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Saturday, February 16, 2019

JOE JACKSON- The Town Hall

Written by Backstage Bruce
The latest album 'FOOL'
    Saturday night, sold-out show, The Town Hall NYC and Joe Jackson. What more could you ask for? He/they looked and sounded TERRIFIC! He, being the legendary virtuoso Joe Jackson, on organ and vocals, and they being the the wonderful, talented musicians that accompany him; on bass (since the very beginning) Mr. Graham Maby -who had a great little solo during 'Another World'- on guitar, Mr. Teddy Kumpel, and on drums, Mr. Doug Yowell.

    Aside from Graham, Joe has been working/ performing with this current line-up of artists for the last three years. They are also the same ones he recorded this latest album with, his 20th, entitled 'Fool' which was released on January 18th, 2019 exactly 40 years after the release of his first album 'Look Sharp'. Appropriately the name of this current tour is 'Four Decade Tour'. 

The phrase "Not a bad seat in the house" originated here.
    The Town Hall opened in January 1921. Today it is a national landmark. The saying "Not a bad seat in the house" originated there and has become the long-standing mantra of The Town Hall. The place was originally built for political education where people of every rank and station could educate themselves on important issues of the day. The architects purposely built it without any box seats or any specialized seating whatsoever thus giving all 1,500 attendees an equal, unobstructed view of the stage, hence the phrase. The outstanding acoustic properties provide for a remarkable intimacy of the auditorium.
The gangs all here. 

    They take the stage, one at a time. The crowd starts to go wild. First song is a new one, 'Alchemy', nice way to start out. We want to hear some of the new stuff to see what he has been working on. They played roughly half of it, a snippet if you will, all instrumental then launched into the second number of the evening 'One More Time'. And they're up. Everyone starts dancing and singing along.  

    Next on the setlist was 'Is She Really Going Out With Him?' Energy level of the audience was electrifying. When Joe would sing "Look over there" all 1,500 people would shout out in unison "where?" That was cool. 'Another World' with a fantastic bass solo followed. A very uplifting tune about being down, surrounded by pessimistic people and finally being able to break free from all the negativity and stepping into another world.


    Right after that a few audience members arrived late and sat right up front and Joe called them out! He said "I think a lot of people in the audience don't realize that with the spotlights on we can not see everyone in the audience very well. But the stage lights happen to illuminate everyone in the first couple of rows up front and you really notice when they come in 
F@&KIN' late!" Everyone laughed and cheered. He continued "It's a distraction. So if you're going to come in late, have a seat in the back somewhere." And the crowd went wild. No artist ever calls out this rude behavior. 
    He went on to say that it was a celebration. It has been forty years since his first album came out and tonight they were going to "draw from one album from each decade". They proceeded into two tracks from the new album: 'Big Black Cloud' and 'Fabulously Absolute' which is the first single off the new album, both were fantastic. 'Fabulously Absolute' is the tune they performed on 'Late Night with Jimmy Fallon' just three weeks prior when the album was first released.

    Next he gave a shout out to the great composer Harold Arlen. It would have been Mr. Arlen's 114th birthday. An audience member yelled out 'Over the Rainbow'. Joe responded "Yes that is one of his, I advise you all to google him." The venue has a warm, chummy feel to it and Mr. Jackson would talk to the audience a bit, not long, drawn out stories but more like quips and anecdotes, he was very engaging. There were more laughs than any other concert I've ever seen, like he was amongst friends, which he was. The people were enthralled and wanted to be on this journey with him.

    'Breaking Us In Two' was up next, another number the audience was anxiously waiting to hear and the band did not disappoint. There was a cover of both The Beatles' 'Rain' and Steely Dan's 'King of the World' thrown into the mix to the delight of the folks. 'Sunday Papers' was simply incredible as were a handful of other great tunes, including my favorite off the new album 'Friend Better'.
Joe and Graham together forever.
    They exit the stage and after much applause return for the encore. He's holding an ANTIQUE drum machine. He tells us that it still works and it was the original drum machine used to record the next number. He says "Tonight we are going to recreate this next song the exact way it was recorded. It's something that we have never done live before and the reason for that is because I played everything on that track, except for the snare." Teddy put down the guitar and played the keyboard (so now there is Teddy on keys and Joe on organ) and Graham played the most important instrument on the song: the glockenspiel.

    They launched into his biggest hit, 1982's 'Steppin' Out' and the audience loved it! 'Got The Time' followed, where Doug got a nice little drum solo in. They all joined in the percussion jam with Doug, Joe on the maracas, Graham on the cowbell and Teddy on the claves. The finale was a reprise of 'Alchemy', the full version. The entire concert broke the two-hour mark and consisted of twenty-three songs total. He/ they played every single hit plus. They did not leave out one, the performance was very entertaining and satisfying. One might even say that the entire experience was quite 'Fabulously Absolute'. 

    I would strongly recommend going to see him/ them when he/ they are in your area. Check the website here for ticket info. And whatever you do, if you are lucky enough to score tickets right up front, show respect. Plan accordingly, make sure you are on time or risk being called out!

2 comments:

  1. I REMEMBER HANGING OUT at BASS PLAYER BRYAN MCCALLUMS place in VANCOUVER ABOUT 7 YEARS AGO AND HE PUT Joe Jackson ON IN vINYL HE PUT yes a record on and we hung out Bryan to me is still one of the best Canadian Bass players he used to play with Carol Pope and SNFU and won acclaim for playing in KAREN FOSTER, Bishop Green, and also THE WASTED STRAY a country band for Cats Charities

    I miss his friendship and I know he loved JOE JACKSON



    AURA THE GOD PAINTER CANADA TORONTO PARKDALE

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    1. That's a great story, thank you for sharing that.

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