Friday, October 30, 2009

Marc Almond / Baby Dee @ The Alexandra Theatre, Thursday 29th October 2009

Oh Marc...shutting your eyes won't make this review go away.

Delighted to have the chance to see Baby Dee for the second time in a year or so. For those of you who don’t know her work Baby Dee is a transgender artist who plays a mean harp (and piano tonight) and sings a whole bunch of songs about transformation, regret, love, confusion…you get the picture. She’s a real Marmite artist, you’ll either love it or sit there feeling a little confused…at best. I’m a fan, partly because the music can, at times be hauntingly beautiful and partly, if I’m honest, because I have the utmost respect for any outsider artist who has the balls (hmmm…perhaps not the best turn of phrase in this case) to just go out there and do their thang. Tonight the audience was certainly split. There was some rather nasty snickering going on (to be fair Dee’s singing voice is a curious mixture of a haggered old sea dog and an angel and at times she sort of laughs the words out) but that says more about the puerile narrow mindedness of some of the audience than it does about the performance. Shame on you, whoever you were. In future please stay in and watch X Factor or whatever people like you do when you’re not inflicting your vile presence on the rest of us.

Baby Dee...unlikely to be appearing on X Factor any day soon.

Speaking of doing your own thang, Marc Almond’s always ploughed a curious field (not literally, I can’t imagine him up to his ankles in turnips and manure). Recent years have seen him putting out a covers album, a couple of Russian language albums and all sorts of obscure underground dance collaborations. The fact that he’s been able to put anything out after smashing his head into a million pieces in a motorcycle accident a few years back is nothing short of miraculous. The last time I saw him was at The Academy 2. Disdain for the venue dripped from his every pore. ‘They’ve stuck me in the corner of some shitty bar’ he moaned. True, it wasn’t the best venue for him and his musicians, a perfectly competent bunch of people but with more than a whiff of those wedding bands who do covers of ‘Hi Ho Silver Lining’ about them, didn’t really help matters. Marc was my first ever gig at The Powerhouse (now the Oceananianiaiaia or some such godawful chain crap) way back in 1988. It remains possibly my favourite ever gig, filled with classic era Almond (Mother Fist, Vermin in Ermine, Stories of Johnny, The Stars We Are) and backed by La Magia (including Marc’s then muse Annie Hogan). I’d not been to a gig before so I wore a huge, thick, heavy donkey jacket (hey, it was the 80’s) and stood there sweating like a motherhumper all night, surrounded a mainly gay or gothic (or gay gothic in some cases) audience. I went on my own too. No one I knew then would’ve wanted to go as Marc was (and still is I guess) something of an outsider artist, despite all of the hit singles. Fast forward 21 years and here I am sitting in the Alex Theatre watching him for the 8th or 9th time (I forget…it’s my age) with Lady Baron but, sadly, without the donkey jacket (I wonder where it is now?). I have to say that, knowing how great he can be, Marc’s performances have somewhat frustrated me over the years. He has a tendency to camp it up and make light of some of his best known songs which unnecessarily cheapens the material (‘Say Hello, Wave Goodbye’ ain’t a comedy number in my book). His choice of musicians, in particular Neal X, has also surprised me. I’m sure Neal X is a lovely human being and a gifted musician but he’s just not right for Marc’s music. Hell, I’m skirting around the issue. Last night’s gig was, for me, something of a disaster. It saddens me to say that, but I do actually care enough about Marc’s career to make a few constructive criticisms:

(1) Get a new band of younger, fresher, classically trained musicians. Sadly the drummer made every line of every song sound like the punchline to a bad joke…be-dum tschhh.

(2) By all means include new and more challenging material but don’t leave the better known tracks for the last 15 minutes. The couple we sat next to walked out after an hour of (mainly) Russian songs.

(3) Hire a really good musical director who can pull the whole show into something cohesive and add a little freshness to the older material. The 12 Years of Tears show in 1992 was a triumph...30 Years of Tears could be even better.

(4) Stop camping it up so much…on the piano backed songs the power, emotion and (most important of all) voice were very bit as strong as 20 years ago. ‘Witty’ asides are fine in between tracks, but not in the middle of them (take Mother Fist for example...substituting 'Barcelona' for 'Birmingham' just ruined it).

(5) Learn the words to the songs…especially your own (Tears Run Rings in particular seemed to get a little 'confused').

(6) Rehearse the show. Last night was sloppy. I wouldn’t mind so much if I’d only paid a fiver but tickets were £21 each + all kinds of random booking fees.

To be fair Marc actually apologised profusely at the end of the show and called it a ‘bit of a mad one’. Hmmmm…that’s not the word I’d use. The absolute nadir was reached when the hapless Mr X’s guitar kept feeding back during the first part of ‘Gone But Not Forgotten’. Marc stopped and said something along the lines of ‘For Fucks sake Neal, can’t you get an amp that works?’ A sound man was summoned. He fiddled with some knobs and the song resumed. Two seconds later, more feedback. The entire song was then abandoned and there followed some farcical get the band off the stage, get the band on the stage nonsense. I half expected the band to start doing the Hokey Cokey at one point. Still, the faithful applauded like mad, showing just what a loyal lot us Marc Almond fans can be. Loyalty can, however, be misplaced. Let’s hope some realistic reviews of these shows finally get the message through and Marc’s true talent doesn’t end up being wasted in some dreadful end of the pier show which, sadly, is what last night ended up being.

PS: Before anyone takes offense at this review please note that Marc himself acknowledged that it wasn't a great show. I've been lucky enough to see him at his best and this wasn't it.

9 comments:

Lady Baron said...

Considering how good Marc Almond can be last night was very sad. I really hope that he changes his tact and goes back to being the true star that he is.

Anonymous said...

I agree with everything you say in this review but it was still. A great night - Marc has the best voice ever and to heAr him live was amazing. I have been a fan from the start and have every album and I love everything he has done so if you're reading this Marc, Lynne still loves you at age 41 and always will.

The Baron said...

Thanks for your comment Lynne. You're right, the voice is as good (if not better) than it's ever been but he really deserves more appropriate musicians to play with him. If it had just been Marc with a pianist the night would, I have no doubt, have been quite brilliant. Like I said Marc's been responsible for some of my favorite ever, which is why I wrote what I did. Here's to the future and the 30th anniversary shows.

Anonymous said...

Bournemouth last night, Marc and the band were superb. He has one of the best voices you could hope to hear. He did acknowledge what a great job the sound crew did at the show, and it's clear now why he did so. A magnificent effort.

The Baron said...

Good to hear that. A decent sound crew can and often does make all the difference. Maybe the Birmingham 'wrinkles' have been ironed out. For me though I still feel passionately that a change of musicians is really needed, or even just a Marc tour purely backed by piano, perhaps playing smaller, more intimate venues. Comments by any other fans who attended these gigs would be most welcome. How did you find the shows? Maybe it was just me...

Anonymous said...

I have seen Marc on numerous occassions and love his work; or should I say loved his work. I agree with the comments that the band resembled a hign school dance band rather than professionals (with the exception of the trumpet player - she was terrific). The show lacked pace, production and professionalism. Lastly, his new songs; and I am really sorry about this SUCK. The Russian stuff is great; actually everything up to Stranger Things ia really good. Stardom Road weak and some of the unrecorded stuff should stay that way. With talent like his, and he has talent, is rare. Maybe you can have too loyal a following. If they forgive everything, as Marc's fans do, maybe you lose the motivation to be professional. It was really sad.

The Baron said...

Thank you! That's just how I feel, frustrated that he perhaps isn't working with the kind of people who can get the best out of him. As you say, if the majority of fans keep making out that things are great why would he feel the need to change? I agree with your comments on his recorded material too. Some new people to write with and a fresh band and things could be so different...

Anonymous said...

Marc forgets lyrics as a result of his motorcycle accident. He suffers short term memory loss.

The Baron said...

Yes, I'm aware of that and the fact that he's made such a fantastic recovery is quite exceptional. This particular show wasn't his best though, by his own admission, and it didn't seem to have anything to do with his injury, more a case of being under rehearsed. This was two years ago though and I've not seen him live since. Hopefully he's put some of that legendary sparkle back in. I've seen what he can do - pre and post accident - and this gig wasn't anywhere near his best.