Topic: Munich, February 25 - a review by Bluemac
Monday 23 February
I’m off to see Joe on Wednesday and it will be my first chance to see him play with essentially the same band format that produced the awesome RAH1 and TDF Shepherd’s Bush concerts, so I’m interested to see how this new set compares.
I was listening to some old recordings of Joe on The Pickup recently and he made a comment that many people still think that RAH1 was his finest work - and he may be right (that a lot of people think that, I mean). When people on the forum recommend albums for new people to listen to, they invariably pick RAH1 or LFNIP rather than any of the later studio albums, for example.
So what made the Joe of RAH1 and LFNIP so special? I think there are a couple of things: both sets included top quality songs of love, loss, death and hope from Joe himself and some of the finest songwriters/performers of recent decades. These songs not only struck an emotional chord with many listeners but also displayed a special ingredient John Mayer called ‘singability’. In a recent interview on writing lead and solo guitar parts for songs, Mayer said that fans really love lead and solo guitar parts that have a hook/melody/tune that they can sing in their heads when they are not actually listening to the music.
And I think this is key to the success of RAH1 and LFNIP - at that time Joe’s guitar work had singability in spades – from the obvious instrumentals Django and India to the lead intros to Asking Around for You and Last Kiss, to the solos in So Many Roads and Mountain Time, etc. – I can sing them all in my head now as I write. Joe’s guitar playing was, big, glorious AND melodic, charged with emotion and capable of making the hairs stand up on the back of your head. His solo on the Beacon Theatre version of I’ll Take Care of You with Beth Hart is another good example of the kind of glorious, singable solo that makes you want to reach for your air guitar…
So, I am interested to see what the concert is like on Wednesday – will it have the old Joe guitar magic? Will it compare with earlier horn band sets? Time will tell - let us see what happens on Wednesday – watch this space…
Thursday 26 February
So, we have just got back from seeing Joe play in Munich to a full house of around 2500 people. We were row 5, centre and so had a great view and, from our seats at least, great sound. On stage were 8 top notch professional musicians who played for 2 hours or so – rocking, bopping, funking, grooving with some outstanding keyboards from Reese Wynans, whose solos were regularly met with applause and ovations. It was slick and entertaining to be sure....
But – and this is a big but – as a showcase for Joe’s awesome guitar talent the whole thing was, unfortunately, a huge disappointment from start to finish. Things got off to a rough start with Oh Beautiful – while the song undoubtedly has a killer riff, Joe played one of the least inspiring solos I’ve ever heard him play – it was just fast, frantic, noisy and full of tuneless short runs, repetitions and go-nowhere vibrato. To be honest, I was kinda stunned...
And, for me at least, things did not really improve much from there - one generally non-standout song (by Joe’s standards) followed another and each one incorporated yet another fairly tuneless, repetitive, vibrato-ridden solo that really went nowhere, made no real emotional connection and sounded barely different to the one that had gone before it. Some songs like Double Trouble flattered to deceive before the solo eventually ended up with Joe once again down the bottom end of the neck playing repetitive and tuneless notes and vibrato. For me, the only stand-out song in the first dozen or so was a funky version of Look over Yonders Wall. By the time Sloe Gin came around I’d become even more stunned. Where were the glorious solos, the emotion, the atmosphere, the changes of tempo, the very skills that we’ve come to know and love - the very singability of his earlier work??
My feeling is that this set needs some major surgery – perhaps an injection of one or two older, top quality songs that go well with horns (there were plenty on the Shepherd’s Bush set), more variety of tempo and mood and, more importantly, some seriously reworked solos from Joe, with more depth, melody, variety, emotion and changes of tempo.
I don’t say any of this to diss Joe, who is after all one of my favourite artists. In spite of having a chest infection, he put his heart and soul into this set as he always does and I have nothing but respect for him as a person, a musician and a professional. But I just feel that this set didn’t quite work.
People may not like some of the stuff that I say on this forum, but I’m always honest – if I think something is excellent, I will say so, as I did in my review of Basel last year. But, by the same token, if I think something is not working, I will say that too – that is the whole point of writing reviews. I’m sure there will be plenty of you who might be tempted to disagree with my views, but I simply ask that you don’t attack me for expressing an honest opinion...