Steve Hackett - Foxtrot at 50 - Manhattan |
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mellotronwave
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 30 2021 Location: Belgium Status: Offline Points: 10019 |
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Posted: October 15 2023 at 12:20 |
:-) Thanks
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28023 |
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Glad you enjoyed it. I saw a very similar show last year in Birmingham and was a tad disappointed with the performance of Foxtrot. Didn't mind Nad's vocals but really missed Gary O'Toole's contribution who seemed better able to create that Phil Collins feel and also contributed vocals and a number of occasions. Blundell seemed a bit 'stiff' the night I saw it. The audience still loved it though so maybe I'm being picky!
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LearsFool
Prog Reviewer Joined: November 09 2014 Location: New York Status: Offline Points: 8642 |
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Things didn't work out for me last year to see the impeccable guitarist Steve Hackett play the cuts featured on Genesis's seminal live release Seconds Out, but I was able to attend a performance of his new tour focused on a front to back rundown of my favorite of the group's studio LPs, Foxtrot. I not only had that to look forward to but also the first set of the tour which casts a wide net over his solo career, including selections from his three most acclaimed early records as well as representatives from the lukewarmly remembered Highly Strung and his most recent outing Surrender of Silence. It indeed proved to be a cracking concert, enthralling all of us in the intimate, almost sold out Town Hall theater with the power of him and his band's excellent playing.
The tour's setlist opens where Hackett's solo career began, Voyage of The Acolyte's opener "Ace of Wands". Immediately the the precision and form of the show took shape, with the expert instrumentation of the band making itself apparent and the stage lighting already sweeping across the audience and upwards to project vivid colors onto the ballroom ceiling. Hackett cheerfully said his hellos to us before breaking into a stellar performance of "The Devil's Cathedral", giving us our first taste of Nad Sylvan's wonderful vocals for the night. The set continued through some of his solo classics before giving over to a thrilling bass solo from Jonas Reingold, the rest of the musicians leaving the stage to give Reingold more room to jam and explore. At the end drummer Craig Blundell - fresh off of his spellbinding contributions to Steven Wilson's The Harmony Codex - returned to his kit to build a rhythm with Reingold to enter into Highly Strung's live favorite "Camino Royale". The last selection before the break was the always radiant "Shadow of the Hierophant". The night's performance of Foxtrot was an expert and arresting example of playing a well worn classic practically to the note and tone. This is to say that rather than being trite or failing to match the form and power of the original - arguments can even be made as to how Genesis Live succeeded or otherwise in the latter department, after all - Hackett and his group gave one of the best possible straightforward takes on the LP. Roger King's mellotron (or else facsimile thereof, I'm unsure) started a little off timbre-wise at the very beginning of "Watcher of The Skies" but quickly regrouped into the next best sound to Tony Banks's original. From there the playing was infallible, a worthy successor and a more than enjoyable experience. Sylvan's vocals in particular take after Peter Gabriel's exceptionally well and he gave the thrust of the limited reinterpretation of the material, organically following his prerogative in the way he sang the lyrics. He also gave over to the audience to gleefully ask "A flower!?" during the titanic performance of "Supper's Ready". Hackett was ever in top form, which to my mind was most directly shown in his own band-free solo, the tender touchstone "Horizons". This of course brings us to the extended encore. It begins with the ever popular "Firth of Fifth" done as great as ever before leading into a mesmerizing drum solo from Blundell. Finally we were given the classic sendoff "Los Endos" in the positively most frenetic performance of the evening, though not without a detour in the middle into Defector's "Slogans" to keep us on our toes and satisfy those proggy desires we didn't know we had. Hackett and his band were astounding in NYC and played off of each other beautifully, so flowers to them including the heretofore unmentioned Rob Townsend on woodwinds, another master of his craft on that stage. I look forward to Hackett returning with both new solo songs and takes on other frontiers of Genesis's legendary oeuvre.
Edited by LearsFool - October 15 2023 at 04:05 |
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