Photo by Beat Halberschmidt / Victor's Places |
The pulse of doof-doof resonates throughout the contemporary church,
psyching up the Berlin punters for a night with the gentile American
guitar legend, Bill Frisell. Soon after, the beat is switched up to a
kind of Sunday chill-out groove, contemporary soul; the volume, slightly
lowered. Before long, the techno is back. Only in Berlin.
In an act of public defiance, one anarchic, heavy-set man ignores the
safety barrier to sit on the church organ stool. Soon after he is shooed
away by a shocked sound engineer. It’s a rebellious city, this one.
There are a good handful of Frisell clones in the audience and one guy
who looks strikingly like bass player Nick Dunston. Turns out it is Nick
Dunston. He’s in the support band. Most of the Bill fanboys hover around
the guitar side of the stage, taking photographs of Bill’s resting
guitar and his little collection of stuffed animals, all within grabbing
distance. The crowd is split into two distinct areas: the guitar side,
which is dense, and the piano side, sparse. Lotta greys in the church
tonight but there was one silver-haired lady with a lip stud piercing,
reminding you once again of the city you’re in.
Tonight's demographic? Old, white, but interesting. Bill is apparently
some kind of style icon. He alone is responsible for the look of the
circular glasses, the likes of which so many have since adopted. Is this
a coincidence? An homage? For every clone, there is an atypical, younger
counterpoint. The woman with the Kraftwerk Autobahn tote wins the merch
game this evening.
Support act trumpeter Anthony Hervey commands the stage in his electric
blue oversized shirt covered in bright yellow fans. The print is as fun
and confident as the bouncy compositions.
“We play the way we live,” Hervey announces, “We’re gonna have a good
time.”
It’s the speedier second piece that really wins over the crowd. The
first trumpet solo cracks the ice and is met with thunderous applause
which resonates up into the church’s high ceiling. Jesus is giving a
thumbs up.
Pianist Johannes Von Ballestrem’s sock game is strong: rainbow argyle.
At one point, he is offered the space for a sweet and delicate piano
solo that segues into one of those jazz songs that comes on in the movie
when the protagonist is strolling along in the moonlight, alone in the
rain, wondering where it all went wrong in his life, possibly
contemplating suicide, but most likely just in need of some tenderness
and understanding, in the form of hard liquor. You know the kind of tune
I’m talking about. During a ballad, some guy with a set of keys on his
belt wanders the periphery of the room offering a free
Wollesonic massage
to every seated person he passes, and smacking one woman in the face.
Hervey’s anthem “Soul Food” is hard to resist. Guest singer Natalie
Greffel is so contagiously joyful - she lights up the room with her
happiness. When Hervey picks up the trumpet during the following song,
folks in the audience are hyped and shouting "Woo" and "Yeah" before his
solo is even over. It’s really infectious. The passive side is bopping.
The "Bill" side is even starting to catch on. At any rate, the support
act is qualified and fun. I’m so happy that Anthony decided to learn to
play the trumpet because he is so good at it.
During the pause, the lines for the bar and the loo extend out the door
of the church. Strategically, drinking is a bad idea as both queues are
glacially slow. A few people appear to have obtained the elusive blood
of christ, thanks be to the bar staff.
Beat Halberschmidt / Victor's Places |
Bill seems totally elated and humbled by all the attention. During his
only stage banter for the night, he can’t help but comment on the warm
adoration and vast sea of fans, of which he is right in the middle:
”It’s like the Beatles or something!”
There is no doubting Frisell’s ability to write a tune, and indeed to
play, still. You just have to be willing to come along on his journey,
which is conducted at his pace. For some, that pace might be a little
slow, but for the guy next to me, this was probably the best night of
2024. Maybe even his whole life. Not a song went by without an audible
gasp, or an exclamation of joyous disbelief, both in German and English.
Some people did appear to start yawning, others swayed with closed eyes.
Sometimes Frisell just gets absorbed into his little world and it just
loops around; mesmerising and hypnotic. It’s a mood.
People are getting tired of standing so they begin casually sitting
down. The space and the music allows for it though, and it’s not
particularly awkward. Rudy Royston’s drum solo brings the house down - a
testament to just how restrained he has been this whole time. Actually,
Rudy often steals the show, ever so subtly.
Beat Halberschmidt / Victor's Places |
Bill’s classic version of the theme from “On
Her Majesty's Secret Service ” closes out the
evening and some audience members appear to be having a religious
experience. It’s an effortless encore and Bill returns to the stage,
genuinely overjoyed at the thunderous ovation. Berlin absolutely loves
him, and seeing his humble delight was nothing short of heartwarming. He
deserves the spotlight, and all the accolades. Sure, at 73, he’s in his
autumn years, but Bill is all set - a beautiful church performance like
this guarantees his entry to the Pearly Gates. Long may his entry be
delayed.
Bill Frisell, guitar
Thomas Morgan, bass
Rudy Royston, drums
SUPPORT:
Anthony Hervey, trumpet
Johannes Von Ballestrem, piano
Nick Dunston, bass
Ugo Alunni, drums
Natalie Greffel, vocals
4 comments:
Great review—feel like I was right there!
She hated it - and she hates the people who attended the show. What‘s wrong with getting old? What about the music? Worst review in a long time …
Pire commentaire depuis longtemps. I can assure you she hates dead people more than the (still) living ... especially composers. Puitan!
Not sure where that reading comes from ... atmospheric description, apt assessment of Frisell's gentle music, it is a mood.
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