Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Prom 19: 29.07.16 - David Bowie Prom
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After the Mahler 3, I got in the queue for the Bowie Prom. I wasn’t sure what to expect as there are so many possible approaches to a concert like this. Then it started to pour with rain and I was defeated. I consoled myself with a large shish kebab from Dalston’s finest (fellow sufferers will know it’s the best cure for night-starvation) and found myself at home in time for the beginning of the gig on TV.
I thought it was a most wonderful concert and I wish I’d braved-out the rain.
The best cover of ‘The Man Who Sold The world’ ever?
Laura Mvula’s rendition of ‘Fame’ astounded me - she’s an amazing artist. Paul Buchanan’s ‘I Can’t Give Everything Away” was so intense I got shivers down my spine. Lady Grinning Soul? What a performance! Marc Almond’s contributions were a valid acknowledgement of Bowie’s massive influence on the musical youth of the early seventies, if nothing else!
I knew John Cale would be good, but I never thought we’d witness such an empyrean performance - I’m not even going to try to put into words. Who else could have produced such an arrangement and performance of ‘Space Oddity’? Amazing. It sent me searching out all my JC CDs and playing them ’til 3.00 am! Wales’ finest?
Stargaze were having the time of their lives and this was palpable even over the telly!
I’ve loved Bowie and his art since my sister came home with the ‘Starman’ single in 1972, and this love is what drew me to this concert. I was not disappointed.
A truly great Prom and a wonderful addition to the routine type of Prom. I just wish I’d braved the rain and not been tempted by a kebab.
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Originally posted by underthecountertenor View PostNo. I expressed a personal opinion. BBM appeared, repeatedly, to purport to state a fact. Do you not get the difference? By highlighting your personal selection of what I wrote, you ignore the context. I acknowledged subjectivity. BBM appears to lay a claim to objectivity.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI don't think Weill would have been particularly sympathetic towards ideas of "reverence" at the time he composed "Alabama Song
You're probably right about Weill. How is that relevant to what I said?
(Apologies for putting your quote inside mine!)
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostYour referencing of Bowie's interpretation of Weill's "Alabama Song" in the context of a tribute concert to Bowie is what makes it relevant to what you said.
(Apologies for putting your quote inside mine!)
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Originally posted by underthecountertenor View PostApologies for being unclear. The point I was trying to make was that re-interpretation need not involve reverence, and that Bowie understood that. Your (entirely reasonable) speculation that Weill would have had no time for the reverential does not undermine that point.
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Exonian
Apart from the honourable exception of John Cale - who was superb I thought - this was in my undiscerning view - pretty awful. Was it just me or did I feel that the rest of the musicians just did not seem to have any emotional or indeed musical connection with the Thin White Duke or the music selected. The arrangements dull beyond despair. I understand perhaps the link between the Berlin ensemble and Bowie's 'Low' and 'Heroes' 1977-1979 recordings at the Hansa in Berlin but little else for me really worked. The MWSTW cover and Marc Almond? Nul points.
I will not bore anyone further but Bowie's work between The Man Who Sold The World in 1971 and Lodger in 1979 as thrilling, challenging and sheerly enjoyable as anything else produced in pop music at the time made the idea of a late prom potentially inspired. Sadly for me the execution was very disappointing. But as I said at the beginning, thankfully John Cale got it.
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