“D’angelo!” a member
of the audience murmured loudly between songs at James Blake’s April 18th,
Thursday night concert at the Rio Theatre in Santa Cruz, California. Who knows exactly what the person meant but a
few moments later as Blake fiddled with his keyboard and microphone they said
it again, shouting this time, “D’Angelo!”
At the second and louder mention of the late 90’s R&B impresario, James
Blake took notice and calmly and wittingly retorted in his endearing British
accent, “What, is he here?...I hope he’s here that’d be great?” Though he was joking there was a
purposefully detectable amount of sincerity in Blake’s voice, and the audience
responded with both cheers and laughter. No, D’angelo
wasn’t there, nor did James Blake suddenly break into a set from the D’angelo
songbook, but the brief exchange was indicative of Blake’s performance before the
intimate crowd in the seaside college town and surfing haven an hour south of
San Francisco. Blake and many of his fans
know and appreciate very well the lineage that he and his music fall into (yell
D’angelo at an Aerosmith concert and see if you get a reply), which only
increased the connection between the sentiment and sound of his songs and the
audience that night. Furthermore, anyone
who’s spent some Sundays in a Black church knows where Blake takes some of his
musical cues and that the roots of his sounds can be heard from a pew any
Sunday morning in Black America.
But Blake’s concert wasn’t a holy event, it was a secular celebration of audible art—in a hallowed way. At
approximately 9pm Blake had kicked off the evening with the mellow intro
to his single “I never Learnt to Share”; service at the church of James Blake had
begun. An hour and a half later when the
doors of the church were opened and the mostly young crowed filed back onto
Soquel Ave., Blake had assured his fans that his is a career worth
following.
Thursday, May 09, 2013
Mad Men Sillfully Avoids the Civil Rights Movement
I started watching AMC’s Mad
Men from the very first episode of the very first season. That’s not meant to be proof of my hipness,
that I watched Mad Men before it was
popular, just a statement of fact…that it also happens to prove my hipness is purely
coincidental. Mad Men at its height was one of the best shows on television, albeit
very quietly, and it long ago achieved endless critical acclaim. Now in its sixth season, the series about a
Madison Avenue advertising firm which takes place during the 1960’s finds
itself nearing the end of the decade it depicts with episode 6 making it clearly
1968 on the show. Which makes it
possible to declare another great achievement of the series: Mad Men
is a show that’s painfully accurate about the 1960’s yet has almost entirely
ignored the civil rights movement.
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