. For more than a few of the songs, he'd sing the lyrics to one while the band played the music to another.
PermalinkPermalink 2008-08-06 @ 12:50
Comment from: Ruth the Truth [Visitor]
It was too "Cemetery Pola." Tom Waits doesn't have a song called "Uncle Bill" as far as I know. Although there is an uncle Bill mentioned in the lyrics of "Cemetery Polka."
PermalinkPermalink 2008-08-07 @ 18:21
Comment from: Ruth the Truth [Visitor]
It was too "Cemetery Pola." Tom Waits doesn't have a song called "Uncle Bill" as far as I know. Although there is an uncle Bill mentioned in the lyrics of "Cemetery Polka."
PermalinkPermalink 2008-08-07 @ 18:23
Comment from: rhonda [Visitor]
I can't believe someone found words for such an event. I went in Birmingham and was at a loss to describe the experience. Thank you for such a vivid, intelligent, soulful review....
PermalinkPermalink 2008-08-16 @ 23:21
Comment from: Heronimus [Visitor]
Absolutely great review. I have been to one show of Waits in the Netherlands, approximately six years ago, and the reviewer is right, i am still trying to find the way back to my own world... how impressive and powerful this performer!
PermalinkPermalink 2008-08-18 @ 14:40
Comment from: alan christon [Visitor]
edinburgh , i have been to many concerts and have often left disoppointed HOWEVER tom Waits Edinburgh another level the best by a country mile i have ever seen ,Tom took you into another realm ,OUTSTANDING
PermalinkPermalink 2008-09-10 @ 13:12

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