Somewhere at the Hell Hilton, Tom Waits sits at a piano strung with wire
fashioned from human souls, all of them his. Waits has spent the last twenty
years writing deep, introspective investigations of the dark side of existence. The
Black Rider provides an excellent forum for Waits' talent.
Long having given up on the prospect of mainstream success, or perhaps
just a desire to stick in the craw of less enlightened types, Waits abandoned
his traditional whiskey-and-a-cigarette blues for a more avante garde style
in the early 80s. Dissonant, vaudevillian arrangements and chaotic woodwinds
befit the otherworldly theme of Waits' latest work.
Based on Gespensterbuch, a piece of German romantic literature
first published in 1811, The Black Rider tells the tale of a clerk
who makes a deal with the devil for the hand of his lady love. In true
romantic fashion, the deal goes awry, lots of blood and gore ensues, and
the clerk ends up another string in Waits' piano.
Here in the mortal realms, the Black Rider project took over four years
to bring to recorded version. The german stage production, directed by
Robert Wilson, wowed audiences across Europe and won Waits praise for his
sarcastic ballads full of traditional melodies and scarred idealism.
Trying to work with the original Black Rider Orchestra was an exercise
in patience. Waits recalls, "They were all from different backgrounds;
some came from a strict classical world. Others were discovered playing
in the train station and my crude way of working took some getting used
to for them and I had to learn a language to communicate with them and
still keep the spontaneity alive."
Unfortunately; time, distance and the need for new piano strings took
its toll and Waits was forced to form a new Black Rider Orchestra stateside.
Fortunately, Waits was able to reenlist the aid of original collaborator
William Burroughs, another crazy old coot appreciated only by the hip and
cool.
Says Waits of the not-so-unlikely pairing, "William Burroughs was
as solid as a metal desk and his text was the branch this bundle would
swing from. His cut up text and open process of finding a language for
this story became a river of words for me to draw from in the lyrics for
the songs. He brought a wisdom and a voice to the piece that is woven throughout.”
The original production and cast of The Black Rider makes its
U.S. debut November 20 at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in Brooklyn. NY.
Here's hoping the show makes it this far west - they're sure to need more
piano wire sooner or later.
published November 01993, In Music Magazine
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