Toronto Star

NICK CAVE ON TOP

Australian raconteur and band mesmerize audience,

- NICK KREWEN SPECIAL TO THE STAR

Eons ago, when this concert was announced and the venue was still known as the Air Canada Centre, there was speculatio­n that Nick Cave and his Bad Seeds might have overreache­d by booking an arena show.

After all, despite being around since the early 1980s and releasing 16 albums, the 61-yearyoung Australian raconteur with a silver tongue for vivid storybook prose is still very distant from what you would call a household name.

The attendance at Sunday night’s Scotiabank Arena spectacle reflected that reality: there were scores of empty seats and the venue’s upper tier was covered, with a guesstimat­ed 7,500 to 9,000 Nick Cave diehards shelling out to see their hero in action.

However, is the glass halfempty or half-full? It can be argued there were more people in attendance than at Cave’s last two-night appearance at Massey Hall. So let’s recognize it for what it is: progress.

Chances are, those who did attend this final stop of Cave’s Skeleton Tree tour weren’t concerned with how many bodies were occupying the building. They were continuall­y awed by the mesmerizin­g man who, with a voice as recognizab­ly deep and sonorous as the Doors’ Jim Morrison or the late Leonard Cohen, could transform a cavernous sports hangar into the engaging and intimate pulpit upon which his career was built.

Certainly, the flawless sound was part of the equation: for two-and-a-half hours, every syllable, statement and sound was conveyed with ringing clarity to the point where the audience actually and respectful­ly listened — you heard no buzz of conversati­on overlappin­g the music, as is too often the case at arena shows.

There were also the fabulous Bad Seeds, led by multi-instrument­alist Warren Ellis, an incredibly tight sextet of seemingly ragtag musicians who played with unobtrusiv­e serenity for No More Shall We Part’s “God Is in the House” one moment and then exploded into a heated, euphoric clamour during an extended and strenuous workout of “From Her To Eter- nity” the next.

Of course, the ringleader of this commotion is the insanely charismati­c Cave, whose evangelica­l zeal doesn’t deter one iota from the potential confines of the stage from which he’s pontificat­ing.

The spacious stage allowed him to dance, jump, kick, kneel, provoke numerous band members and cushion intermitte­nt hurls of his microphone, and a mini-catwalk echoing its width a few feet in front allowed Cave to confront his audience.

He frequently leapt back and forth between the two, occasional­ly returning to the piano to bang out a few bars on the keyboard before returning to his hosting duties.

Cave is literally an “in-yourface” performer and, from the very first notes of the Skeleton Tree opener “Jesus Alone,” he was on the platform grabbing outstretch­ed hands and eliminatin­g the barrier between singer and patron.

He’s a charmingly charismati­c entertaine­r who fearlessly fixates on an individual but somehow transmutes that personal moment into a universal experience for those watching from afar.

The trust that Cave builds with his followers is truly something to behold: he often leans into his crowd to the point where he’s practicall­y bodysurfin­g on them, and there was more than one occasion where his follower held him aloft by his legs or allowed him to stand on their shoulders as he delivered a rambunctio­us “Red Right Hand” or a dynamic “Tupelo.”

Cave is also a wanderer, making his way up to the12th row in the stands seat by seat as he serenaded shocked concertgoe­rs with “Higgs Boson Blues,” gesturing for the surroundin­g fans to move as close as humanly possible before temporaril­y halting the song for comic relief.

“I’m not sure what the expletive I’m doing up here,” he joked. “Getting back down is the challenge.”

Later in the show he strolled to a mini-square that doubled as a camera station for “The Weeping Song,” repeating his commands of “C’mon, c’mon, c’mon, c’mon” and beckoning with his fingers to draw his audience closer before returning to the main stage and inviting 30 or 40 more to join him for the one-two pre-encore whammy of “Stagger Lee” and “Push the Sky Away.”

If there was a negative, it was for those confined to the stands close to the front of the stage, as side spotlights were so blinding they obscured Cave’s presence on the mini-catwalk.

But that only affected a few hundred people: the rest were treated to a sublime concert by a compelling performer who really needs to be on your bucket list.

There really is no other act on the plateau occupied by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.

About 7,500 to 9,000 Nick Cave fans saw him live in action during the final stop of the Skeleton Tree tour

 ??  ??
 ?? GUS STEWART REDFERNS ?? Nick Cave, seen performing in London, England, this year, is a charmingly charismati­c entertaine­r, Nick Krewen writes.
GUS STEWART REDFERNS Nick Cave, seen performing in London, England, this year, is a charmingly charismati­c entertaine­r, Nick Krewen writes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada