SOUNDTRACK: GALLANT-Tiny Desk Concert #595 (January 30, 2017).
Despite the impressive cred, I had never heard of Gallant. I mean, check out these bona-fides:
When Christopher Gallant was featured in Forbes‘ 30 Under 30 list, the testimonial came from none other than Elton John, who said, “When I hear his voice, I just lose it.” The two even performed Gallant’s song “Weight In Gold” together back in September.
Gallant performed a stripped-down version of that hit when he came to the Tiny Desk earlier this month, and preceded it with another of his best-known songs, “Skipping Stones.” Written with Jhené Aiko, that tune radiates sultry intensity and passion; here, the talented Dani Ivory (who’s performed as a touring member of Imagine Dragons) sits in for Aiko.
Ology, Gallant’s 2016 debut, is up for a Grammy — for Best Urban Contemporary Album [it lost to Lemonade] — and another of its falsetto-driven highlights opens this three-song set. On the record, “Bourbon” is produced with a funky, old-school, Prince-like drum track, but here, a steady drum beat grounds the hypnotic song just as well, if not better. Best of all, “Bourbon” gets a welcome bonus at the Tiny Desk: a guest rap by Saba, a charismatic rising star and frequent Chance The Rapper collaborator.
The musicians for this set are: Gallant (vocals); Wes Switzer (bass); Dani Ivory (keys, vocals); Dylan Jones (guitar); A.J. Novak (percussion); featuring guest rapper Saba in “Bourbon.
I don’t really like R&B all that much, but I can certainly appreciate a great voice and man does Gallant have one. On “Bourbon”his falsetto is really really impressive. And Saba has an incredibly fast flow. And on “Skipping Stones,” again, he has such an amazing falsetto. I don’t know what the recorded version’s female singer sounds like, but while Dani Ivory does a fine job, she really can’t compete with him. And on “Weight In Gold” he hits some amazing high notes with ease.
[READ: February 21, 2017] “Dona Nobis Pacem” (means grant us peace)
This story has an epigram from Plato’s Republic in which someone asks Sophocles about his love life, if he can still make love to a woman. Sophocles replies: “Shush man, I am very happy to have escaped from that–as happy as a slave who has escaped from an insane and heartless master.”
The title of the story “Dona Nobis Pacem” means “grant us peace.”
This story is written as an address from a sixty-two year old divorced professor of philosophy to a 58-year-old widowed member of the faculty. They have known each other for many years. Her husband died two years ago and since then the two of them have holidayed togetehr a few times. Their vacations have been primarily to Italy or the Alps or, as in the current vacation, to the Aegean shore of Turkey and the Greek Islands.
They often shared a room–their vacations were amicable and pleasant.
And then in Bergama, their hotel had but one bed. They reluctantly agreed to share the bed. And that’s when things changed.
At least for him. He lay awake all night feeling the heat of her body, the weight of her in the bed, her proximity. He wondered if she felt it too. But the next day when the hotelier said he had a free twin room, she took it quickly.
And then he wondered–did he blow it by not saying or doing anything? Did she think he wasn’t interested? Did she lay awake like he did afraid to move? Was she happy he did nothing or did she want him to and was disappointed that he didn’t.
The rest of their story is spent in his head as he goes back and forth about this. He doesn’t even really pay attention to the rest of their trip. He just wonders if they will have another evening sharing a bed. And then finally they do. All he can manage to do is put his hand on her hip as the sun comes through the window. She doesn’t react.
Is that good or bad? He doesn’t know and he becomes sullen and cranky.
And that is pretty much the whole story–a tale of a guy trying to have sex with someone.

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