Category Archives: Pop and Rock

Stew and Heidi tackle The Broadway Problem

The Damrosch Park Bandshell stage could hardly contain the full forces of Stew and Heidi: The Broadway Problem on Wednesday night.  (Photos copyright 2009, Steven P. Marsh)

The Damrosch Park Bandshell stage could hardly contain the full forces of Stew and Heidi: The Broadway Problem on Wednesday night. (Photos copyright 2009, Steven P. Marsh)

Stew and Heidi Rodewald took on Broadway at Lincoln Center Out of Doors on Wednesday night, and Broadway was no match for them. I’m posting pictures now, with words to follow soon.

Stew and Heidi — too much space between them!

Stew and Heidi — too much space between them!

Meanwhile, don’t forget: The Spike Lee film version of Passing Strange on Broadway hits the big screen at the IFC Center in NYC today! Even if you’ve seen the show as many times as I have, you need to see the movie — to get a new perspective on it and to support Stew and Heidi. Be there!

Stew was in a great mood.

Stew was having a good time.

Life is a mistake that only art can correct

Heidi Rodewald, Stew, moderator Wendy Bounds, Bill T. Jones and Bjorn G. Amelan at Summer Scoops Live last night. (Copyright 2009, Steven P. Marsh)

Heidi Rodewald, Stew, moderator Wendy Bounds, Bill T. Jones and Bjorn G. Amelan at Summer Scoops Live on Aug. 18. (Photos copyright 2009, Steven P. Marsh)

The question on the table was: “Why would people pay $25 to hear Stew and Heidi talk when there are talks after screenings all weekend?”

I have to admit that was my first thought when I heard about Tuesday night’s Wall Street Journal Summer Scoops panel discussion held at Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater with Stew and Heidi Rodewald, creators of the musical Passing Strange,  and the creative team behind the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company — founder/choreograper Bill T. Jones, set designer Bjorn G. Amelan and associate artistic director Janet Wong.

WSJ StewHeidi

Heidi Rodewald and Stew.

After all, the Spike Lee film version of Passing Strange on Broadway does hit the big screen at the IFC Center in NYC on Friday.  Stew and Heidi will be talking aplenty at those early screenings. And they’ll be playing a free show at Lincoln Center Out of Doors in Damrosch Park on tonight — so what good’s talk when it’s really all about music, or the music of notes and words, for those two?

And the sparse turnout suggested that many fans may have felt the same way.

But the answer is simple: You won’t get the deeply real interaction between the Passing Strange team and Jones and his colleagues at those post-movie talks. And that alone made the discussion worth the price of admission. If you thought about going and skipped it, you missed something truly special.

I was blown away by the honest, revealing discussion. There were  connections made onstage between those two creative teams and between them and the audience that were, while not out of the blue, deep and I hope lasting. (As Stew wrote in Passing Strange: “The wire got connected. The mistake got corrected.”)

I saw Passing Strange 12 times at the Public Theater, and four times on Broadway. I’ve been a fan of Stew and Heidi for 10 years. I’ve been one of 15 people in the audience week after week for their residency in the grungy basement of the Knitting Factory. But I have never heard them have such frank discussions about their art as they did with Bill on Tuesday night.

That’s not to say those conversations have never happened before. Passing Strange wouldn’t exist without a series of creative collisions and collaborative head-butting. But I’ve never seen such a magical level of public connection between two creative powerhouses like that before.

Some of Stew’s best lines:

The advantage of being a songwriter in a rock and roll band is that we can contradict ourselves mid-verse.”

“Relax your ego? That’s like saying relax your penis!”

“I don’t believe in authenticity or truth. I make shit up and string words together cause they sound good…it’s not philosophy, not a teaching piece.”

“Meaning is boring.”

WSJ Bill T

Bill T. Jones, with moderator Wendy Bounds.

And Bill had some great ones, too:

“This life is a real motherfucker. And if you aren’t careful, they will fuck you up. And we can go into who they are later!”

“Art is a fight.”

And then there was Bill’s revelation that he may have lost some of his fire to do more work and his admission that, at age 57, he’s experiencing “spiritual malaise” and needs to rethink how he creates art.

Some in the audience thought the talk got a bit “squirmy” when Bill talked about the link between creative partnerships and sex, and admitted that although ” I’m a hom…uh, gay man.” he had thought about sleeping with Wong, his collaborator. (For her part, she said, “I would have said no and forgotten about it.”)

In the end, moderator Wendy Bounds showed a clip from the last scene of Passing Strange, in which Youth (Stew’s theatrical alter ego) ponders the death of his mother:

“That’s it? You know, you’re right, you cannot bring her back. But why lose faith in the only thing that can? I will see her again… Because life is a mistake… that only art can correct.”

That clip gave Bill his chance to ask Stew one of the most provocative questions of the evening:

“Do you believe that?” Bill asked.

Stew started to reply. Words came, but he never really answered the question — perhaps because there is no answer. But instead of being frustrating, it seemed appropriate. After all, “the real is not real, my friend. The real is a construct. The real is a creation. The real is artificial. … Some people feel like art is more real than life.”

The unknown Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan or homeless man?

Bob Dylan or homeless man?

Can you believe that Bob Dylan was mistaken for a homeless man on the streets of Long Branch, N.J.?

The crazy story, in which a cop swept the eccentric singer-songerwriter off the street into a patrol car, is reported by ABCNews.com’s Chris Francescani:

Dylan, 68, one of the most celebrated, eccentric artists in American history, was in the area on July 23 as part of a national concert tour — a fact lost on 24-year-old Long Branch police officer Kristie Buble.

To hear the young New Jersey police officer describe it, the scene was like something out of one of Dylan’s epic song-poems: It was pouring rain, Dylan was soaked and wandering alone, far from the traveling home of his entourage of tour buses.

When Dylan wandered into the yard of a home that had a “For Sale” sign on it, the home’s occupants became spooked by his appearance and called police with a report of an “eccentric-looking old man” in their yard, Long Branch Police said. One of the occupants even went so far as to follow Dylan as he continued on down the street.

To read the whole, wacky story, click here.

Stew and Heidi, 25 percent off!

Sometimes it pays to wait!

If you haven’t booked tickets yet for the Summer Scoops Live With the Wall Street Journal talk by Passing Strange co-creators Stew and Heidi Rodewald, or maybe, like Stew, you just couldn’t believe anybody would pay $25 to hear them gab, you stand to come out ahead.

There’s a new offer out today giving a 25-percent discount to the pARTners talk at Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater at 7 pm on Tuesday, Aug. 18.

Enjoy the fruits of procrastination while you can. Here are the details:

Stew Opens Up with The Wall Street Journal at Lincoln Center!-

Take 25% off a rousing discussion titled pARTners, which explores the pleasures and pitfalls of artistic partnerships on August 18 at 7:00 P. M. in the Walter Reade Theater. Use promotion code WSJ10 to receive this special discount when purchasing online or calling 212.721.6500.

For tickets, click here.

The evening’s conversation features Stew and Heidi Rodewald, the co-creators of the Tony-winning Broadway rock musical Passing Strange and longtime collaborators in the band The Negro Problem; Artistic Director Bill T. Jones, Associate Artistic Director Janet Wong, and Creative Director Bjorn Amelan of the legendary Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company. Reporter Wendy Bounds of The Wall Street Journal leads the discussion.

Program, artists, dates, and prices subject to change. This offer is subject to availability and may be revoked at any time. May not be combined with any other offers or discounts. Not applicable to previously purchased tickets. All sales are final—no refunds or exchanges. Limit four tickets per customer.

Stew & Heidi present The Broadway Problem at Lincoln Center Out of Doors, August 19. For details, click here.

Can American Idiot become the next Passing Strange?

AmericanIdiot

Does lightning strike twice in the theater world?

Berkeley Repertory Theater (Berkeley Rep) is  about to find out. The California nonprofit theater group, which played a significant role in the development of the cult musical hit Passing Strange (forever preserved as a Spike Lee Joint coming to big screens and PBS soon) is now in rehearsal for a musical version of American Idiot, based on the multiplatinum Green Day album. Tickets for performances, which start Sept. 4, are already on sale on Berkeley Rep’s web site.

It seems like a smart, but cynical, move.

Passing Strange, written by Stew and Heidi Rodewald, who toiled separately and together on the Los Angeles rock scene for years (Wednesday Week, The Negro Problem, Stew),wrote a musical based loosely on Stew’s autobiography. They produced a fresh and compelling story that scored many loyal adherents (I’m one of them) and won massive praise from critics. But that loyal core, the show’s built-in audience, wasn’t enough to fill the seats of Broadway’s Belasco Theater eight times every week for too long.

At heart, Passing Strange is a very personal and unconventional show. And, frankly, I don’t think anyone ever figured out how to market it to the tourist-heavy Broadway audience. (For Stew and Heidi’s sake, that may have been a good thing, as they have been incredibly productive in the year since Passing Strange closed. Monica Drake of The New York Times covered this territory here.)

green-day-american-idiot American Idiot, on the other hand, has a huge built-in audience. The album has sold more than 14 million copies since its release nearly four years ago. As much as I love Stew and Heidi’s music, I know that number dwarfs the total number of albums that pair have sold in their careers.

Sales figures don’t necessarily correlate to quality. And both sets of performers have their fans. But it’s clear that American Idiot — like the long-running Mama Mia, a jukebox Abba musical — has a huge advantage over something like Passing Strange simply on brand recognition alone.

But producers of the Green Day musical are taking no chances. They’ve stacked the deck with heavy-hitters, including plenty of Broadway talent:

The show was adapted from the rock opera concept album by Green Day vocalist-guitarist Billie Joe Armstrong and Michael Mayer, the Tony-winning director of Spring Awakening, who’s also directing American Idiot.

Rebecca sharpened

Rebecca Naomi Jones in Passing Strange on Broadway

The musical has no book, per se, but its story is told in song. Tom Kitt, from Broadway’s Next to Normal, handled arranging duties, while Steven Hoggett, of Black Watch, has worked out the dancing.

And the cast of 19 is led by John Gallagher Jr. as Johnnie. Gallagher was Moritz in Spring Awakening. Producers even someone from Passing Strange, Rebecca Naomi Jones, to play Whatshername.

It seems doubtful that American Idiot can achieve the white-hot, deeply personal impact that Passing Strange had. But it sounds a heckuva lot easier to market. And that could well be the key to a long and successful run.

Will You Miss Me When I’m Gone?

More than a few people have wondered where the name of this blog comes from.

Am I depressed, or just dark?

None of the above. I just love music.

If you’ve read the About page, you already know that the name of this blog is lifted directly from a Carter Family song.

Because Will You Miss Me When I’m Gone? is getting a lot of hits because of my coverage of Asphalt Orchestra and Lincoln Center Out of Doors, I figured now was a good time to give you a taste of the timeless tune. So much of American popular music stems from the Carter Family that it seemed appropriate to use one of their songs as a sort of theme for this blog about music, theater, art — all forms of the arts — and life in general.

So here’s an Emmylou Harris version of the Carter Family classic. Enjoy:

Liquid Liquid makes time melt away

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Liquid Liquid drummer Scott Hartley and vocalist Salvatore Principato have energy to spare at Lincoln Center Out of Doors. (Photos copyright 2009, Christine Maurus)

If you think you don’t know the band Liquid Liquid, you’re probably wrong. If you know Grandmaster Melle Mel‘s White Lines (Don’t Don’t Do It), you know Liquid Liquid. The hip-hop track’s bass line was lifted straight out of the track Cavern, by the Eighties NYC-based post-punk band.

Liquid Liquid lasted bare three years — from 1980 to 1983 — but the band’s high energy and rat-a-tat percussion sound made a lasting impression on music lovers and the music. The quartet — drummer Scott Hartley, bassist Richard McGuire, vocalist Salvatore Principato and percussionist/marimba player Dennis Young — made a triumphant return to New York City last night at Lincoln Center Out of Doors, taking the stage after the conclusion of Rhys Chatham‘s A Crimson Grail for 200 Electric Guitars (Outdoor Version).

Scott and Salvatore.

Scott and Salvatore.

The membes of Liquid Liquid haven’t been playing together regularly for more than 25 years. They reunited at NYC’s Knitting Factory in 2003 and got together again last October at the Barbican Centre in London. But they sounded amazingly tight and the crowd responded enthusiastically. ‘

All four band members seemed energized and totally engaged — thrilled to be performing before an appreciative hometown crowd. The sound was crisp and the beats were just as hypnotic as the day they were created. People in the audience who saw Liquid Liquid in the Eighties were amazed that the players had barely aged and hadn’t lost a bit of their drive.

Click through for more fantastic photos! Continue reading

Susan Marshall saves the day!

Three little girls sitting on Josie Robertson Plaza, mesmerized by Asphalt Orchestra.

Three little girls sitting on Josie Robertson Plaza, mesmerized by Asphalt Orchestra.

Asphalt Orchestra, the avant-garde marching band created by Bang on a Can, has been incredibly popular so far. Audiences seem to grow as the group moves around the Lincoln Center campus.

But children have been particularly entranced by the band’s performances. But that pied piper quality could have come to grief for three little girls on Wednesday night when a saxophone came thisclose to marching right into the girls.

It could have been a disaster if not for the quick action by Susan Marshall, who choreographed Asphalt’s movements and was there to take a look at how it was working.

Once she noticed the three identically dressed girls were so mesmerized by the band that they didn’t realize they were about to be run over on Josie Robertson Plaza, Susan sprang into action, saving the girls from the boots of saxophonist Peter Hess.

All’s well that ends well, of course.

Here’s the action sequence:

LCOOD Trample 2

Choreographer Susan Marshall comes out of nowhere.

LCOOD Trample 3LCOOD Trample 4LCOOD Trample 5LCOOD Trample 6

LCOOD Trample 7

Saxophonist Peter Hooks on a collision course with the girls.

Asphalt Orchestra’s amazing debut — and more to come!

It came from underground: Asphalt Orchestra made its debut appearance yesterday by emerging from the subway station in front of Alice Tully Hall.

It came from underground: Asphalt Orchestra made its debut appearance yesterday by emerging from the subway station in front of Alice Tully Hall.

Asphalt Orchestra made its world debut at Lincoln Center last night to the thrill of a large crowd gathered in front of Alice Tully Hall. It was quite a sight to see people gathered at the amphitheater at the northeast corner of Broadway and West 65th Street, wondering exactly where the avant-garde marching band would make its entrance.

It was quite a pleasant shock to realize that Asphalt would be emerging from the depths of the NYC subway system, marching up the stairs of the 66th Street station on the No. 1 line.

The band kicked off the performance with the world premiere of “Carlton,” a snappy number Stew and Heidi Rodewald of Passing Strange fame. The title, Heidi said at last night’s show, is the name of a cab driver in Jamaica. Here’s a video excerpt of their piece:

The Asphalt fun continues every night at 7 o’clock through Sunday, starting at a different location on the Lincoln Center campus. See the schedule and more photos after the jump.

And oh, yeah, the Dave Brubeck Quartet (with special guest Simon Shaheen) and Amir ElSaffar‘s Two Rivers Large Ensemble really kicked out the jams later last night. But more about that later!

Continue reading

Asphalt Orchestra today: On the radio at 2, in person at Lincoln Center at 7

Ken Thomson plays saxophone in Asphalt Orchestra.

Ken Thomson, who's making his debut tonight with Asphalt Orchestra.

Asphalt Orchestra, the avant-garde marching band organized by Bang on a Can, makes its debut performance at Lincoln Center Out of Doors tonight at 7 o’clock. But if you can’t wait to hear this amazing new band, you can get an advance taste by tuning in to John Schaefer’s Soundcheck show on WNYC-FM (93.9 on the air, or on the web here).

Ken Thomson, a longtime Bang on a Can collaborator and one of Asphalt’s saxophone players, has been rehearsing 8-10 hours a day for tonight’s premiere. Ken, who’s also a driving force behind the band Gutbucket, gave Will You Miss Me When I’m Gone? his take on the Asphalt project:

“I’m enjoying this process so much with the band.  Great musicians and cool people; working with [choreographer] Susan Marshall is amazing… we’re  really psyched to give this a whirl tonight.  I really feel like every night will be an adventure.  Oh, and for a preview, check us  out on Soundcheck!”asphalt_orchestra_logo-2

Asphalt Orchestra performs from 7-7:30 p.m. nightly through Sunday at various locations around the Lincoln Center campus. Tonight’s show is at Broadway Plaza, the new amphitheater in front of Alice Tully Hall at Broadway and West 65th Street. For locations of all Asphalt Orchestra’s Lincoln Center performances, click here.

Be seeing you!