Arts & Entertainment
David Bromberg: Triple Threat Who Beat the Mets
David Bromberg's Big Band returns for a third time to Landmark - and sells out again
Before he had even struck a note, David Bromberg had achieved two remarkable non-goals. First, he sold out his third strong appearance at Landmark. Second, he achieved this first milestone on an evening when the local major league baseball team, the Mets, were appearing in game 4 of the World Series a short 14 miles away at Citifield.
The expression “loyal fan base” would be an understatement where Bromberg’s following is concerned. Among those in attendance was Gary Giuntini from Bellerose who estimated that he had seen David Bromberg perform a dozen times. Giuntini was likely not the only frequent fan on this evening, because the audience for this show was not only enthusiastic, it was well versed in the entire Bromberg catalog. That catalog spans the early 70’s until the present.
Jukebox Jam
A unique mix of tunes is central to a Bromberg Big Band brew. The Big Band part of the evening began with “Before I Grow Old,” and a rousing bar-band rendition “I Love my Whiskey - Sloppy Drunk,” the latter giving Bromberg a chance to solo with some electric slide. A jazz-inflected trumpet solo was the highlight of “Eyesight to the Blind,” but that tune and “The Joke’s on Me” surfaced Bromberg’s feigned lowbrow dialect. “Send me to the ‘Lectric Chair” was an audience favorite that featured perfect “girl” backup vocals and memorable brass solos: trombone first, then trumpet with mute -- both with a grinning Bromberg accompaniment throughout.
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“The Holdup” was a perfect excuse to offer up lines like “Wealth is the disease and I am the cure,” more of Bromberg’s velvet hammer. That hammer brings opinion, but does little damage. Bromberg lyrics elevate a polished coarseness to a sort of pub savvy. Proof: “Where other men have gone insane, I’m only slightly mad,” he sings in “Strongest Man Alive,” his version of an English drinking song. Because, it might be said, “I alone live on while all around my friends and loved ones die.”
As on previous occasions, the evening featured a skillful solo interlude from guitarist Mark Cosgrove, gentle soapbox for a flatpicking style he attributes to the legendary innovator Clarence White. Cosgrove, Bromberg and Grower then teamed for an instrumental flat-picking acoustic guitar trio, also rare for this venue, followed by a Bromberg guitar solo.
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There was more. For instance, the improv frame “Blues in the Key of C” served its purpose well, with outstanding solos by Payne and Coswell, ending with its multilingual alliterative paroxysms of “goodbye.” The band also performed the “Kaatskill Serenade” and covered Sam Cooke’s “Don’t Know Much About History,” the lyrics for which Bromberg could well have penned himself.
What Bromberg called his “Swamp Gas Brass” section was a delicious edition to the Bromberg Bouillon. Self-serving suggestion: Do bring them back for the next sell-out performance in this town.
Fred Gillen’s Hudson River Hope and Harmony
Opening for Bromberg was Peekskill-based Fred Gillen Jr (@FredGillenJr). If you’d had a difficult day of drudgery or detail, Gillen was the perfect antidote. With a demeanor that blended earnestness with heartfelt respect for his folk roots, he offered a suite of classic and original tunes that hewed closely to the genre suggested by his bumper-sticker-emblazoned steel string guitar. Gillen began that suite with the Elizabeth Cotten classic “Freight Train,” which he admitted he was quite obsessed with. The tune was no doubt familiar to the Port Washington audience, who had previously heard it performed by the hometown Front Porch Players, and more enjoyable singalongs were to come.
How Big a Band
The David Bromberg Big Band was, on this occasion, reliably big. He brought nine musicians with him to Port Washington, and for most of the evening, they were pleasingly busy. The night’s lineup included:
- Mark Cosgrove (guitar, mandolin, vocals)
- Nate Grower (violin, mandolin, guitar)
- Butch Amiot (bass, vocals)
- Josh Kanusky (drums, vocals)
- Birch Johnson (trombone)
- John Payne (sax, clarinet, penny-whistle)
- Peter Ecklund (trumpet; he’s credited on this 1978 program)
- Nancy Josephson (vocals + Bromberg moral support)
- Kathleen Weber (vocals)
So they’re big, but what gives an audience almost as much pleasure as the full sound of all those instruments and voices is the big smile on Bromberg’s face during alternating solos. The man not only relishes the talent he’s gathered; he is its biggest fan.
Next Up
The 2015 Landmark Spotlight Gala will be held on Saturday November 7 at 7PM, featuring a performance by Patina MIller.
Read the complete version of this review at DarkViolin.com.
Image credit: the artist and Landmark.
