Thursday, November 14, 2013

Sinead O'Connor at the Tarrytown Music Hall 11/13/13

Sinead O'Connor at the Tarrytown Music Hall 11/13/13

I originally found Sinead O'Connor on YouTube, where I saw a video of her singing "She Moved Through the Fair."  I sent a link to this video to Josh Groban. He later included that song on his album "All That Echoes."  He said in his banter before he performed the song that he found her singing it on YouTube. I have no clue whether he found the song, because I sent him the link, or whether he found it on his own.

Still there was the chance that maybe he found the song through me. Who knows?

In any case, I really love his version of the song. I particularly loved his very passionate rendition of it during the iheart radio concert.

I really knew nothing about the history of Sinead O'Connor. One of my friend is a volunteer usher at The Tarrytown Music Hall. She told me that Sinead tore up a picture of the pope, and after that the radio stations would not play her music any more, so she fell off the edge of the world as far as popular music was concerned in this country.

That's an interesting story. I was surprised to hear that radio stations were that touchy. It seems to me that performers are often doing crazy things. It hardly seems worth taking her off the radio for that, but, maybe, they wouldn't do it now. So much else has happened.

But there is certainly a lesson in that. Other performers would do well to be cautious if they don't want to suddenly become Indie.

Apparently, though, a lot of people remember her. The place was packed, and the audience hugely enthusiastic.

Sinead recently wrote a very interesting letter to Miley Cyrus. Here is a link to that article


So Sinead O'Connor came to the Tarrytown Music Hall, which is near me, and I went, because I already had a ticket, even though I had to get up early for testing, because they've found a mass in my ovaries which is suspected to be cancer. I needed the sleep, because I only had three hours sleep the night before, but I went, and I only fell asleep very briefly.

She still has a very short buzz cut. She performed stocking footed, and wearing jeans and a loose tunic type yellow shirt. She looks like she probably has a very nice body, but she certainly covers it well, which is consistent with her letter to Miley Cyrus, warning the younger singer not to let the industry pimp her. She is noticeably knock kneed.

The news items I have read about Sinead indicate that she is 47, which makes her sort of in the same age category as Susan Boyle, but she's obviously a very different performer.

She mostly performed with a guitar, though not always.  She had a five piece band with her. She did one solo a capella piece, which I found very impressive, as you almost never see a performer do that. She definitely pulled it off, with drama and grace. Also, on one piece, the band became a chorus, so they did a choral a capella number, which I also liked.  She used whispering as part of her songs, sometimes.

Her voice is strong, fairly low, slightly raspy and soulful.  She performs with energy and dances a bit while singing.  Some of her songs include the "f" word.

The style of the music was sometimes folk-like and sometimes rock. For the early part of the concert, I did not need ear plugs, but it got louder as she went on, so I was grateful for them later, though it never became truly deafening. Some of the later parts had extremely loud bass, which made me a bit queasy and gave me narcolepsy, assisted by my lack of sleep.  Still I have a history of getting narcolepsy from certain music, especially classical music, so I'm trying to figure out what types of  music give it to me.

Unfortunately, I did not recognize any of the songs. Notably, she did not perform the song I first discovered her singing. I'm pretty sure it would not sound like the YouTube video I first found her in. She's older and her voice is lower and heavier.

Basically, I thought she gave a great show.

I did find the musical arrangements a bit dull and repetitive. That's one thing I like about Josh Groban, the creativity and variety of the musical arrangements.

If you look at her letter to Miley Cyrus, she says she feels she's been thrown on the trash heap of the music industry. She certainly doesn't deserve that. She's got a lot if spunk left in her and, with some better arrangements, I think she would be quite successful. Certainly her fans at the Tarrytown Music Hall were ecstatic.


Those of you who read this blog know that it's been mostly centered on Josh Groban. At the same time as I was attending this concert, he gave his final concert of the "In the Round" Tour, which features "She Moved Through the Fair."  He recently put out a tweet saying that this might be his last concert ever, which was odd given that he also recently said that he wants to record two albums once his tour is over. Still, especially in view of my health concerns, the season, and Josh's end of tour, I have this twilighty ending feeling about the evening.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

miscommunication on twitter

Now this was a weird sequence of tweets


Josh feels that Jim is a sicko.  Jim thinks Josh almost tweeted a joke about the typhoon in the Philippines.

First, why does Jim think Josh almost tweeted this joke?

If you look at Josh's timeline, you will see these tweets

A)


and:
B)

Now, on Josh's real time line, the tweet about the typhoon does not appear to be right next to the tweets about the mysterious offensive remarks.

However, if you, like me, are using the twitter app for Android phones, you will probably have noted that many tweets just don't appear on that app.  If I really want to see all of  Josh's tweets, I have to look on my desktop computer.

And, if you just turn to Josh's timeline, and fail to click on "all" at the top you won't see reply tweets anyway, causing more tweets to disappear, making these seem closer together.

Therefore, it is entirely possible that if Jim is using an Android phone, like me, and failed to click "all" these tweets would have appeared to be immediately adjacent.  I think they did appear to be adjacent the first time I looked at them, myself.  Therefore Jim might have reasonably concluded that the purportedly unsent tweet was a tasteless joke about the typhoon.

So, Josh, if you're reading this, he might not be such a sicko as you assumed.

Of course, we don't know if there was an unsent tweet at all, because Josh might have made it up just to generate excitement for his readers.   Moreover, if there really was an unsent tweet, it might have been on some entirely different topic.

Now Jim, on the other hand, seems to have not understood why the joke was on him.  If you're reading this, Jim, I think Josh tricked you into following him, as he never had any intention of sending out any such joke.  Still, there are people who would give their right arm to have Josh tweet them so often and even send them a DM, so I hope you won't feel unduly wronged by this odd miscommunication.



Friday, November 8, 2013

Josh Groban appearance on Crazy Ones

Well that was interesting.  I just listened to Josh sing on Crazy Ones.  It totally was not the same voice that I just heard in concert.  I might have thought that it wasn't him, except that I know he has a lot of different voices.

This voice on Crazy Ones did not have vibrato.  It was not as loud as he sang in concert, where he seemed to be on forte or fortissimo most of the time.  It was just a plain, pop or folk style.  It sounded relaxed, clear, and warm.

I wonder what would happen if he sometimes used that voice in concert.  

I'm trying to think about what draws me to Josh's music.  Certainly, his beautiful, multi-textured voice is important, but that's certainly not all it is.  I like the music as well. There's something very different about his music, something about the note and chord sequences he uses, something about the instrumental composition.  It's definitely not all the voice.

Which is not to say that I don't care about the voice.  I particularly hate when it sounds strained and painful.  That just makes me cringe.

On the other hand, I can't say that, if it were a simpler voice, like what I hear on Crazy Ones, I would like the music less.  It's the music as a whole that I like, not just the voice -- and the voice on Crazy Ones was at least not strained.

Josh is a competitive sports fan.  I think he approaches singing like a competitive sport, enjoying showing off his range and his volume.  But there could be benefits to simplicity

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Now, as to his acting, I think he did a good job.   He's always really good with spurned or broken hearted emotions.  I guess he has some experience to draw on in that area -- alas.

It was certainly a nice, meaty role, with a lot of lines.  He's moving up in these sitcoms.

The leather jacket seems odd to me.  I grew up in a time when leather jackets were still considered sort of low life.

Friday, November 1, 2013

Josh Groban & Judith Hill at the Prudential Center 10/30/13

I was very relieved that the sound quality at this concert was much improved over when I heard Josh at the same venue in 2011. At that earlier concert, the high frequency distortion was such that the music was essentially lost. This time it was merely too loud, which could be remedied with ear plugs. I didn't wear them all the time, but a lot of the time.

My favorite song of this concert was Remember When It Rained.  I had seen the YouTube videos of this song, but failed to appreciate how truly brilliant it was until I saw it in person. The arrangement is haunting. The way Judith and Josh move around the circuit of the In The Round stage, while staying on opposite sides was amazing choreography. I know Josh doesn't think he's dancing in this number, but it it's in fact a slow dance that illustrates isolation and lack of communication.  There were the spotlights shining upward from around the edges of the stage, which made it visually beautiful. This piece is really a tour de force, great Art with a capital A.

First my discussion of the pre-show with Judith Hill
======================================:

I became a fan of Judith Hill for three reasons: 1) her appearance in "This Is It," 2) her singing at Michael Jackson's memorial service, 3) her totally amazing song "I'll always be missing you," of which she distributed millions of copies totally free of charge after Michael Jackson’s death.

Since I’m such a fan of “I’ll Always Be Missing You,” I should mention, perhaps, that it’s more of a classical/pop crossover piece than her more recent performances.  Obviously, since I’m here as a Josh Groban fan, I’m going to prefer classical/pop crossover music.  But there was more to it.  Her ability to convey her grief over Michael Jackson’s death by use of her voice in that song was probably the best emotive singing I’ve ever heard.  Also, the lyrics were positively brilliant.  That song is just in a category by itself.  I still like to play it.

I wasn't as wild about her appearances on The Voice.  The earlier appearances showed this talented, beautiful, emotional, vulnerable young woman in relatively informal performances. More recently she's been trying to glam up, which totally doesn't interest me. I mean who could be a Josh Groban fan, if they were into glamour?  He's so anti-glamour.

Her show was good. She sang well. Her backup people did well, also. Since I tend to go for quiet, I appreciated her starting with a medley of just her at the piano. Also I enjoyed the numbers where the backup ensemble did choral harmonies.

Still the sublime genius of her earlier song, "I'll always be missing you," was not in evidence.  I know she doesn't want to get back into the pain she felt about Michael Jackson's death. I understand that; and maybe it takes that kind of pain to bring out genius, so maybe we're just not going to see it again. Perhaps she'll be a better, happier person, without going there, but, as a fan, I'm definitely not as happy.

Also, the super high heels made her walk awkwardly. I thought she looked better in ratty jeans and a homespun cotton craft shirt, and her hair flying wild all over the place.  They they didn't show her up on the screens, the way they did Josh. I wanted to see her face.

Her backup ensemble was all male and all black. Huh?  What's that about, in this day and age?

Apparently she was at the Meet & Greet, but did not come out to the busses afterwards to meet with the great unwashed masses, the way Josh did.  I wasn’t prepared to pay a lot for a Meet & Greet to see Josh, because I’ve met him a few times already.  If I had realized that that was the only way to meet Judith, I might have done it.  Oh, well.

Now to the main feature.
====================

First, the seats we got from the fan pre sale were not good.  They were high up and near the end – pretty far from the stage.Fortunately, we were able to move closer, because there were lots of open seats. We moved twice and ended up with very good seats. Still it was disappointing that the fan seats weren't good.

Now if you've been following this blog, you know I have a mild autism spectrum disorder. This means that I tend to focus on details that might not be important to others, but this is what I noticed.

First, I'm very sensitive to loud noises. This concert was definitely loud, in most places, so I spent a lot of it wearing ear plugs. But, and this is what was very curious, when we moved closer to the stage, the sound wasn't as loud. I figured out afterwards that the speakers were near the ceiling, so the upper seats were getting higher volume than the lower seats, not what I would have expected, but there it was.  Once we moved forward, I was able to spend more time with my ear plugs out.

Another thing that I got into was Josh's appearance on the screens. Josh seems to have developed a habit of dropping his jaw slightly to one side when he sings. His nose tilts slightly to the other side. When enlarged on the screen, these tilts give Josh an oddly distorted appearance, as if his face were bent.  The curious part of this was that the insides of the screens showed the mirror image of the outside of the screens. Where we were sitting, we could see the outside of one screen and the inside of the opposite screen. So on one screen he was bent in one way and on the other he was bent in the opposite way, kind of like a pair of parentheses.  Weird.

There were ominous warning signs at the entry to the concert that strobe effects were going to be used in the lighting.  That sent a little chill down my spine, but, fortunately, I’m not one of those people who goes into epileptic seizures in response to strobing.  Phew!

I did think that the lighting was beautiful in many cases.

Ok, now to the part of the review that is going to reflect that one tweet that Josh sent me “You’re always disappointed in me” (and then there was that other tweet of “why are all your questions so negative?")  OK, yes, I tend to be a griper.  Very true. 

I’ve been to several Josh concerts this year, which you’ll notice if you look at the back issues of this blog.

I really loved the sound at the Allen Room, in Lincoln Center, in February, at least after they turned down the volume. Due to the smaller number of instrumentalists, the sound was more focused; and I loved the slow, insistent beat.  The concert was hypnotic.  I was paralyzed by the music.  Afterwards, I saw myself on video, and saw that my face was stony serious, while other people were smiling.  I suppose that was a downer for Josh looking at me, given that I was front row center, but I was really transported, despite my stony demeanor.

I loved the sound at the Hollywood Bowl on the fourth of July even more.  I still cry when I think about that concert.  The volume level was perfect.  The acoustics were excellent.  The setting was beautiful.   It was the third time the performers had performed that same concert, so the timing and coordination were just perfect.  Josh was in excellent voice, with lots of subtlety of sound.  The whole thing just combined to be the absolute perfect concert experience.

So those were my major previous experiences with Josh this year. (see previous blogs for more)

The ITR concert was more rock-like.  To me, aside from being unpleasantly loud, the music sounded somewhat chaotic.  This could have been due to the amplification.  Still, I wonder whether using a different orchestra and backup choir at every concert is really working.  Obviously, they’re not going to be as good as the Los Angeles Philharmonic, but even the LA Phil seemed to profit from doing the same concert three times.

Also, Josh’s voice was less subtle.  He’s still having problems with some of the higher notes, even though he’s transposed down.  It could have been the amplification, but it also seemed to me that his dynamic range was poor.  There were a few moderate volume notes, but mostly he seemed to sing loud, louder, and loud enough to make the amplification system go non-linear.  When he got really loud, you could hear odd buzzing sounds in the amplification.  Also, in duets, when he gets really loud, you can't hear Judith -- which is really the fault of the audio engineers, I think.

To me, the real joy of Josh’s voice has stemmed from its multi-textured quality.  It’s less boring to listen to songs over and over if every note is in a slightly different tonality.  His ability to do that has always been a great wonderment to me. 

Unfortunately, though, that multi-textured quality was largely absent from this concert. 

I sent a recording of my voice to a new vocal coach, recently.  I met her on the airplane flying to Los Angeles to hear Josh at the Hollywood Bowl.  I figured that I ought to take advantage of her being put in my way to see if she could help me with my voice.

Unfortunately, though, she was a real downer.  She said my pitch is starting to waver due to age, so she didn’t think she could help me.  She also said that my lung capacity is going to be reduced due to age, so she didn’t think she could help me with my breathing to create more emotional effects with my singing, which she felt were mostly to be achieved with breath control. She also said that the best singers are all under 30.  Bummer.

I told her about being a Josh Groban fan, and how he seemed to be losing his high notes.  She said that they worked him too hard when he was young and likely permanently damaged his voice.  There was a former voice major on the Bad Grobanites of the community bulletin boards who said she feared the same thing. 

I sure hope not. 


In any case, the Prudential Center had a lot of empty seats, even with the upper balconies closed off.

Sigh.

Maybe I should just give up on trying to see Josh in arenas.  Though I thought the show at Madison Square Garden was decent in 2011.

=========================================

Now I'm going to post my miserable photographs.  Ick.  Eventually, I'll get a cell phone with a better camera.

First, the view from our first seats taken at about 7:15 p.m. before the concert started:



I took this one, because I was surprised to see people sitting in the balcony, as I thought Josh wasn't planning to sell any balcony seats.


Here is Judith Hill.  You can see that's she's wearing a gold metallic dress and super high heels, but you can't see much else, as it's blurry.


Here are Josh & Christian.  This was after we moved closer to the stage.  We were maybe 6 rows from the front? Not sure.  Once we moved, we had excellent seats, as you can see here.


So this was my vain attempt to photograph Josh on the overhead screen.  Didn't work.


This was my attempt to photograph the chandeliers, when they were turned on.  Also didn't come out too well.  They definitely were pretty.


I did go out to the busses to see Josh after the concert.  I asked him where his Halloween costume was, but he didn't answer.  I forgot to ask him my favorite question "Have you called Stevie Wonder yet?"  I blogged about this a while back.  Here was my first attempt to photograph him. Blurry.  That big black thing is Darren's shoulder.


So then he moved on and I had to tilt my cell phone to get him.  You can see a bit of Darren's chin here. 


I've always been frustrated with photographs of Josh.  His face slants deeply way from his nose, so looking at him is a very 3D experience, and 2D photos don't capture him at all.  These were my very first attempts, not that they were successful. 

I've always thought that Josh looked best in his glasses and informal.  There's something very angelic about his face in person.  I don't think that comes through on the photos either.

I also tried to get Ruslan, but my cell phone really started acting up.  Sometimes, when it's been too long since it's been restarted, it starts throwing up black shadow menus over the screen and you can't do anything.  Ruslan was pretty patient, but eventually he moved on.  He has a much flatter face than Josh, so his photos tend to come out more true than Josh's do.



=================

Addendum:

I *thought* I had blogged about my frustration with Josh's reports that he never took Stevie Wonder up on his offer to co-write a song with Josh, but I can't find that.  I wanted to add the link here, because I metioned my perennial question as to whether he has called Stevie.

Josh reported that Stevie asked to write a song with him, because Stevie thought they might write a song that would save the world.  This was related to my quixotic quest for the world anthem, which I *have* written about on this blog.  

Josh said he was too chicken to call Stevie back.  This made me crazy.  It so reminded me of his being afraid to go rehearse with Celine Dion back when he was 17 -- only now David Foster isn't there to make Josh do it.  

So, I try to do my little part, and keep bugging him to call Stevie. 

================

Addendum 11/4/13

I am just looking back at a duet from 2011 from the STY tour, and how relaxed Josh seemed having someone come up on stage from the audience.  My sense of Josh at this last concert was that he seemed less relaxed, somehow.  

=================

Addendum 11/6/13

Ruslan was very excited about the upcoming HBO special.  He really loved watching these kids learn how to write songs.

Ruslan also explained that sometimes they can't do the second encore because of issues with agreements with the unions who do the backstage work.

Also, I went to the Grobie pre-show gathering place, at the Brick City Bar and Grill.  People were scattered over a lot of tables, so I didn't get to see most people, but at least I got at a table with some Grobies, which was nice

===================

Addendum 11/7/13

I suppose that issue with the unions might explain this sense I had that the pace of the concert had a certain rushing feeling about it.

I noticed when Josh was playing the piano that his playing seems to have gotten a lot smoother than it used to be.

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Addendum 11/8/13

On the FOJG boards, there was some discussion of people not daring to go to this concert, because it was in Newark, which has a poor reputation as a high crime area.  The turnout for this concert was not great. I wonder how much of that was because of a largely female audience fearing crime.