corinne and kogi
Wednesday, 28 April 2010 17:46

I rolled into town after the Moscow trip, and, as I was driving around running errands and trying to un-jetlag myself, I heard on the radio (KCRW of course) that there was a concert/fundraiser for KCRW at the Vibiana downtown featuring a performance by and interview with Corinne Bailey Rae.  Of course, the concert was that night, and it was sold out....but at the last minute I was able to snag a couple of free tickets courtesy of her immensely cool manager, Bob Miller (thanks again Bob!).  I grabbed my friend Garrett and we headed down to the Vibiana, which, if you haven't been to an event there (and you NEED to!), is a stunning space formerly occupied by the Catholic Archdiocese and now home to all kinds of events from art shows to fashion shows and now (for the first time) concerts.

I'd been listening to Corinne's latest album The Sea--but this corinne bailey rae at the   vibianaperformance (with the musicians that played on the album, no less) raised my respect and admiration for her as an artist to a different level.  I'm not sure why it affected me so deeply; maybe it was the beauty and ambiance of the space, maybe it was her level of comfort with the band (they all grew up in the same music scene in the Manchester/Leeds area), maybe it was the fact that the audience was full of KCRW subscribers who value great art and shelled out for a show they really wanted to see, or maybe it was just the fact that I hadn't been in the audience for a show of that caliber and that level of intimacy in awhile.  When Jason Bentley interviewed her in the middle of the set, she skillfully avoided his questions about her dealing with the death of her husband a couple of years ago (basically saying, "it wasn't really therapeutic writing this album")...but she didn't need to mention it.  Her music and performance revealed that she's experienced deeper pain and perhaps more meaningful joy since she first told the girls to turn their records on a few years back.  Without having to tell her story in detail, she made it clear that she's happy, and even still a bit happy-go-lucky, and living out her life creating beauty just like she always has.

To cap off the show, Corinne and the band out a deeply groovin cover of "Que Sera Sera" as an encore that caught us all by extremely pleasant surprise.  I couldn't help but picture Doris Day belting out the song in The Man Who Knew Too Much as almost a cry of hope in search of her kidnapped son (see that movie if you haven't!) and knowing that Corinne seems to have a similar message of hope in the midst of grief and despair for the world they're performing for on this tour.

After the show, there was a sense of normalcy for me--meeting the musicians in the band afterward and having normal touring musician talk about it all being in a days work with all of the necessary British sarcasm intermixed--yet I still left the venue with the sound of the performance still enveloping me and inspiring me to greater performance, composition, and collaboration.

If you haven't seen her show on this tour, find a show and make it happen.  The experience at the Vibiana was definitely one-of-a-kind, but it will be well worth it no matter where you see it.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In other news I am officially obsessed with the Kogi truck.  If you live in Los Angeles, you know this is the Korean Taco truck that we've all been hearing about for a year or so.  I finally tried it the other day when it was sitting outside the 4100 bar in Silverlake when some friends and I were randomly there.  I took a bite.  And immediately started following it on Twitter.  I won't say it changed my life, but that's only because I don't want to be too dramatic on this site.  And in this case, I'm fine with not being an early adopter, at least I'm in now.  Next time you're going, hit me up and I'll drop everything to meet you there.

 

Comments  

 
#1 Seth 2010-04-28 19:06
Wow Dave! I love it when you post new blogs! It's excellent.
Quote
 
Home Blog corinne and kogi