BREVIEW: Stewart Lee – Content Provider @ Symphony Hall 27.03.17

Words by Helen Knott / Pics by Idil Sukan

There aren’t too many comedians who would structure a stand-up show around a 19th Century painting. You can’t imagine Michael McIntrye or Russell Howard doing it. But then Stewart Lee isn’t like most comedians.

The painting in question is Wanderer above the Sea of Fog, by the German Romantic artist Caspar Friedrich. It depicts the back of a mysterious figure looking out across a hazy landscape. Lee refers to it throughout his new show, Content Provider, and seeks to explore the role of the individual in a “digitised free market society”.

Wanting a show he can tour until mid 2017, the aim was to avoid the kind of current affairs-related material that quickly dates. Some things are impossible to ignore though, and each half starts with a short, almost identical routine: in the first half about the horrors of waking up after the Brexit vote, and in the second about the horrors of waking up after the election of Donald Trump. It’s a simple and effective method of drawing parallels between the issues that led to the two events.

And if I hadn’t spotted that Stewart Lee was using this device as a neat comedic method, it’s okay, because he’s more than happy to point it out; Lee is well known for explaining the mechanics behind his jokes, especially if part of the audience isn’t finding something funny enough. In truth, Lee probably explains his jokes too much in a disjointed first half and consequently things drag a little.

Still, he pulls out some great lines along the way. He professes to be annoyed to be appearing at Symphony Hall for two nights – there are too many people in the audience who don’t get it. He blames the venue’s efficient marketing campaign and his fans bringing their clueless friends for the odd flat reaction to a joke. Some seats are empty, but he assures us that they are sold. He’s popular enough for touts to snap up tickets, but not popular enough for people to buy them at inflated prices. This suits him: “That’s my dream, the whole room sold out and empty”.

Of course, we don’t believe him. As an audience member at a Stewart Lee gig you feel like you’re there as much for his entertainment as he is there for yours. Although it’s a heavily scripted show, Lee seems to test new things out every night to amuse himself. Does a longer pause, a different noun, a different inflection, make a joke funnier? This might seem unlikely, but anyone who has read his 2011 book How I Escaped My Certain Fate, in which he analyses three of his own sets using comprehensive footnotes, will understand just how considered every facet of his performance is.

And what a performance. The fictionalised version of himself he plays on stage is clever, smug, arrogant, hypocritical, patronising, pompous, vain, and as wonderfully rounded as any comedy character going. Indeed, as Stewart Lee ages the character just makes more and more sense; of course this cantankerous, middle-aged man hates the under 40s and doesn’t understand Games of Thrones. In one skit he tries to appear relevant by knowing who the “rap singer” FKA Twigs is, but as the story unfolds and becomes more and more preposterous it becomes clear he thinks she’s a man from Gloucestershire.

The second half is much tighter and well paced than the first, and is all the more enjoyable for it. Lee starts to warm on his theme – exploring the idea that the digital world has fragmented communities and turned human interactions into marketplace transactions. He looks back to a time when all of the information, music, products and thrills you could wish for weren’t just a click away. You actually had to work for them and because of this they meant more.

Stewart Lee is self-aware enough to know that he’s as much a part of the problem he’s examining as the audience. After all, he’s a content provider himself, both in his roles as a performer and a column writer for The Guardian. He criticises the selfie culture, but his onstage persona isn’t immune to vanities of his own, mentioning his critical acclaim a number of times. He talks about the lengths he goes to in order to commodify his own work into profitable DVDs.

But his stand-up shows are not easy to mindlessly consume. To get the most out of a Stewart Lee set you need to listen carefully and attentively. As he jokes, “I hope that you’ve done the reading”. You have to make your own links, apply your knowledge of current affairs; in short, you have to think.

And whilst there may not be huge shared cultural moments anymore, like when half of the UK population watched Morecambe and Wise on TV in the 1970s, we did all share something watching a live comedy gig together tonight. Lee’s final monologue is poetic, memorable and leaves you with much to mull over. I go away wanting to be a bit more like the man in Friedrich’s painting, looking out at the world, instead of down at my little section of it.

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For more on Stewart Lee, visit www.stewartlee.co.uk

For more from the Town Hall and Symphony Hall, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.thsh.co.uk

BPREVIEW: Stewart Lee – Content Provider @ Symphony Hall 27&28.03.17

BPREVIEW: Stewart Lee - Content Provider @ Symphony Hall 27&28.03.17 / Idil Sukan

Words by Helen Knott / Pics by Idil Sukan

On Monday 27th and Tuesday 28th March, Stewart Lee brings his new show, Content Provider, to the Symphony Hall.

Doors open at 7.30pm, with tickets priced at £25 (including £3 booking fee). For direct gig info, including full venue details and online ticket sales, click here.

After four critically acclaimed series, the BBC finally wielded its axe and killed off Stewart Lee’s Comedy Vehicle. If you never saw it, Comedy Vehicle featured a half hour Stewart Lee stand-up routine, interspersed by interview segments of Lee examining his performance, joke writing abilities and career. It was a clever, insightful and funny show, but it’s hard to imagine it had mass-market appeal.

Anyway, it’s gone now and Stewart Lee had some unexpected time on his hands. The result was Content Provider, an anthology of selected short prose from the columns he writes for The Observer ‘every time that David Mitchell was away’First published by Faber & Faber in July 2016, Lee is now taking Content Provider out on an 18 month UK tour as his new stand up show.

This is Stewart Lee’s first full-length show since 2011’s Carpet Remnant World, with his most recent tours testing out 25 minute segments of material for his TV work. As such, the axing of his BBC show is perhaps a blessing in disguise for Lee fans: a full-length show is arguably a better channel for his carefully constructed, reflective and analytical comedy.

As Stewart Lee is a fully paid up member of the metropolitan liberal elite, it’s safe to expect Content Provider will contain left-leaning attacks on the Tories, Trump and Brexit. However with the need to keep the show topical for a long 18-month stint, Lee‘s focus will also be on consumerism, narcissism and their role in today’s society. Hopefully at the Symphony Hall, as a local boy made good, there may be some Birmingham jokes too (Lee was born in Shropshire before growing up in Solihull).

But with Stewart Lee there’s little middle ground – most people either think Lee’s the best stand-up comedian in the country, or can’t stand his long, repetitive speeches and smarmy persona. And for all his five star reviews, Dominic Cavendish (Daily Telegraph) made public his decision to walk out of a Stewart Lee gig in 2013:

‘If Lee had a shred of interest or insight into the working lives of other people, he’d realise that those who give up an evening at the end of a week to see him deserve his thanks not his toxic scorn.’

Of course, you could argue that Cavendish missed the point; Lee is playing a character, he’s pretending to be scornful to be funny, and he’s pushing the confines of comedy as far as he can. But it can undoubtedly get under your skin if you don’t take it for what it is. And with all the bad reviews and negative social media comments that Lee posts on his own website, I don’t think that he would want it any other way.

Stewart Lee’s Comedy Vehicle Series 4 – ‘Telegraph Review’

Stewart Lee performs at the Birmingham Town Hall on Monday 27th & Tuesday 28th March. For direct gig info and online tickets sales, click here.

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For more on Stewart Lee, visit www.stewartlee.co.uk

For more from the Town Hall and Symphony Hall, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.thsh.co.uk

BREVIEW: There Will Be Blood: Live @ Symphony Hall 05.02.17

BPREVIEW: There Will Be Blood @ Symphony Hall 05.02.17

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Words by Billy Beale

Many rock stars have had a turn scoring films. Mark Knopfler scored The Princess Bride, Trent Reznor worked on The Social Network and Johnny Marr contributed to his mate Hans Zimmer’s score for The Amazing Spider-Man 2. Much like Radiohead in the world of pop music, Jonny Greenwood’s music for There Will Be Blood is distinctive and there is nothing else quite like it.Birmingham Review

Performed by the London Contemporary Orchestra (LCO), There Will Be Blood: Live is the presentation of both film and score – with Greenwood’s soundtrack played live by the LCO throughout the screening. Touring only four venues in the UK, There Will Be Blood: Live came to the Symphony Hall for one special production.

Daniel Plainview (Daniel Day-Lewis) is, in his own words “an oil man” and the film follows his rise from a digger with a silver nugget to a prolific oil baron and the rivalry he faces with small town preacher Eli Sunday (Paul Dano). Day-Lewis takes the focus from the music to command a scene, his voice gruff yet encouraging as opposed to Dano’s shrill simper.

As the film opens there is a gentle whisper of strings that swell and quickly drop, as more strings rise up to meet them, everything falling in and out of discord more like a sweeping synthesizer pad than acoustic strings. It is a brief and unsettling overture of a motif that recurs throughout the film, often a precursor to some violent accident. The sound effects act as punctuation to the music, minutes of eerie legato dissonance brought to an abrupt stop as something falls down a well; gunshot, explosion, spurt of blood. Music is the tension, the sound or dialogue is the release.

‘Open Spaces’ (as it’s called on the album) is a piece that, in context of the films setting, evokes Morricone and Westerns through a mere three notes. The entire soundtrack manages to sound period-appropriate despite much of it being modern, avant-garde orchestral compositions. ‘Convergence’ is the basis of perhaps the most neo-classical piece of music in the film (an altered version is used in TWBB, the original is included on Greenwood’s Bodysong soundtrack) but it isn’t at all incongruous. It’s a polyphonic percussive cacophony that falls in and out of syncopation with itself almost at random. On screen, Plainview and his workers rush to cap an oil well as an inferno burns through the night. This intense and urgent sequence is perhaps the most memorable part of the evening.

As the credits begin to roll, they are accompanied by the third movement of Brahms’ ‘Violin Concerto in D’, which acts as a sort of victory theme for Plainview besting Eli Sunday (it also appears earlier in the film). It’s an incredibly energetic and technically demanding violin solo, the beauty and delicacy of the performance contrasting the brutal harshness of the film and its final scene. Hours of sparse atonality with occasional oases of melody explode in a rondo.

Symphony Hall / Craig HolmesUnlike a lot of film scores, There Will Be Blood features a mixture of compositions Greenwood had already put out (such as excerpts from his ‘Popcorn Superhet Receiver’), pieces written by Greenwood specifically for the score, plus pieces from Brahms and Arvo Pärt. But like the all-classical soundtrack to 2001: A Space Odyssey, the music and film are perfectly consonant and feel made for each other, even if they are not.

Birmingham Review has previously discussed the place of film scores in the world of contemporary orchestral music – with opinion pieces from both Sam James and Ed King. Synergy is perhaps why Greenwood’s There Will Be Blood soundtrack is so successful and avoids sounding like a bloated, dull Hans Zimmer-esque cookie-cutter score.

Scores like Inception and Batman v Superman are perfect for those films – dull nonsense that try to seem larger and cleverer than they really are. A swell of brass, staccato strings, a foghorn blow for the trailer edit; it’s the soundtrack du jour for blockbusters. You could talk about all music in reductive terms like this but it would seem less apt if I said it about Star Wars or Danny Elfman’s Batman theme.

But then, these are all supersized, typical Hollywood movies that aren’t really in the same weight class as There Will Be Blood which, although it won Oscars for Best Actor and Cinematography, doesn’t seem to be courting awards with its soundtrack. Its sole purpose is to accompany, inform and emphasise the film.

For more on There Will Be Blood: Live, visit www.lcorchestra.co.uk/will-blood-live-uk-tour

For more on the London Contemporary Orchestra, visit www.lcorchestra.co.uk

For more from both the Town & Symphony Halls. including full event programmes and online ticket sales, visit www.thsh.co.uk

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BPREVIEW: There Will Be Blood: Live @ Symphony Hall 05.02.17

BPREVIEW: There Will Be Blood: Live @ Symphony Hall 05.02.17

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Words by Ed King

On Sunday 4th February, There Will Be Blood:Live gets a special screening at the Symphony Hall – with the London Contemporary Orchestra (LCO) playing the film’s score live. Clue’s in the title.Birmingham Preview

Conducting the LCO will be founder Hugh Brunt, featuring Cybthis Millar on Ondes Martenot, Galya Bisengalieva on violin and Oliver Coates on cello. Doors open at 7pm, with tickets priced between £48-28. For direct event info, including venue details and online ticket sales, click here.

Paul Thomas Anderson’s Oscar-winning film was another feather in the increasingly distinguished hats of both film maker and film star, with Daniel Day Lewis becoming an ambitious oil and family man in the way that only he does. And before you throw Raging Bull at me, I’m not sure even DeNiro could have pulled of Christy Brown.

But it was a score (pun intended) for Jonny Greenwood too, who left his despondent Oxford pals alone to write an orchestral accompaniment to the film. And he’s not the first well known modern musician to jump from guitar to something a little more… with both Rufus Wainwright and Bill Ryder-Jones trading their mainstream endeavours for music more suited to the Symphony Hall.

It also taps into a running conversation we’ve been having at Birmingham Review – namely, my kickstarting whinge about contemporary classical composers cashing in only at the box office. I had Hans Zimmer in mind when I put finger to keyboard, following his recent Lion King love in at the Barclaycard Arena last April, but to get the full starter for ten read my OPINION: Michael Nyman Syndrome.

Then read Sam James’ OPINION: Contemporary music is bigger, broader and weirder than you thought – from a man who practices what he preaches and performs what he practices. Now we hand the baton to Billy Beale, who will be going to There Will Be Blood: Live for a Birmingham Review and to throw some  more constructive fuel onto this incendiary conversation (people really love The Lion King…). You can always join into – just email you two cents to ed@birminghamreview.net

Or you could just go and see the show, which Rob Hastings (The Independent) called “Sparse and at times just plain peculiar – but in a brilliantly original way. It’s magnificent.” And there’s a trailer below if you’ve had enough words for one day.

There Will Be Blood: Live

There Will Be Blood: Live comes to the Symphony Hall on Sunday 4th February – with the film screened to live accompaniment from the London Contemporary Orchestra . For direct event info, including venue details an online ticket sales, click here.  

For more on the London Contemporary Orchestra, visit www.lcorchestra.co.uk

For more from both the Town & Symphony Halls. including full event programmes and online ticket sales, visit www.thsh.co.uk

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BPREVIEW: Elgar’s Cello Concerto – Bergen Philharmonic, with Edward Gardner and Truls Mørk.

BPREVIEW: Elgar’s Cello Concerto – Bergen Philharmonic, with Edward Gardner and Truls Mørk / Benjamin Ealovega

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Words by Ed King / Pic by Benjamin Ealovega

On Tuesday 17th January, the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra performs at the Symphony Hall – presenting Elgar’s Cello Concerto, Walton’s First Symphony and Peer Gynt Suite No1. The concert will be conducted by Edward Gardner (OBE) with Truls Mørk playing solo cello.Birmingham Preview

Doors open at 7:30pm, with tickets priced between £53-£12.50. For direct concert information, including venue details and online ticket sales, click here.

Leading the concert is Elgar’s Cello Concerto. Written in the summer after the final ceasefire of the First World War, as the remaining powers were signing the Treaty of Versailles, Elgar’s concerto for cello is both mournful and uplifting.

Opening with an Adagio, a bold lament, the concerto becomes more frenetic as the cello and orchestra spar and mirror. Then with crescendos, cadenzas and almost playful pizzicato chords, the piece lifts itself across its second movement, only to fall, as if in love, into its third. And just as the fate of the world was being decided the fourth movement ends with firm and considered power, as the protagonist leads the orchestra to its resolute conclusion. Considering the time it was both written and first performed, Elgar’s Cello Concerto is an incredibly pertinent composition – one that still holds meaning as we tread the boards of today’s febrile global stage.

Also being performed are Walton’s First Symphony and Peer Gynt Suite No 1 – the later written by Bergen’s celebrated composer, Edvard Grieg, who was conductor of the Bergen Philharmonic from 1880 to 1882.

Playing the solo cello will be Truls Mørk, a Bergen born cellist who has previously toured and performed with the Oslo Philharmonic and London Philharmonic. Mørk has further received five Spellemannprisen awards for his work in Chamber, Orchestral and Classical music, as well as holding a Professorship at the Norwegian Academy of Music.

Conducting the concert will be the Bergen Philharmonic’s Chief Conductor, Edward Gardner, who was the CBSO’s Principal Guest Conductor from September 2010 to July 2015. Arguably the man who saved the English National Opera, after becoming the company’s Music Director in March 2006, Gardner is revered as a talented young conductor – having worked with prolific orchestras and opera companies from across the world. This concert will be Edward Gardner’s Birmingham première with the Bergen Philharmonic.

Edward Gardner introduces the Bergen Philharmonic’s concert at the Symphony Hall 17.01.17

Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra performs at the Symphony Hall on Tuesday 17th January, conducted by Edward Gardner with Truls Mørk playing solo cello. For direct gig info and online tickets sales, visit www.thsh.co.uk/event/bc-bergen-philharmonic-orchestra

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For more on the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, visit www.harmonien.no

For more on Edward Gardener, visit www.askonasholt.co.uk/artists/conductors/edward-gardner

For more Truls Mørk, visit www.nmh.no/en/about_nmh/staff/truls-mork

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For more from both the Town & Symphony Halls, including full event programmes, visit www.thsh.co.uk

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