The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Big Hurt  |  CD Reviews  |  Classical  |  Jazz  |  Live Reviews  |  Music Features
unsexy2011_1000x50b

Hoot and challah

Silver Jews, Middle East Downstairs, September 5, 2008
By NINA MACLAUGHLIN  |  September 10, 2008

sjews_in
Photo credit: Matt Teuten.

Instead of walking off stage with the rest of Silver Jews at the close of their sold-out show at the Middle East last Friday, David Berman — bearded, balding, long of limb, and dripping sweat in a dark suit and deep red shirt — hopped off stage right and into the crowd, shaking hands, saying thanks, giving a high five, a flimsy hug, thronged, pronto, with folks wanting to get close. In with the people like a candidate. It was a surprising gesture given that the Jews — who came to Cambridge in support of their sixth album, Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea (Drag City) — have toured but twice in their 19 years.

Watching Berman on stage, you couldn’t be sure. Is he into it? Does he like this? He paced like an antsy crane as he declaimed in his half-sung, half-spoke baritone, sinister like Leonard Cohen, but a little more bemused. The songs from Lookout are cheerier than those from American Water and Tanglewood Numbers (insert requisite mention of Berman’s drug addiction and attempted suicide here), but the many words of “San Francisco B.C.” got lost on stage. Berman is both bard and balladeer, and the most successful songs — “Tennessee,” “Horseleg Swastikas,” “Random Rules” — highlighted his loping eloquence.

The Jews followed an energetic set from Hallelujah the Hills — loud and non-showy with six dudes on stage including a trumpeter, a cellist, and a thunderous drummer who pounds with such force he’s regularly launched off his stool. The downy faces of openers Who Shot Hollywood — 12- and 13-year-olds from Western Mass — emphasized the Jews’ comparative experience.

Whether or not stage life suits him, it’s clear Berman likes his wife. Cassie Berman — bassist, singer, older sister of Hallelujah the Hills bassist Joseph Marrett — wore a red dress with a slit that went up and up the front. Her smile was pure allure — and Berman stared at her in a way that’d make any girl blush. The kids in WSH closed their set with a song that ended with “I love you” repeated dozens of times. The Jews closed the show with “Punks in the Beerlight,” which ends by repeating, “I love you to the max.” Sardonic, sure, but jubilant, too.

Related: Silver Jew | Drag City DVD, Rare, please!, Just a baby label, More more >
  Topics: Live Reviews , Leonard Cohen, Silver Jews, Silver Jews,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
ARTICLES BY NINA MACLAUGHLIN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   ON CARPENTRY AND COLLEGE  |  October 20, 2011
    Age 30, I quit the Phoenix and ended up with a job as an apprentice to a carpenter. Sawing, chiseling, hammering, nail-gunning, tiling, sanding, slotting, framing, hauling, measuring, and sweeping are less obvious outcomes of an undergraduate career in the liberal arts. College, in strange and unexpected ways, prepared me for this sort of work. And in others, did not prepare me at all.
  •   PHDISASTERS  |  April 27, 2011
    I knew a man pursuing a PhD in literature. His dissertation had to do with humor as a form of dissent in 20th-century literature. And how enthused he was at first! How passionate and excited.
  •   DAVID FOSTER WALLACE'S THE PALE KING  |  April 13, 2011
    All I can do is tell you how I read the book.
  •   THE HOUSE THAT HOUSE OF SAND AND FOG BUILT  |  February 25, 2011
    Andre Dubus III collected me at the Newburyport train station last month when the snow piles were already high. We stopped first for a coffee for the road; he asked all the questions: siblings, hometown, are you married?
  •   DON'T BE AN IDIOT  |  January 27, 2011
    We're all idiots when we're 18. We're all idiots for the first half of our 20s, and longer, for some. By saying so, we're not trying to insult anyone.

 See all articles by: NINA MACLAUGHLIN

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed