Music To My Ears (Timothy White tribute) concert
Shown below is a great review
very kindly sent in by a Brain Damage reader, but to preserve his
privacy I have not printed his full alias/email address. There is also
a review from Billboard, included here with a link to the original
page, for archiving purposes, as not all sites keep all content
available as time goes on.
Brain Damage contributor review - TheFan
New York, October 8, 2002
Roger played Comfortably Numb,
Wish You Were Here and Flickering Flame, which was very well recieved
by the crowd, recieving one of the few standing ovations on the
evening. The song has progressed a lot since I heard it on the Sao
Paulo rehearsal, with a very beautiful celtic-like flute solo now in
it.
Roger's voice was sounding great,
the best in many years; he's definately recovered from the ravages of
the world tour. Don Henley sang Gilmour's parts on Comfortably Numb,
but the mike was kinda screwy in the beginning of the first chorus, but
Henley saved the day when he absolutely BELTED OUT the last line in the
chorus ("I have become.....").
Wish You Were Here was done very
well, a little bit more melodic than I've heard on the recent shows.
The house band backed Roger. Roger opened the show, which I was none
too pleased with, he also played the least amount of songs, everyone
else played 4 or 5.
White Tribute Continues In New York
Billboard New York, 9th October 2002
While most of the thousands
attending last night's Music to My Ears tribute concert to late
Billboard editor in chief Timothy White probably had at best a vague
notion of who he was as they entered New York's Madison Square Garden,
they no doubt left knowing him as a journalistic giant and big-hearted
man wildly in love with his wife and twin boys until his last breath.
White, who died at 50 on June 27
after suffering a heart attack in an elevator at Billboard's New York
office, received a fete like few -- if any -- music journalists before
him. Many of the artists who he covered and also considered friends
paid tribute to him and raised funds for his wife, Judy, and their
sons, one of which is autistic.
Before rolling out some of their
biggest hits during often rousing, sometimes sad three- or four-song
sets, Sting, Don Henley, Jimmy Buffett, Brian Wilson, Sheryl Crow, John
Mellencamp, James Taylor, and Roger Waters explained what White meant
to them, and/or what impact the longtime scribe had on music journalism
and the music industry in general during brief, often touching, and
occasionally hilarious videos projected onto two giant screens.
Waters said that White, a
longtime editor at Rolling Stone and Crawdaddy, showed interest in his
music and life when other journalists couldn't be bothered. Taylor
called him a champion of artists and artists' causes. Crow said White
often reminded her of the power of music, and how it means everything
to some. "That's something you could forget on the road everyday," she
said.
Last night's show was the second
of two tributes to White, Billboard's editor for 11 years and the
author of the widely revered Bob Marley tome "Catch a Fire" (considered
by many to be the definitive book on the late singer), as well as books
on Taylor and Wilson and the Beach Boys. The bill and set lists for the
first, held Monday at the Fleet Center in Boston (where White lived),
were almost identical. But while Billy Joel performed in Boston only,
Buffett and Wilson were exclusively a part of New York's Music to My
Ears event.
In a biographical video,
interviews from throughout the '90s showed White reflecting on his
youth, talking about his stand against violent music and gangsta rap in
the early half of the decade, and talking about how he wanted to shape
the future of the music industry. There were portions of a speech White
gave while accepting industry charity City of Hope's 1998 Spirit of
Life award (which he shared with Billboard publisher Howard Lander), as
well as pictures of him with his parents, some of the musicians on the
bill, friends, and family.
White's best friend, screenwriter
Mitch Glazer, scripted the film, providing the words that narrator
Taylor said as the film wrapped -- that White lived for music and
"tonight it will live for him."
With that, the screen switched to
Wilson's comments, in which he remarked that White "knew more about me
than I knew myself." And just as the screen faded to black, the opening
piano strains of "California Girls" came from the still-black stage --
providing for an early highlight, and one of the most powerful moments
of the night.
Rocking from side to side, often
clapping and snapping his fingers, the former Beach Boys frontman sat
center stage (backed by a house band) plowing through rockin',
sometimes gritty versions of many of the iconic act's biggest hits,
including "God Only Knows" -- dedicated to White's family -- "Help Me
Rhonda," and "Surfin' USA," each met with thunderous approval.
Arriving next was Buffett's
video, one of many to make mention of White's trademark bowtie and
white bucks. "I know somewhere tonight his white bucks are dancing,"
the easy-smiling Buffet said, before igniting the parrotheads in the
house with renditions of "Far Side of the Moon," "A Pirate Looks at
Forty," and "Margaritaville."
Adding levity and infusing the
Garden with beautiful sadness was ex-Pink Floyd frontman Waters, who
opened with an impassioned, chilling performance of "Wish You Were
Here," followed by the somber new song "Flickering Flame" (featuring
the touching, repeated line "I shall be free"), and "Comfortably Numb"
(featuring Henley on vocals and guitar), which arguably was the night's
peak. Often jerking his head and shoulder as he hit chords, Rogers --
like each artist who took the stage last night -- made it more than
obvious that although these were classic songs being rolled out, no one
was going through the motions.
Taylor trotted onstage for a
sweetly soulful set that included "October Road" and "Stop Thinking
About That." The troubadour was joined by Buffett for "Mexico," and
Sting for another of the night's highlights, an a cappella version of
Taylor's "You Can Close Your Eyes," which features the line "You can
sing this song when I'm gone," that was nicely topped off by Sting's
pretty falsetto.
After an intermission, the show
began again with a videotape of White's friend, actor/comedian Bill
Murray -- dressed in white bucks and struggling to tie a bowtie --
remarking on White's "exciting hair." Stirring, fun, and as beautiful
and inspiring as ever, Crow followed, belting out "If It Makes You
Happy," "Soak up the Sun," "Steve McQueen," and "Home."
While most utilized a house band
-- featuring a trio of backup singers that added a wonderfully
spiritual, soulful tint to much of the evening's songs -- Henley took
the stage with his own backing group, augmented at first by fellow
Eagle Timothy B. Schmit, Taylor, and a local choir, all of whom helped
out on "How Can I Stop Singing?" He then delivered a cover of
little-known David Gray track "Shine," beautifully embellished by the
choir and well executed by Henley himself. But it was the timeless
"Boys of Summer" that proved nearly transcendent.
Sting returned again, clearly
having a blast as he danced and sang his heart out during Henley's
closer, a powerful rendition of the Bob Marley classic "Get Up, Stand
Up," during which the stage backdrop was drenched in Rastafarian colors
in a nod to White's love of Marley and reggae.
One of the evening's spark plugs,
Sting's set offered an extended jam on "Roxanne," a beautiful rendition
of "Fields of Gold," and a poignant "If I Ever Lose My Faith in You,"
which segued into a slightly sped-up version of "Every Breath You
Take," which, like many of the sets, left both artist and audience
feeling as though they were just hitting their stride when it was
unfortunately time to move on.
Being one of White's closest
friends, it was perhaps fitting that Mellencamp closed the show,
belting out a riveting and raw take on "Paper in Fire," an acoustic,
back-porch blues reworking of "Small Town," and a duet with Patti Smyth
on "Pink Houses," among others.
As they did in Boston, all of the
night's performers returned for the traditional "This Train" and Sly
& the Family Stone's "Everyday People," in which Waters, Crow,
Mellencamp, and Sting traded lead vocals.
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