It’s only a five-minute walk from my home, but I’ve
only attended about a half dozen events at the Bergen Performing Arts Center (BergenPAC) over the years. There are
all sorts of reasons why I should have gone more: the fine adaptive reuse of the first-run movie house of my childhood into a hall with the
kind of acoustics that far better-known venues would kill for; a varied calendar
with something for everyone—jazz, classical, rhythm and blues, pop/rock/folk, comedy, family musicals; and the need to support cultural programming at a time
when this area—and all the arts—could surely use it.
But something usually got in the way. Maybe it had
something to do with a commute that sometimes leaves me depleted even into the
weekend. At other times, when I attempted to buy tickets for acts (such as Todd
Rundgren and Hall and Oates) I saw years ago as part of Central Park’s
Schaefer Music Festival, I was put off by the vast difference in prices. Maybe
all of this also had a little bit to do with failure to appreciate a special
cultural institution right near me here in Englewood, N.J., while there was still a chance to enjoy it.
But on this past Saturday night, I saw those
obstacles melting away when I thought of Judy Collins and Jimmy Webb. Seats
for their show that night were still available, and with (comparatively)
inexpensive prices, I ponied up for an upper-balcony ticket. At the end of the
evening, I had enjoyed one of my favorite experiences in the 30 years after
college when I had fallen out of the habit of regular concert-going.
I was only sorry that there weren’t more people around
to enjoy it. My great luck in attending the show at all resulted from the fact
that so many tickets were still available at the box office an hour before. For
the life of me, I couldn’t understand how two legends of the pop-music scene
hadn’t sold out this performance long ago.
Collins, after all, even at age 73, still possesses
silvery soprano tones barely diminished from the Sixties and Seventies, when
she enjoyed hits such as “Both Sides Now,” “Amazing Grace” and “Send in the
Clowns.”
As for Webb, the golden boy from Oklahoma who, only in his early 20s,
wrote such Top 40 hits as “Up, Up and Away,” “Galveston,” “Wichita Lineman” and
“MacArthur Park” has developed into an accomplished live performer himself. (As
I argued in a prior post on the
creation of this last hit, as a helpless romantic unafraid of giving full vent
to his emotions, this member of the Songwriters Hall of Fame might be thought
of as the Thomas Wolfe of pop music.) Both recovering substance abusers, they have gone on to endure and prevail, improbably, over time.
Despite owning several of his albums, I had never
seen Webb in concert before Saturday night. As for Collins: I saw her three
times in the Seventies, in Central Park, with the quality varying (the first
show the best, the second the worst, and the third somewhere between). If I had
any fear before the show, it was that time might have diminished a voice that,
in youth, was one of unsurpassed beauty.
With the first song, her version of Joni Mitchell’s “Chelsea
Morning,” it seemed that this might occur, as her voice seemed to struggle for
its bearings over the combination of her guitar and the house Steinway played
by her musical director, Russell Walden. As the show went on, however, she
settled into a comfortable rhythm, with the familiar voice that could still
move listeners with its purity.
Collins followed Webb’s lead from earlier in the
night in converting her appearance into a kind of musical memoir. Between
songs, she related her influences, including her father, a blind radio DJ who
exposed her to all kinds of music, including several songs she performed for the audience to powerful effect, Rodgers and Hart’s “Where
or When,” the Irish tune “The Kerry Dancer” and Stan Jones’ “Ghost Riders in
the Sky”; her onetime lover, Stephen Stills, who immortalized her with the hit “Suite
Judy Blue Eyes” (and to whom she, in turn, paid tribute with “Helplessly Hoping”);
and Joni Mitchell, creator of "Both Sides Now" as well as "Chelsea Morning."
Another songwriter whose work she covered was Webb.
A few songs into her set, Webb provided piano accompaniment to her haunting
version of his “The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress.” Calling Collins “the fairy
godmother of lost songs,” Webb told the audience how in 1974, this tune had
been rejected before Collins took it up. Since then, it’s been recorded by the
likes of Linda Ronstadt, Joan Baez, and Joe Cocker.
Webb had other often-entertaining stories of his
career before he briefly shared the stage with Collins. He told how he wrote “Up,
Up and Away” while indulging his hobby as a balloonist, only to see, to his
horror, his influential local Oklahoma station wrongly ban it as pro-drug (it
took his father, a Protestant minister, to argue the station manager into
ending the restriction); how he hooked up with the “crazy Irish actor,” Richard
Harris, to record “MacArthur Park”; how "All I Know," dismissed by a former lover as "silly," had been accepted by the "persnickety, perfectionist"--but golden-voiced--Art Garfunkel; and how, despite their political
differences over the years, he felt he owed his career to Glen Campbell for his
recordings of “Wichita Lineman” and “Galveston.”
Forget everything you ever remember about these
latter songs once Webb performs them.By his own admission, he is not possessed of the greatest voice, but none of his interpreters can match him for the passion he brings to his material. Accompanied only by his piano, he turns
these tunes inside out until, for the first time, you can hear his haunted
characters--men alone--with startling immediacy. It’s just him out there, and that same sense
of rawness and risk-taking informed his finale, “MacArthur Park.” Mid-song, he
summoned all the energies from the house Steinway for the uptempo “Allegro”
section, evoking a whole world of anguish and loss in chord after pounding
chord.
Collins closed the show with "In My Life," one of her signature songs from the Sixties. It was not only an unspoken acknowledgement of its creator, John Lennon--whose death had occurred 32 years before to the night--but also a heartfelt tribute to the influences and the fans that had sustained herself and Webb over the years.
(Judy Collins performing in Bradford, Penn.,
February 5, 2009; Jimmy Webb performing live at The Bottom Line in New York
City, August 24, 2003)
3 comments:
I saw Webb several times in the BK (before kids) days: at the Bottom Line and, once, at a tribute concert at Avery Fisher Hall that was also attended by Keith Hernandez (who spent time before the concert pleasantly chatting with the security guard), where Art Garfunkel and Linda guested.
I remain fond of the Glen Campbell version of "The Moon's a Harsh Mistress"--Glen Campbell:Jimmy Webb::Roger Daltrey:Pete Townshend--but having a woman perform it does open up the song a bit.
Glad you enjoyed it. BergenPAC still gets better shows than SOPAC does.
Wow I am a huge Jimmy Webb fan and really like Judy Collins... what a show that must have been. Jimmy Webb played at WPC last week and I neglected to go...I am now even more regretful... Lovely article :)
I've never been to SOPAC, Ken--but yes, Bergen PAC has a fine schedule.
Glad you liked the article, Janet. Jimmy Webb is not only a fantastic songwriter and an unexpectedly compelling concert performer, but unbelievably gracious with fans, and yet in a way that doesn't infringe on the main draw in his acts. He came out at intermission to sign copies of his CDs, then, so as not to detract from Collins' half of the show, promised the long line of fans remaining that he'd return after she finished, which he did.
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