
Antony And The Johnsons - You Stand Above Me (1:36)
Antony And The Johnsons - The Lake (4:48)
Antony And The Johnsons - Cripple And The Starfish (4:51)
Current 93 - Judas As Black Moth (1:49)
Current 93 - Sleep Has His House (2:54)
Current 93 - Walking Like Shadow (3:27)
Ce disque ne compte pas tant pour les performances de Current 93, que celles d'Antony. Le court "You Stand Above Me" contient toute la mélancholie que l'on peut en attendre. C'est ensuite la magnifique adaptation de "The Lake", texte d'Edgar Allan Poe, qui a lui seul vaut qu'on achète ce disque puis suit le tendre "Cripple and the Starfish".
Autant Antony n'avait jamais édité de live, autant Current 93 en a pléthore et nous préférerons aller chercher ailleurs... (bientôt...vous dis-je). Judas As Black Moth et Sleep Has His House sont réduits à leur plus simple expression.... c'est finalement "Walking Like Shadow", composé par David Tibet et Steven Stapleton de Nurse With Wound sur le "Bright Yellow Moon" (bientôt.... si y'a des réclamations....), qui sonne le plus juste.
While several Current Ninety Three live outings have been recorded and in due time released, Antony and the Johnsons five years of performances have not seen the same light of day. Perhaps that and the (at the time) upcoming Antony/C93 shows in Portugal and San Francisco were reasons for Durtro to present this EP length disc featuring three tracks apiece from last April's shows. Antony is at the piano, accompanied by Johnson Maxim Moston on violin. "You Stand Above Me" is only one minute and thirty-six seconds but contains all the melancholy and drama one would expect. Antony bellows "while eternity cycles wildly, inside me," over plaintive piano notes, the vibrato of his powerful soprano nestling into every crevice of my mind, body and soul. Antony naturally adapts Edgar Allan Poe's lovely 1827 poem "The Lake" to song, a much more fitting tribute than Lou Reed's ill-advised 'The Raven' (excepting Antony's minimal rendition of Reed's "Perfect Day"). What follows is the tender "Cripple and the Starfish," and what sounds like a well deserved standing ovation. For C93's songs, David Tibet is accompanied by usual suspects Maja Elliott on piano and Michael Cashmore on guitar. "Walking Like Shadow," from C93 and Nurse With Wound's 'Bright Yellow Moon' is musically true. Ditto the brief version of "Judas as Black Moth" from 'Soft Black Stars' which also benefits from additional lyrics, "in the middle of the night as the cats cry in the street, and the scent of flowers is heavy in your hair, the car sweeps by with a murdered child, the car sweeps by with a violated girl". The mammoth title track from 'Sleep Has His House' is reduced to just the main lyrical passage here, the piano and Tibet's voice rising to a fever pitch as he breathlessly chokes on emotion in remembrance of his father. It is magnificent. Too bad there's only three songs each. I'd happily pay more for more. Maybe, just maybe, a future show will come closer to me than 1300 miles away.
Mark Weddle, Brainwashed
Sunday, 09 February 2003
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