Aficionados of the Velvet
Underground were out in force on a freezing Thursday, December 15, 2016 for a
commemoration of their performance 50 years ago at the Gershman Y in
Philadelphia. The band had hardly begun in 1966, when they played a number of
shows with their “producer” Andy Warhol and his Exploding Plastic Inevitable.
This was prior to recording their first record, the one with the banana on the
cover. I was ten, lived in the Atlanta suburbs and wanted to be The Man from Uncle. Little did I know that
the ICA in arty Philadelphia had given Andy Warhol his first museum show in
1964. Apparently, he was scared stiff.
On the bill were Britt Phillips and
Dean Wareham performing along with select Warhol Screen Test films and veterans
Yo la Tengo playing all VU music. The night re-convened with Britt & Dean (formerly
half of the band Luna) playing newly commissioned soundtracks from their latest
album: Thirteen Most Beautiful… Songs for
Andy Warhol Screen Tests. Some of these scores resembled softer Velvety tunes
and paid homage (logically) with guitar echo and reverb while other songs featured
electronic drones and digital drums appropriate to art events. It was
interesting to see a band pair up their curiosity in Warhol’s films with their
fascination of the Velvet Underground. There is a distinction.
Warhol’s screen tests are always
compelling time capsules shot at 24 frames per second and projected at 12 so
they resemble still portraits until the subject moves. 500 Screen Tests were
made between 1966 and 1968 featuring New York’s underworld of poets,
celebrities, porn stars and drug addicts. An early death awaited many of the Factory’s
odd cast of characters – Andy escaped nearly his after he was shot in 1968 by
disgruntled Valerie Solanis. His prodigy, Edie Sedgwick died in 1971. Model and
singer, Nico is in full command of her test, swanning around for the camera. Dennis
Hopper’s test is titled Herringbone Tweed
after his jacket. Within the space of a few minutes, the actor creates a stern
faced narrative punctuated by worried moments and finally a smile as if he had
finally found his car keys. I kept
thinking how he ends up headless in Apocalypse
Now. Lou Reed’s screen test with Coke bottle was the epitome of nonchalance
providing a little levity behind wraparound shades.
Yo la Tengo stood in for the Velvet
Underground once before in the 1996 film, I
Shot Andy Warhol, but they are mostly known for furious flights of fancy
and delicate songs with deadpan vocals much like the Lou Reed. They are also known for carefully
selected cover songs – see their silly video version of The Cure’s, Friday, I’m in Love. This night dealt solely
with the dissonant side of the Velvet Underground. To start, drummer, Georgia
Hubley (who can’t help but channel VU’s drummer, Mo Tucker) sang a few songs
from The Velvet Underground and Nico. Yo la Tengo then launched into less
radio-friendly VU territory with some signature noise, finishing the show with
an hour of inspired feedback. Ira Kaplan’s guitar wall moved in and out, above
and below the “rhythm section” creating a strange, swirling undertow punctured
by staccato piano or growling viola. The barrage may have surprised the audience
who might have been expecting a standard rock show or 60’s flashback. They forgot
that much of the impact of the Velvet Underground was the sonic approach
borrowed from contemporary art and progressive jazz. This is where the band
(and those who re-create and expand the ouvre) diverted from Warhol and created
its own lasting legacy. Melodies and lyrics are almost an aberration.
1 comment:
I have no idea what any of that meant.
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