The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

Fun Funeral Rite

Amanda Palmer at the Paradise, November 24, 2008
By DANIEL BROCKMAN  |  December 2, 2008

IMG_9690INSIDE.jpg
MOURNER: Amanda waked herself, complete with "Abide in Me," the auctioning off of "personal
effects," and "Living on a Prayer."

Now it can be revealed: Amanda Palmer has a stage mom. In the midst of a long-winded multi-song introduction to the set proper, Ms. Palmer (the mom, not the solo Dresden Doll) offered a eulogy (in keeping with the theme of Amanda's solo debut, Who Killed Amanda Palmer), expounding to a capacity audience at the Paradise on the topic of her daughter's piano tutelage — Amanda began playing at age two and a half and had mastered "Chopsticks" by the age of four. Sheet music was handed out as Mama Palmer led the crowd through the hymn "Abide in Me." Eventually Ms. Palmer's daughter emerged through the crowd in a spectral white veil and was hoisted by her dancers into the air and up on stage. And then the full-on Amanda worship commenced, the crowd shrieking as she sat alone at the spotlit Kurzweil center stage and began pounding away the frenetic piano chug of solo-album highlight "Astronaut."

The thing about Amanda Palmer is that everything you think about her is probably true. Yes, she's a talented, unique artist capable of whipping her faithful into a frenzy of confessional and emotional catharsis. Yes, she's self-indulgent, not above pandering to her fans, all the better to bask in unconditional adulation. And for an artist as collaborative as Palmer, it's striking how much of her music is just her, alone. Even though she and Dresden Dolls drummer Brian Viglione have been taking a break from each other, you might expect to see her fronting a crack back-up band at this point in her solo career, but she seems bent on going it alone, for better and worse.

The show was frequently interrupted by non-musical tomfoolery, and that was a welcome respite from the intense downer-ism of her material (like the school-shooting ballad "Strength Through Music," and the Dresden Dolls child-abduction ditty "Slide"). But the nadir was reached when Amanda and her crew auctioned off some tour merch from the stage between songs, fetching almost $800 for a guitar from some rube in the audience. Fortunately for Palmer, this audience was willing to accept almost anything that happened on stage as some kind of artistic personal statement. If the selling of one's belongings is an appropriate act for the recently departed, then the sing-songy blow-through of Bon Jovi's "Living on a Prayer" closed the night like the end of a particularly boozy wake.

Related: Eat it, High School Musical!, Review: Amanda Palmer and Evelyn Evelyn at the House of Blues, Evelyn Evelyn | Evelyn Evelyn, More more >
  Topics: Live Reviews , Dresden Dolls, Auctions, Brian Viglione,  More more >
| More

[ 05/30 ]   Lindsey Buckingham  @ Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel
[ 05/30 ]   "2012 RISD Graduate Thesis Exhibition"  @ Rhode Island Convention Center
[ 05/30 ]   "TechnoCraft: Where High Tech Meets Handmade,"  @ Jamestown Arts Center
ARTICLES BY DANIEL BROCKMAN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   THE CULT SURVIVES ROCK'S HIGHS AND LOWS  |  May 29, 2012
    There is a difference between an unknown musical artist and a superstar, and that difference isn't necessarily musical — it's mythological.
  •   RAZORMAZE ADDS FOCUS TO THEIR THRASH  |  May 15, 2012
    For a kind-of goofy metal dude, Alex Citrone is pretty serious — especially when he talks metal, and especially when he's talking about his band, Boston shred titans Razormaze.
  •   ZAMBRI | HOUSE OF BAASA  |  May 15, 2012
    For those of us of a certain age who remember when school dances had a strict four-fast-songs-then-one-slow-one policy, the memory of bouncing around to "Let's Hear It for the Boy" with the anticipation of "One More Night" or "Take My Breath Away" still makes our palms sweat with hormonal anxiety.
  •   CONFRONTING THE SWEDISH GLOOM OF IN SOLITUDE  |  May 08, 2012
    When I am finally able to get through to the cell phone of In Solitude's tour manager, they have emerged from a massive dust cloud, their metal-mobile finding civilization after a long spell traversing the deserts of Arizona with no idea where they are going.
  •   [R.I.P.] ADAM YAUCH AND THE BEASTIE BOYS  |  May 08, 2012
    ADAM YAUCH, a/k/a MCA, was likely inspired to pen those words, that appear in a tossed off couplet in the middle of what would wind up being one of the band’s final singles, by his immersion in the world of illness.

 See all articles by: DANIEL BROCKMAN



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group