SOUNDTRACK: BARENAKED LADIES-Talk to the Hand: Live in Michigan (2007).
I have seen Barenaked Ladies live a number of times. At this point I think I have seen them without Steven Page more than when he was with them. After listening to his solo album I remembered how much I loved Page with the band. And even though they still do a great show, this CD/DVD combo reminded me how much…more fun…they were when Page was in the band (and how sad it is that a reunion seems impossible).
I had heard that the other guys in the band (notably Jim and Kevin) wanted more songwriting opportunities. And whether or not that is true, it seems like they might since this is completely the Steven and Ed show. They split lead vocals duties exactly in half (with two songs in which they share lead vocals). Indeed, Kevin wrote “Sound of Your Voice” but Steven sings lead. Although I have to say that Kevin Hearn absolutely shines with all of the instruments he plays here (he’s quite remarkable).
So this concert came on the Barenaked Ladies Are Me/Men tour in one of their biggest American fan locations–Clarkston, Michigan.
The CD is a collection of lots of older hits and a few newer songs. I recall not loving this period of BNL as much, but the songs that are picked for this show from these albums are great: “Bank Job” one of my favorite new(ish) songs sounds great here. And “Easy” is another great song from these two albums. “Adrift” a pretty, slow song (which is here played on the banjo) and “Wind It Up” is fun because we get to see Jim Creeggan come down away from the upright bass and wander around with an electric bass.
They have the most fun with “Angry People” since they do a lengthy “skit/dance” at the end of the song in which they beat each other up (to a disconcerting prerecorded version of the song). This is included in the audio CD with no explanation–the DVD clarifies the weird sound effects in the song). Perhaps the most unexpected addition is the song “Powder Blue” which is a B-side to the “Pinch me” single. It’s a bit of a slow down in the set, but it get s a pretty big reaction.
There’s some very funny fan interaction, like teasing the lady in the front row who is talking on her phone and point out (and singing about ) the guy who uses beer bottles as maracas. (I also enjoyed seeing a guy with a Rush shirt near the front row).
They also do “For You” from Everything to Everyone. This version is an interesting acoustic version with Kevin Hearn on mandolin and everyone gathered around the center mic. They do “Be My Yoko Ono” in this format as well, which is quite fun (Hearn on accordion and Tyler on bongos).
No matter how often I hear “Brian Wilson,” I never get tired of it. And while I’ve heard them live with not Steven Page singing it, it’s great to have his original voice doing it (and as always Creeggan’s bass is amazing).
The one thing that’s a bummer is that the DVD and the CD contain the same songs–in other words the DVD is pretty short for a concert. According to Wikipedia, songs played at the show, but not included in Talk to the Hand include: “Maybe Katie”, “In The Car”, “Running out of Ink”, “Get In Line”, “Tonight is the Night I Fell Asleep at the Wheel” [acoustic], “Alcohol”, “It’s All Been Done”, “Lovers in a Dangerous Time” and “Call and Answer.” The DVD also falls a little short because there’s no crazy wacky end song where Tyler sings some crazy nonsense.
The bonus features include the five guys sitting in a room with an interview. They talk about how Steve and Ed first started playing together. And there’s a funny story about a guy with an ass on his head. I also appreciated them talking about the greening of their tour.
But really, the saddest thing is that in the bonus features the five of them talk about how much fun they are having in the and and how long they’ve been together and other things that make Page’s split seem so much sadder.
[READ: October 10, 2014] Saint Friend
Saint Friend is the latest book in the McSweeney’s poetry series. This collection of poems features largely longer poems. And I admit to not really enjoying longer poems–they often seem to lose either the plot or my attention. Which I know is more likely my fault than the writer’s but so be it.
“Pacific” is evidently about Amelia Earhart. It has a epigram from Earhart, but I didn’t realize it was about her (which is certainly my fault as I know really no details about her). Each page is a part of a longer poem (there’s a black diamond at the bottom of each page making it seem like the end of a section or so). The fourth section (about fog and being at 8000 feet) sure makes sense as an Earhart poem.
“Near Real-Time” is a series of small poems–each one dated a day in February (except the last one). I wish I knew context for these poems (was he doing a write a poem a day challenge or something?). Also, not every day of the month is represented.
Perhaps the most powerful is February Eleventh:
My only wish
is that I die before you
so I don’t meet that pain
or court that suffering
or marry that awful hollowness.
After February Twenty-Eight, the next and final “entry” is March Eighteenth. Again, I’m not sure how the dates really work.
I enjoyed “The Mathematician” (a much shorter poem) with an interesting attitude for a poet:
What I do is calculate
I’ve always seen the world as numbers,
buildings and trees as factors
math as a language better suited for explaining
how things work
than the formula of grammar
I like especially that a later section ends with
She is not math.
While his longer poems seem somewhat relaxed, his few shorter ones seem urgent and more powerful. Like “A Map to Now” which opens with
I didn’t know a woman could vanish
within herself, didn’t know
fear would then be her master…
I thought my body was mine
until it became a window
a map anyone could use.
He has three poems that are one page each, and each one is named after a person: “Emily,” “Michael” and “Thomas.” And then another one page poem is called “Everything That Happens Can Be Called Aging” which is an interesting catalog of the needs as one admits to getting older.
I didn’t love this collection as much as some of the others they’ve released. There were not a lot of lines that I had to read two or three times because they were so powerful. I guess I just prefer more immediate and urgent poems to these longer ones.

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