Surf Santa Monica, May 4, 2001: Difference between revisions

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Surf Santa Monica, 2001-05-04
{{Bibliography header}}
- Tomm Carroll
{{:Bibliography index}}
{{:Surf Santa Monica index}}
{{:US online publications index}}
{{Bibliography article header}}
<center><h3> UCLA's Harry Smith Project a star-studded <br> distillation of American Folk Music </h3></center>
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<center> Tomm Carroll </center>
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{{Bibliography text}}
Wow. What a couple of fascinating, insightful, historical and looooong evenings at UCLA's Royce Hall this past Wednesday and Thursday. Music's master mix-and-match-maker Hal Willner's two-night tribute to folk song archivist Harry Smith was the concert event of the season, if not the year. The setlists and artists for each night were similar, but not identical. The performances may have been rambling and a bit ragged, but they were always right on.


A mega-hootenanny featuring nearly 40 diverse musicians performing (mostly) the largely obscure pre-Depression hymns, blues and murder ballads from Smith's collection (originally compiled as ''The Anthology of American Folk Music'' for Folkways in 1952 and released as a CD box set in 1997), the two evenings of The Harry Smith Project were exhaustive — and not a little bit exhausting. But even as the running time slipped past five hours, many die-hard fans found it difficult to leave. How could you? You didn't know what you might miss!


UCLA's Harry Smith Project a Star-Studded Distillation of American Folk Music
Akin to a live version of Willner's multi-artist tribute albums to Kurt Weill, Thelonious Monk, Disney songs, etc., the band members and lead singers shifted from song to song to provide an ever-changing musical mosaic, most of it marvelous with only a few missteps.
 
Among the many varied highlights: Beck getting back to his roots on Robert Johnson's "Last Fair Deal Gone Down," Todd Rundgren and Eric Mingus leading a gospel sing-along of the Fugs' "River of Shit," Marianne Faithfull scraping her sandpaper voice against "Spike Driver Blues" re-born country folkie David Johansen(!) voicing a gritty, baritoned ode to "Old Dog Blue," Steve Earle singing a knowing "Prison Cell Blues," and Van Dyke Parks, with a string quartet led by legendary fiddler Richard Greene, concocting a pop operetta out of "Butcher's Boy."
 
Also, Kate and Anna McGarrigle were joined by Elvis Costello (who contributed a lyrical coda) on the lovely murder ballad "Ommie Wise," clarinetist Don Byron lead the band through an avant-jazz take on "This Song of Love," portly Pere Ubu frontman David Thomas performed a wacky, absurdist "Fishin' Blues," Eliza Carthy warbled and fiddled "99 Year Blues" and assisted Richard Thompson on "The Coo Coo Bird," Philip Glass provided live piano accompaniment to Smith's experimental film shorts, and Michael McKean, Christopher Guest and Harry Shearer tapped into some comic relief as the Folksmen with their Kingston trio-ish take on the "Flashback" theme.
 
Band members included such luminaries as guitarist Bill Frisell, bassist Larry Taylor, percussionist D.J. Bonebrake, keyboardist Garth Hudson (who performed the post-1 a.m. exit music on Royce's pipe organ both nights), multi-instrumentalist Ralph Carney and guitarist Smokey Hormel, who also did a gargantuan job as music director.
 
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{{Tags}}[[Royce Hall]] {{-}} [[UCLA]] {{-}} [[Los Angeles]] {{-}} [[Kate McGarrigle|Kate]] & [[Anna McGarrigle]] {{-}} [[Ommie Wise Part 2 (What Lewis Did Last...)]] {{-}} [[Michael McKean]] {{-}} [[Christopher Guest]] {{-}} [[Harry Shearer]] {{-}} [[The Folksmen]] {{-}} [[Hal Willner]] {{-}} [[Kurt Weill]] {{-}} [[Thelonious Monk]] {{-}} [[Robert Johnson]] {{-}} [[Todd Rundgren]] {{-}} [[Don Byron]] {{-}} [[Eliza Carthy]] {{-}} [[Richard Thompson]] {{-}} [[Bill Frisell]] {{-}} [[X (band)|D.J. Bonebrake]] {{-}} [[Garth Hudson]]
 
{{cx}}


by Tomm Carroll
{{Bibliography notes header}}


Wow. What a couple of fascinating, insightful, historical and looooong evenings at UCLA's Royce Hall this past Wednesday and Thursday. Music's master mix-and-match-maker Hal Willner's two-night tribute to folk song archivist Harry Smith was the concert event of the season, if not the year. The set lists and artists for each night were similar, but not identical. The performances may have been rambling and a bit ragged, but they were always right on.
{{Bibliography notes}}
'''Surf Santa Monica, May 4, 2001
----
[[Tomm Carroll]] reviews the Harry Smith Project, including Elvis Costello with [[Kate McGarrigle|Kate]] & [[Anna McGarrigle]], Wednesday, [[Concert 2001-04-25 Los Angeles|April 25, 2001]], Royce Hall, UCLA, Los Angeles.


A mega-hootenanny featuring nearly 40 diverse musicians performing (mostly) the largely obscure pre-Depression hymns, blues and murder ballads from Smith's collection (originally compiled as The Anthology of American Folk Music for Folkways in 1952 and released as a CD box set in 1997), the two evenings of The Harry Smith Project were exhaustive -- and not a little bit exhausting. But even as the running time slipped past five hours, many die-hard fans found it difficult to leave. How could you? You didn't know what you might miss!
{{Bibliography no images}}


Akin to a live version of Willner's multi-artist tribute albums to Kurt Weill, Thelonious Monk, Disney songs, etc., the band members and lead singers shifted from song to song to provide an ever-changing musical mosaic, most of it marvelous with only a few missteps.
{{Bibliography notes footer}}


Among the many varied highlights: Beck getting back to his roots on Robert Johnson's "Last Fair Deal Gone Down," Todd Rundgren and Eric Mingus leading a gospel sing-along of the Fugs' "River of Shit," Marianne Faithfull scraping her sandpaper voice against "Spike Driver Blues" re-born country folkie David Johansen(!) voicing a gritty, baritoned ode to "Old Dog Blue," Steve Earle singing a knowing "Prison Cell Blues," and Van Dyke Parks, with a string quartet led by legendary fiddler Richard Greene, concocting a pop operetta out of "Butcher's Boy."
{{Bibliography footer}}


Also, Kate and Anna McGarrigle were joined by Elvis Costello (who contributed a lyrical coda) on the lovely murder ballad "Ommie Wise," clarinetist Don Byron lead the band through an avant-jazz take on "This Song of Love." portly Pere Ubu frontman David Thomas performed a wacky, absurdist "Fishin' Blues," Eliza Carthy warbled and fiddled "99 Year Blues" and assisted Richard Thompson on "The Coo Coo Bird," Philip Glass provided live piano accompaniment to Smith's experimental film shorts, and Michael McKean, Christopher Guest and Harry Shearer tapped into some comic relief as the Folksmen with their Kingston trio-ish take on the "Flashback" theme.
==External links==
*[https://www.surfsantamonica.com/ SurfSantaMonica.com]


Band members included such luminaries as guitarist Bill Frisell, bassist Larry Taylor, percussionist D.J. Bonebrake, keyboardist Garth Hudson (who performed the post-1 a.m. exit music on Royce's pipe organ both nights), multi-instrumentalist Ralph Carney and guitarist Smokey Hormel, who also did a gargantuan job as music director.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Surf Santa Monica 2001-05-04}}
[[Category:Bibliography]]
[[Category:Bibliography 2001]]
[[Category:Surf Santa Monica| Surf Santa Monica 2001-05-04]]
[[Category:Online articles]]
[[Category:2001 concert reviews]]

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Surf Santa Monica

US online publications

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UCLA's Harry Smith Project a star-studded
distillation of American Folk Music


Tomm Carroll

Wow. What a couple of fascinating, insightful, historical and looooong evenings at UCLA's Royce Hall this past Wednesday and Thursday. Music's master mix-and-match-maker Hal Willner's two-night tribute to folk song archivist Harry Smith was the concert event of the season, if not the year. The setlists and artists for each night were similar, but not identical. The performances may have been rambling and a bit ragged, but they were always right on.

A mega-hootenanny featuring nearly 40 diverse musicians performing (mostly) the largely obscure pre-Depression hymns, blues and murder ballads from Smith's collection (originally compiled as The Anthology of American Folk Music for Folkways in 1952 and released as a CD box set in 1997), the two evenings of The Harry Smith Project were exhaustive — and not a little bit exhausting. But even as the running time slipped past five hours, many die-hard fans found it difficult to leave. How could you? You didn't know what you might miss!

Akin to a live version of Willner's multi-artist tribute albums to Kurt Weill, Thelonious Monk, Disney songs, etc., the band members and lead singers shifted from song to song to provide an ever-changing musical mosaic, most of it marvelous with only a few missteps.

Among the many varied highlights: Beck getting back to his roots on Robert Johnson's "Last Fair Deal Gone Down," Todd Rundgren and Eric Mingus leading a gospel sing-along of the Fugs' "River of Shit," Marianne Faithfull scraping her sandpaper voice against "Spike Driver Blues" re-born country folkie David Johansen(!) voicing a gritty, baritoned ode to "Old Dog Blue," Steve Earle singing a knowing "Prison Cell Blues," and Van Dyke Parks, with a string quartet led by legendary fiddler Richard Greene, concocting a pop operetta out of "Butcher's Boy."

Also, Kate and Anna McGarrigle were joined by Elvis Costello (who contributed a lyrical coda) on the lovely murder ballad "Ommie Wise," clarinetist Don Byron lead the band through an avant-jazz take on "This Song of Love," portly Pere Ubu frontman David Thomas performed a wacky, absurdist "Fishin' Blues," Eliza Carthy warbled and fiddled "99 Year Blues" and assisted Richard Thompson on "The Coo Coo Bird," Philip Glass provided live piano accompaniment to Smith's experimental film shorts, and Michael McKean, Christopher Guest and Harry Shearer tapped into some comic relief as the Folksmen with their Kingston trio-ish take on the "Flashback" theme.

Band members included such luminaries as guitarist Bill Frisell, bassist Larry Taylor, percussionist D.J. Bonebrake, keyboardist Garth Hudson (who performed the post-1 a.m. exit music on Royce's pipe organ both nights), multi-instrumentalist Ralph Carney and guitarist Smokey Hormel, who also did a gargantuan job as music director.


Tags: Royce HallUCLALos AngelesKate & Anna McGarrigleOmmie Wise Part 2 (What Lewis Did Last...)Michael McKeanChristopher GuestHarry ShearerThe FolksmenHal WillnerKurt WeillThelonious MonkRobert JohnsonTodd RundgrenDon ByronEliza CarthyRichard ThompsonBill FrisellD.J. BonebrakeGarth Hudson

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Surf Santa Monica, May 4, 2001


Tomm Carroll reviews the Harry Smith Project, including Elvis Costello with Kate & Anna McGarrigle, Wednesday, April 25, 2001, Royce Hall, UCLA, Los Angeles.


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