I went to see Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds at the O2 last
night. These are my thoughts.
I was last at this venue four years ago to see Leonard
Cohen. What a night that was. Cavernous and soulless it may initially appear,
but I must say I’ve never been let down by a gig at the O2. For a venue that
size, the sound and sightlines are great.
Cave shares a lot with Cohen as a songwriter, perhaps more
than anyone else. Both are literary men who spent their career balancing and
battling the sacred and profane, both capable of writing the most perfectly stately
songs, songs you’d hear in a church, at a wedding, at a funeral. Cave is
embedded in the Christian tradition, Cohen, right until the end, the Jewish
tradition.
With due respect to Lenny, though, Cave is more of a rock
god than one can imagine Cohen ever was even in his prime. Cave, just past his
60th birthday, is still a shamanic rock’n’roll wild man. Amongst
many, many other things.
He has written some of the greatest songs about faith that I
have ever heard, but this gig was not about faith. Faith has gone. It was all
together, in the most astonishingly moving way possible, about love.
I’ve not seen love expressed before so profoundly in the
artifice of a rock’n’roll concert. Great tragedy hangs over Nick Cave, it is
inescapable, and he does not want us to escape it. The accidental death of his
son Arthur two years ago is present in every song, every move, every word. Love
and grief, most explicitly in the songs from his latest album, Skeleton Tree.
Love for his wife, again, with no attempt to hide it embellish it.
Love is all, faith has gone. Cave, for whom the world has
already ended, is singing songs to prepare the rest of us for the end of the
world. He remains an imposing, powerful figure, but he is not distant from us,
the audience. He is communicating, engaging with us in a quite unexpected way.
This in itself is strangely moving.
As a final point of comparison to Leonard Cohen, that gig in
2013 was comfortably one of the three finest I’ve ever been to. Sometimes I try
to boringly anatomize what makes a great rock concert. One thought I’ve had is
that there are an optimum number of an act’s songs you can love going into the
night. When I saw Cohen, I loved about 25 of his songs, and he played about 20
of those. It was as if the gig was performed just for me. With Cave, I love
about 50 of his songs, if not more, so there were always going to be reservoirs
of personal favourites I wouldn’t hear. But this gig was about more than the
song selection, more than hearing the hits.
As it happened, there was just one song from Murder Ballads,
one from the Boatman’s Call, none from No More Shall We Part, Nocturama, Abbatoir
Blues/Lyre of Orpheus which is basically my favourite stretch of Cave, but it
mattered very little.
The set was dominated by the tracks from ‘Skeleton Tree’, as
well as the album before it, ‘Push the Sky Away’. Cave and the Bad Seeds have
boldly developed a whole new sound and a whole new lyrical style on those two
recent albums. It is looser, more atmospheric, there are fewer of those perfect
hymns, also fewer of those classic rock’n’roll peaks and troughs.
The Bad Seeds are an magnificant band – this bunch of louche
and dangerous 50-something extras from ‘Boardwalk Empire’, led by Cave’s
closest collaborator, the wildest man on the planet, Warren Ellis – his violin
is one of the great instrumental sounds (and looks) in all popular music. He
harnesses the wind, both with Cave and with his own band, the Dirty Three. The
Bad Seeds create the kind of controlled maelstrom I’ve very rarely heard
elsewhere, perhaps in the recordings of Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue, perhaps
from Wilco in their prime, though Wilco’s storm is more electrical. And at the
centre of it all, Nick Cave himself, belying his 60 years, wearing the same
black suit and white open-necked shirt as always, mesmerizing with his unique
s-shaped exhortations. First, he sings to the front rows, then sometimes to his
wife, then sometimes to all of us, then sometimes to somewhere else in his own
head.
When ‘Push the Sky Away’ came out in 2013, I wasn’t
immediately sold on it, but ‘Higgs Boson Blues’ from that album is an early
highlight. Also early in the set are a couple of the more apocalyptic (but, for
me, less heartrending) songs from ‘Skeleton Tree’, as well as two fearsome
older favourites, ‘Tupelo’ and ‘From Her to Eternity’.
After half an hour, I was digging it but I was still very
much in my skin. This was a commanding and witty Cave, but he was not yet shattering
the earths and the heavens. The thought came into my head “At a Nick Cave gig, whatever
the onslaught of raucous noise at that time, you’re only ever one song away
from ‘Into My Arms’”. Well, turns out, at that point, we were two songs away
from ‘Into My Arms’.
The gig took off. A heavy, stunning sequence of events.
First of all, ‘Jubilee Street’, building, building, the closing lyrics “I am
transforming, I am vibrating, I am glowing, I am flying, Look at me now” and
suddenly the audience too was possessed, enraptured. He left the stage briefly
and came back to the piano to play ‘Ship Song’, and, gee whizz, suddenly I was
close to tears. This is not a common occurrence for me, not in any context,
certainly not at a gig. Perhaps it was the memory of the song’s glorious and
incongruous appearance on ‘Home and Away’ in the mid-90s … or perhaps not.
This was the first appearance of one of Cave’s “hymns”, hewn
from the rock of music (the Stone of Song?). And then, wouldn’t you know it,
‘Into My Arms’. And he asked us to sing along! Nick Cave asked me to sing, how
can I turn him down? And as the song takes its timeless, stately course, I’m
actually crying. At the end, he stops singing and us brave souls sing the
chorus unaccompanied one last time. I’ve sung the song before, I’ve sung it as
a lullaby in the last year. Any song one’s every sung as lullaby, I imagine,
has a particular personal poignancy (apart from There were 10 in the Bed, which
has yet to stir such strong emotion in me …).
At that point, surely he could take us no further, but then
came ‘Girl in Amber’, the song from ‘Skeleton Tree’ which above all, made me
catch my breath in shock when I first heard it. These songs, on record but even
more so now, are dealing with rarefied emotion almost never heard before in
popular song – I really mean that. I may talk things up a lot, and I’ve
listened to a lot of supposed heartbreak albums, even grief albums, but I’ve
heard almost nothing as raw yet articulate as the songs on ‘Skeleton Tree’. It
was painful to be part of this. I had worried about going to this concert, just
because of this, this intrusion on private grief. But this is what he’s wanted.
The album, the accompanying film, the gigs, this is how Nick Cave, the
craftsman, the meticulous office worker/reformed rock demon, is doing this.
Phew. ‘Red Right Hand’ - you know the one from Peaky
Blinders - came almost as a relief, a release of some of the intensity. Then
‘The Mercy Seat’. This, light years better than his recorded version, better
than the Johnny Cash version, worth the price of the admission alone.
But these songs of crime and punishment, of villains and
murder, they weren’t the end of it.
‘Distant Sky’ and ‘Skeleton Tree’ are the two last songs of
his latest album – ‘Distant Sky’ with its devastating line “They told us our gods
would outlive us, They told us our dreams would outlive us, They told us our
gods would outlive us, But they lied”. Well, isn’t that all of it right there …
And, a few minutes later, as he tore through an
indescribable ‘Stagger Lee’ during the encore, the most gloriously obscene song
you’ll ever hear, surrounded by audience members on stage (one of whom, a gym
bunny jesus, was trying rather too hard to take a bit of limelight), after a
few elegant stage dives, it struck me as he sung its last line. “Those were the
last words that the Devil said, cause Stag put four holes in his motherfucking
head”, that in a very different way, both the line from ‘Distant Line’ and the
line from ‘Stagger Lee’ were saying exactly the same thing.
He seemed a little short of composure at the end, said “thank
you” more than we deserved, found Bobby Gillespie in the front row (pretty
certain by chance) to sing a line of Push the Sky Away with him, which briefly
reduced him to just another rock’n’roll survivor bumping into an old buddy.
This may be the largest headline gig Nick Cave and the Bad
Seeds have ever done. I have rarely seen any band better suited to playing to
this many people, though, and losing nothing of their power in the process.
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