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David Gilmour Echoes Pink Floyd
at Oaklands Paramount Sunday.
17.04.2006:
The
Mercury News, Brad Kava, Concertreview: More than anything he's done since parting ways with Roger Waters
more than two decades ago, David Gilmour's spectacular Sunday night
show at Oakland's Paramount Theatre captured the magic and majesty
that was Pink Floyd.
Songsliste:
01. Speak To Me
02.
Breathe
03. Time
04. Breathe Reprise
05. Castellorizon
06. On An Island
07. Red Sky at Night
08. The Blue
09. Then I Close My Eyes
10. This Heaven
11. Smile
12. Take a Breath
13. A Pocketful of Stones
14.
Where We Start
15.
Shine On You Crazy Diamond
16. Wots Uh The Deal
17. Dominoes
18. Coming Back To Life
19. High Hopes
20. Echoes
21. Wish You Were Here
22. Comfortably Numb
His 2.5 hour set, which almost evenly mixed new and old material,
was more like the best years of Pink Floyd than the last two tours
he, Nick Mason and Richard Wright did under the quartet's name.
That was largely because this time out, on a four-city U.S. tour of
intimate theaters, GIlmour felt free to challenge his audience with
new music and some adventurous twists on the old tunes that made
Floyd one of the top-selling bands of all time.
It also helped that the sound was perfect and the lights artistic
and sublime. Gilmour and Waters were always at the forefront of
multimedia performance, pulling the audience into the show with
lasers, roller coaster-like videos and, yes, famously flying pigs.
In one of rock's ugliest and most bitter divorces, Gilmour
apparently got the lasers, and Waters, the videos and Gerald Scarfe
animations. Gilmour got keyboardist Wright, who sang Waters' parts
on "Breathe,'' "Time" and "Comfortably Numb,"
and Waters got drummer Mason, who is touring Europe with him now,
and should be at Shoreline Amphitheatre in October.
(No telling who got the pig.)
With stellar guitar work, a tight seven-piece band that included
former Roxy Music guitarist Phil Manzanera, and his most focused new
songs in years, Gilmour quickly erased fears that half of Floyd may
not be able to measure up to the mark they set last summer when the
whole band reunited for an emotional show-closing set at LIVE 8.
The show started with the beating heart, cash registers and
helicopters that has been a band signature, growing louder over
giant speakers, and launching into eclipsed versions of "Breathe''
and "Time'' from the group's 1973 epic, "Dark Side of the
Moon," which set a record by lasting on the Billboard charts
for 15 years.
(On previous tour stops, the first set was all new and the second
one featured classic hits.)
Then, Gilmour begged the audience's patience, while he did almost an
hour of his new album, "On an Island,'' a work helped
significantly by Gilmour's lyrical partner, his wife, Polly Samson.
The new songs, focused and concise, ring true, while the last two
albums, 1987's "Momentary Lapse of Reason'' and 1994's "The
Division Bell,'' at times sounded like pastiche Floyd, full of sound
and fury, but not enough substance.
Gilmour's voice ranged from very good, to only passable on some
songs (and both voices were fairly bad in a couple of duets with
Wright) -- but his guitar work was revelatory. He moved over the
fretboard, like few others, squeezing out clear, spine-tingling high
notes and thunderous low ones in the same solo. His guitar didn't
only gently weep; it told stories in a language that didn't need
words, like some evolutionary step toward telepathy.
He is to rock what B.B. King is to blues, a clear, tasteful, melodic
and confident player, who is not afraid to push the outer limits. Dressed in black, his long locks long gone, the 60-year-old moved
from electric and acoustic guitar to pedal steel, dobro, and new
addition to his arsenal, saxophone. Clearly, this is a musician who
likes to be challenged, and it was hard not to wonder whether, if he
were alive today, Jimi Hendrix, might not have also started blowing
a horn.
Later in the show, when Gilmour launched a set that included "Shine
on you Crazy Diamond'' and "Wish You Were Here,'' Dick Parry
took on the sax duties, his stylings recognizable from old Floyd
classics. The old hits part of the show included some obscurities,
1972's "Wot's ...Uh, the Deal'' from the "Obscured by
Clouds'' soundtrack, and "Dominoes,'' a Syd Barrett song from
1970.
Fans, including the guy who wore a jacket strung with light bulbs,
off the "Delicate Sound of Thunder'' album cover, got more than
they bargained for, with old hits, new hits and forgotten oldies
that sounded new again.
It was surprising to hear two songs from the last Floyd studio album,
"Division Bell,'' but "Wearing tue Inside Out'' and "Coming
Back to Life,'' now old enough to be considered classic, have aged
well, and sounded better than they did in 1994. But the real highlights were a stunning rendition of 1971's 20-plus
minute "Echoes,'' in which Barrett and Wright traded lines on
organ and guitar, bringing the band from a delicate whisper to
hurricane strength several times. Gilmour treated this song like a
fine wine, letting it air out, and keeping it true to its
psychedelic roots, a wonderful mix of darkness and light.
And 1979's "Comfortably Numb,'' on which Gilmour, on a black
stage, silhouetted in front of a white spotlight, reeled off a solo
that made colors spin around the room. Then, one of the few rock
artists who understands the importance of larger than life visuals,
he let lasers paint the room too, using literal smoke and mirrors to
create piercing three dimensional triangles and pulsing waves.
Floyd fans can't help but feel like children of divorce, getting
visits from both parents this year, both bearing special gifts.
Gilmour proved to be a classic rock artist who still has a lot to
say, and the discipline to make his older material sound new again.
He set the bar high, in a room with perfect acoustics, for Waters. The bass player, whose last local show six years ago presented very
good renditions of old Floyd songs, will perform the entire "Dark
Side of the Moon,'' this time out.
For the first time since the breakup, Waters wasn't missed at
Gilmour's show. Now, the big question will be whether Waters can do
the same for the man who gave his songs their sweet voice and
lilting guitar. |
Links:
DVD
Fotos
News
On An Island
Statistik:
Gilmour beginnt von nun an mit den Dark Side-Songs
seine Konzerte.
Presse:
The Mercury News
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