The New Zealand Herald

Mad to majestic — a wild night with Nick Cave

- Karl Puschmann t@ critikarl

The vibe was funereal. A barely audible dirge welcomed us into Vector Arena, while shafts of cold, stark white light illuminate­d the stage. The Bad Seeds, all clad in dark suits, walked out sombrely to take up position. As the heavy Gothic chords of

Anthrocene rang out from the grand piano, the centrepiec­e of a crammed stage, Nick Cave, also impeccably dressed in a dark suit, appeared.

He sat hunched over on a little stool, with a music stand to his left, and began: “All the fine winds gone, and this sweet world is so much older.”

He was mostly hushed, oscillatin­g between spoken word and song while gesturing extravagan­tly from his crooked body, like a grizzled old storytelle­r around a campfire.

It was commanding and hypnotic. The piano’s steady march to impending doom punctuated only by rumbling bass and frantic bursts of jazz drumming. Next, the dirty bass fuzz of Jesus

Alone shook the stage while an absolutely ear-piercing synth whine, courtesy of head Bad Seed Warren Ellis, swooped erraticall­y like an injured harpy. It was relentless.

There was little respite to be found in the haunting Magneto, its delicate fragility commanding complete and silent attention from the audience.

Higgs Boson Blues lifted the audience’s spirits as Cave’s lopsided dancing and gangly outstretch­ed arms encouraged others to join him. But things really took off during the

driving horror grooves of From Her to Eternity, which saw Cave going into full manic preacher mode.

He appeared to have platforms set up in front of the security barrier, from which he would leave the stage to lean directly over the audience.

While he whipped himself into a frenzy, hands rose up from the audience to grab at his gesticulat­ing arms. As it turned apocalypti­c Cave grabbed a punter’s hand and didn’t let go for the entirety of the song. Against the backdrop of blood red lighting, the cacophony of the band and Cave’s increasing histrionic­s it resembled an unholy exorcism.

The swampy, chugging Americana of Tupelo kept the blasphemou­s vibes going with the Bad Seeds getting raucous behind Cave’s feral yelps.

It quietened down a bit when Cave sat down at the grand. “If you could sing along with this it’d be ideal because . . . uh, I don’t know . . . it’d just be a good idea,” he said, before leading a subdued sing-along through Into My Arms.

From there the textual sophistica­tion of the impossibly sad Girl in Amber segued into the raw emotionali­ty of I Need You.

This was a wild and brilliant ride of conflictin­g urges that lashed out and sought reassuranc­e all at once.

With his arms outstretch­ed like a grotesque angel Cave intoned, ‘Nothing really matters,” over and over and over . . . When the song switched to vulnerabil­ity, “I need you, I need you” the relief was palpable. It was also short-lived as the final minutes of the song veered haphazardl­y between the two,

While he whipped himself into a frenzy, hands rose up from the audience to grab at his gesticulat­ing arms.

sounding as musically conflicted as the depicted emotions.

The band switched things up with the louche groove of Red Right Hand, which they followed with an uncompromi­sing run through of violent early number, The Mercy Seat.

As the pastoral organ of Distant Sky soothed the wounds a monochrome projection of Danish vocalist Else Torp filled a screen behind the band.

Her angelic voice sent chills down the spine, causing more than a few teary sniffles in the audience. When Cave’s gruff baritone returned for his second verse with the anguished, “but they lied” refrain, it was heartstopp­ing stuff. On record the song’s affecting, live it’s simply brutal.

The gentle, swaying beat of Skeleton Tree was a perfect end to a near perfect set. If they’d called it a night there it still would have been more than enough.

But Cave and his Bad Seeds returned for a five-song encore that, in contrast to the main set, was loose and unpredicta­ble. Cave even began taking requests.

“I don’t really know if people want to hear that anymore,” he replied when someone inevitably shouted Stagger Lee. “We’re all a little old . . .”

“Does anyone not want to hear it?” he asked, only to be answered with a roar of disapprova­l. “Oh . . . okay we’ll crank it out for another f***in’ couple of years then.”

What happened next was worth the price of admission alone. The song’s debauch swagger building into hysterics with the Bad Seeds erupting into a squealing, calamitous inferno as Cave played the devilish tempter, luring you gleefully into the fire.

They left the stage on the stately quiet of Push the Sky Away, which afforded a chance to reflect back on the incredible performanc­e we’d just been treated to.

It’d been intense and powerful, encompassi­ng moments of both clamorous noise and funereal quiet, and even sneaking in the odd moment of humour.

In short, it’d been emotional. Bravo.

 ??  ?? Nick Cave’s entrancing performanc­e segued between fire-and-brimstone preacher and grizzled storytelle­r.
Nick Cave’s entrancing performanc­e segued between fire-and-brimstone preacher and grizzled storytelle­r.
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