| Popmatters
review
Damo Suzuki's Network
25 October 2007: The Rotunda — Philadelphia, PA
Trying to decipher Suzuki’s lyrics is a little like trying to decipher
James Joyce’s Finnegan's Wake. But with Bardo Pond as his backing
band, his message becomes crystal clear: there's a certain magic to musical
mayhem.
by Kevin Pearson
Prior to this show, Damo Suzuki and his backing band, Philadelphia’s
Bardo Pond, have never even exchanged pleasantries, let alone played together.
There is no rehearsal. No set scribbled down. No designated ending or
encore. No ‘Point A to Point B’ type musical travail, just
the here and now. Damo Suzuki calls it ‘instant composing.’
We might call it improvisation, or, if you live in a dorm room, jamming.
Suzuki knows a thing or two about avant-garde approaches. He was, after
all, the front man of German legends Can for four seminal albums in the
early ’70s. Bassist Holger Czukay and drummer Jaki Liebezeit found
the Japanese-born singer busking on the streets of Berlin and asked him
to join the band after its initial singer, American Malcolm Mooney, returned
to the US at the behest of his psychiatrist. Suzuki agreed and, as a pre-cursor
to his current musical campaign, played with Can that very same night.
He was just 17 years old.
Over the course of Suzuki’s short tenure with Can (he was a member
from 1970-1973), the band redefined several musical genres and left a
lasting impression that continues to inform today’s musical maelstrom.
But, following the 1973 release of Future Days, Suzuki left the band,
became a Jehovah’s Witness, and retreated from music altogether.
He resurfaced in 1983 and slowly started to perform again as Damo Suzuki’s
Network, which is, all told, quite possibly the largest band in the world.
Simply put, the ‘Network’ is Suzuki touring the world and
performing live improvisational music with local musicians (or ‘sound
carriers’, as he calls them). Some he has met before, many he hasn’t.
It is estimated that the collaborations have incorporated 400-plus musicians
worldwide.
Suzuki is 57 years old, yet looks 15, maybe even 20, years younger. He
climbs onstage dressed in a black t-shirt emblazoned with the adage “Hear
No Evil.” His hair is long and graying, and his beard, like that
of many Japanese men who flirt with facial hair, is wispy. He’s
hardly an overwhelming figure—more a thin, small, and rakish one—yet
his voice, an imposing instrument, makes up for his diminutive stature.
Over the course of the show it veers from transcendental chanting to robotic
death-metal doom and, weirdly, for one five-minute period, a Japanese
Morrissey impersonation.
The show starts off slowly as orchestrated feedback oscillates around
the room. A flute floats in through the haze like a Viking ship parting
the fog, and the eight-piece band—two guitars, bass, drums, harmonica,
keyboards, flute, violin, and backing vocalists—build to a crescendo
of sound that flat-lines into a driving, droning psychedelic jam. Suzuki
sings above, neither carrying the tune nor leading it, instead utilizing
the sonic platform for his own unique brand of improvisational poetry.
Trying to decipher Suzuki’s lyrics is a little like trying to decipher
James Joyce’s Finnegan’s Wake. Both artists use a confounding
sense of rhythmic cadence, their own distinct language, and off-kilter
approaches to prose in an effort to get a feeling across. You have to
listen (or in Joyce’s case, read) attentively to understand what’s
being said. Then again, you also have to ask yourself, how much do they
actually want to be understood? The only discernable lyrics I make out
all evening are “you’ll see what you want.” Whatever
is said, it’s very likely that an audience will never hear it again.
The drone has now turned into a full-on attack that vacillates from throbbing
like a migraine to beating like a cocaine heart, with the only stipulation
being that everyone plays at once. It’s a set-up that doesn’t
really beg to be compared and contrasted, but different influences do
spring to mind depending on which instrument takes the lead. A flute line
brings back memories of early Mercury Rev. Several of the storm-in-heaven
guitar shimmers feel like the Verve’s first album fed through a
few more effects pedals. The harmonica brings about a bluesy element,
dueling at times with Suzuki’s lyrics, lifting them both above the
crowded sound and approximating what Robert Johnson would have sounded
like if he really had sold his soul to the devil.
At times, though, as with any improvised piece of music, the musicians
are out of step, but it’s only a toe outside the tracks, and they
soon re-align themselves. The wall of sound dissolves into another dirge
before exploding into a screed of feedback. Bardo Pond’s Michael
Gibbons holds his guitar aloft against his speaker, tipping it back like
a chalice, drinking in the sound.
When they hit a groove, it’s a wonderful groove. Occasionally, though,
the composition drags. It’s not monotonous, just repetitive. A groove
pushed too far or a note sustained too long. My girlfriend, who sits,
leaning against a wall for the entire show, falls asleep several times—not
out of boredom, but because the recurring nature of the riffs and the
rumbling bottom end lulls her into a REM cycle.
Several times the drums stutter to a stop, like a hesitant horse before
a jump, while the others keep on playing, propelling the band back into
a psychedelic sea of sound. Suzuki spurs them on for a full 80 minutes
of non-stop musical grind—one song, no breaks. If this were a gym
instead of a gig, the band members would be in a spinning class.
Things get interesting as the band begins to break down, replacing the
sonic bluster with a more textural approach. Bells rub against guitar
strings and instruments play off each other as opposed to with each other.
Alternating between discordant and sedate, the comedown sounds more improvisational
than anything that came before. Even Suzuki’s singing is a little
more unhinged. Bardo Pond slows down as, one by one, the musicians stop,
curtailed by a hand gesture from the booking agent that tells them time
is up. Damo Suzuki carries on, oblivious to the signal, and only stops
when the last note puts its coat on and heads for the door. It’s
obvious that he can keep going. And he does. Two hours later, he performs
with a different Philadelphia band at a different location.
— 14 November 2007
Photography
by Dan Cahoon - please visit his Bardo
Pond Photography Page
     
 
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