Randall's Island, New York, June 13 & 14, 1998
"I hope you appreciate the extensive lengths the organizers have gone to make this an appropriate Irish festival," quipped Englishman Richard Thompson during his set on the first day of the Guinness Fleadh (pronounced "flah") festival. "The rain, the mud ... totally authentic."
Indeed, in light of the lightning-related tragedies (and
cancellations) plaguing the Tibetan Freedom Concert in Washington,
D.C., over the same time, all of the rain and mud at the two-day
Irish festival seemed like more atmospheric window dressing than a
downer on the festivities. Although the relatively low turnout
spurred the organizers to invite the first day attendees back for
the second day gratis, in terms of "good crack" (the Irish-ism for
fun), the Fleadh was a smashing success. It rained with a vengeance
throughout the weekend, but the bands (all sixty plus of 'em)
played on schedule, the modest but happy crowds jigged, slam-jigged
and mud-wrestled happily, and the Guinness -- that creamy Irish
nectar with the consistency of, well, mud -- flowed endlessly. And
who the hell wants to guzzle that stuff under a blazing sun?
Of course, all-day, all-weekend festivals aren't everybody's cup of
tea. "I like playing festivals, but I don't like coming to them,"
laughed Welshman Mike Peters, the former lead singer of the Alarm
who turned in a solid set of sharply melodic tunes from a
forthcoming solo album. "I was brought up on punk rock, and
festivals meant hippies." But there was punk aplenty over the
weekend -- courtesy of Patti Smith, a reunited X and Irish expat
rebels Black 47 -- along with a healthy mix of traditional folk,
country, rock and alterna-pop. Along with the expected Gaelic
mainstays (Sinead O'Connor, the Chieftains, Shane MacGowan) were
alt country kings Wilco, Texas honky tonkers Joe Ely and Nanci
Griffith (an Irish favorite), and Lilith Fair veterans Tracy
Chapman and the Indigo Girls. And while there was no act quite big
enough to fill the godfather-sized hole left by the noticeable
absence of Van Morrison (he headlined last year's Fleadh, the
American debut of the festival), there was the small consolation
prize of the better-than-you'd-expect Chumbawamba, whose
fifty-minute set was not forty-five minutes too long, but rather
too short.
On the Irish side, the Chieftains were predictably enjoyable,
although the hipper, more fun Saw Doctors (performing both days)
provided better overall kicks. Even the Corrs, a platinum-selling
family act with three hot-hotter-hottest young sisters, stirred up
highly danceable fiddle and tin-whistle jams, although their vocal
numbers smacked of bad Wilson Phillips flashbacks. O'Connor --
commanding perhaps the largest crowd of the festival -- sported a
shaved head again (sigh) and turned in an engaging performance that
rocked ("The Emperor's New Clothes") and chilled (the Bono-penned
"Thief of Your Heart").
And what would an Irish fest be without a bit of politics? Although
there were no Tibet-style speech intermissions, opinions on Irish
affairs were there if you looked for 'em. While Sharron Corr, the
Corrs' Shania Twain-ish fiddle player, enthused backstage about the
recent Irish peace treaty ("It's wonderful, thank God it went
through..."), other performers seemed less ready to call bygones.
"Are there any Catholics in the audience?" taunted Chumbawamba's
Alice Nutter while getting jiggy with it in a nun's habit. ("Yeah,
it's a regular part [of the act]," the Englishwoman commented
afterwards. "Fuck the Pope.") And in this corner, Black 47:
"Congratulations, Tony Blair ... now get the fuck out!" But nobody
bellows from a soapbox quite like Patti Smith, who waxed on Tibet,
national pride and the folly of buying into any corporate-sponsored
event, particularly when the corporation (Guinness!) peddles a
deadly drug (alcohol!). That one went over like gangbusters.
In the non-Irish category, Wilco and Billy Bragg -- performing
separately and together -- premiered highlights from their
forthcoming album of new tunes to newly discovered Woody Guthrie
lyrics. The best by far was Wilco's "California Stars," although
the band seemed to be playing on autopilot. "I don't have anything
to say to you," shrugged Jeff Tweedy to the crowd. Playing like
they actually gave a shit were Rosanne Cash, Nanci Griffith and Joe
Ely, each of whom turned the second stage/tent into a smoking
honky-tonk. Equally crowd pleasing were the Indigo Girls, who
easily commanded the main stage like the Rolling Stones with
charisma to spare. The biggest chills of the festival, however,
where provided by Chris Smither's intense front porch blues and
Richard Thompson's aching, harrowing "The Ghost of You Walks." As
for the recently reunited X, the Los Angeles punk icons were as
loud as any ten other Fleadh acts put together, firing a barrage of
short, instrumentally sharp barn burners that were a welcome
alternative to Tracy Chapman's earnest-to-a-fault power folk.
Given all the many musical highs of the festival, there was really
only room for two significant complaints. One was the sadistic
scheduling that frequently pitted strong draws like O'Connor and
Griffith, Wilco and Cash, and Ely and Bragg directly against each
other. Catching a bit of each competing act entailed a messy sprint
across the shoe-sucking mudfields from one stage to another. From
the pint-half-full point of view, of course, the three stages
ensured that there was pretty great music happening *somewhere* at
any given time during the weekend, but far too often a great
performance had to be missed in favor of a better one. (Sorry,
Bragg.)
And Shane. Oh, how the mighty have fallen!
"The last time I saw Shane was in Dublin," laughed Ely, who looked
forward to seeing the former Pogue in action. "We get on stage and
leave Shane in the dressing room. We come back, and Shane has drunk
every bit of beer in our trailer. We had a case of beer and two
bottles of wine. We get off stage and come back to our trailer all
thirsty, and Shane's there going (drunken Irish slur), 'Awright
guys, you missed it -- someone came in and drank all the beer! I
tried to stop them -- I called in for the police and everything!'
In one set!"
One laughs, but there was nothing laughable about MacGowan's
performance Sunday night. While his talented band tried to work the
"Shane"-chanting crowd into a spirited frenzy, the man himself just
stood there, less the swaggering Pogue of yore than the corpse in
Weekend at Bernie's, propped lifelessly against the mic
stand. His vocals, mumbled faintly between drags on his fag and
sips from his drink, lacked any sense of spit and vigor. Across the
mudfield at the main stage, the Indigo Girls kicked his tired ass
like a limp rugby ball. Knocked down, MacGowan didn't even attempt
to get up again.
RICHARD SKANSE
(June 16, 1998)
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