Jen Cloher
The Thin White Ukes
(supporting Robert Forster)
Thornbury Theatre
Friday 27 November 2015
$35
Go Betweens
I was with my friend John for a sold
out Robert Forster gig at The Thornbury Theatre. We’d arrived in time for the
support act, Jen Cloher whose most recent album, In Blood Memory, is startlingly good. I say ‘startlingly’ because
it represents a stark change in direction for her.
Her previous albums; ‘Dead Wood
Falls’ and ‘Hidden Hands’, tended to the folky singer-songwriter school, whereas
In Blood Memory has a tougher, minimalist
rock sound that suits her laconic delivery and emboldens the material. I had
seen her perform live only once, just a month or so previous, as part of the
Melbourne Festival’s tribute to Patti Smith’s Horses album, so I was keen to hear her playing her own material,
especially given I was going to be there anyway.
The Thin White Ukes
As we entered the Thin White Ukes
were playing. They came more or less as advertised – a woman and two men
playing David Bowie songs on ukuleles. The only question mark might be the
relative thinness of one of the men, but relative to Bowie, no one is thin, so
to criticise them on this basis would just be quibbling. They worked through a
selection of Bowie classics – The Man Who
Sold The World, Starman, Golden Years and Ashes to Ashes with surprising conviction, even élan. The minimal
accompaniment highlighted the inherent musicality of the songs.
They even embarked on Station to Station, the song that
contains the eponymous reference to ‘the return of the thin white duke’, but
rather than giving us the full 10 minute feedback drenched sonic extravaganzas,
complete with steam train noises, they morphed it into the somewhat more sing-a-longable
Let’s Dance. John was wanting to
shout out for Art Decade or Warszawa, a couple of Bowie and Eno’s
brooding electronic instrumental experiments from Low, but was only prevented from doing do out of concern they might
actually attempt them.
It was refreshing to hear Bowie
played with such a sense of fun. These were among the most refreshing Bowie
covers I’d heard since Seu Jorge popped up in The Life Aquatic singing Rebel
Rebel in Portugese.
Jen Cloher
I was a little bit disappointed that
Jen Cloher played a solo acoustic guitar set without her band, but I suppose she
was the support act for this gig, so you can understand why the stage crew only
wanted to set up one set of amps and one drum kit. Besides the bulk of her band
were probably in Sydney with Courtney Barnett at the ARIAs.
Nevertheless she gave an exuberant performance.
She opened with one of her early songs, Rain,
and then played Mount Beauty, the
opening track from In Blood Memory, which
she said was about a stalker – having one or being one I’m not sure.
Cloher was a warm and generous
performer, giving credit to those who have inspired her, including Robert
Forster, and she played a Gillian Welch song to celebrate the forthcoming tour
by Welch and Dave Rawlings. She didn’t mention it as such, but her jet black
hair style was also a sort of tribute to either Joan Jet or Noel Fielding.
She introduced songs with just enough
context, telling us that Mother’s Desk
is about the feeling of emptiness she felt upon the death of her mother.
The rest of the set featured songs
from In Blood Memory, including Kamikaze Origami and David Bowie Eyes, just to continue the
theme established by the Ukes. She invited The Thin White Ukes to join her on
stage to perform Needle in the Hay,
that she introduced as a split 7-inch single with “a young up and coming
performer called Courtney Barnett who you might hear of one day.” Given that
Barnett, Cloher’s partner, had swept the previous night’s ARIA awards, her
comment received the requisite titter from the audience.
The set concluded with a great
version of Name In Lights, and even
though it was Robert Forster’s name in lights on this occasion, Cloher’s name glowed
faintly alongside it. Between sets we went and said hello at the merch stand
and John bought a copy of In Blood Memory.
Set list
Rain
Mount Beauty
Gillian Welch cover
Mother’s desk
David Bowie Eyes
Kamikaze Origami
Needle in the Hay
Name in Lights
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