Patricia and I attended the "Troubadour Reunion Tour" in Glendale (Jobing.com Arena) on May 19. Paul Jr. and Nedda also went.
We had previously enjoyed seeing James Taylor in concert back in 2008. We were willing to listen to Carole King - but probably more concerned that she would eat up time better spent listening to JT. In the end, she almost stole the show - tremendous energy. Both were wonderful.
We decided it's highly, highly unlikely that we will ever enjoy a popular music concert as much as this one. Some reasons:
1. They can still perform. Their voices have deteriorated - he's 62 and she's 68 - but they still hit the notes, and probably communicate the music better than ever. Will they tour again? Not likely.
2. By design for this tour, they stuck to songs that are familiar. The performance lasted almost three hours, and they didn't come close to running out of songs that folks know and want to hear more of. Few others would have a catalog of that depth.
3. Just the mere overlap of time won't be duplicated - we liked these folks' music, a lot, going back 40 years. One of many nice things about getting older is that these things resonate in a way that wouldn't happen absent passage of time.
4. The two performers really get along - you can tell they appreciate each other as people, as professionals who helped each other at important career junctures decades ago, as musicians with overlapping and complementary styles etc. Of course the rapport could have been faked. But no one in this audience would have believed it.
5. And the main thing - the music was good. Much of this music will endure, at least to the extent any pop music endures. These folks could write, and they could (and still can) perform.
One of the annoyances of venue events these days is that a big chunk of the audience reflexively wants to be part of the show - scripted shrieking at every pause, ritual standing with arms waving, etc. That was not this audience. Often there was a quietness in the auditorium while folks just sat back and let the music envelope them; at song's end, the applause would start slowly and build and sustain - very unusual. Very non-ritual.
The video clip below is from a performance about a week prior to the one we attended - I include it because it gives a good sense of how this all came across.
For comparison I also include (at bottom) two 1971 videos featuring JT and CK. Last video has same bass player as in 2010 performance, just now has a longer (and whiter) beard.
Photos above are from the Glendale performance.
"In his domestic administration my father had this system . . . to keep a journal and insert in it all occurrences of any note . . . A record very pleasant to look at when time begins to efface the memory of events, and very well suited to get us out of perplexity: When was such and such a thing begun? When completed? What retinues came? How long did they stay? Our trips, our absences; marriages; deaths; the receipt of happy or unhappy news . . . An ancient custom, which I think it would be good to revive, each man in each man's home. And I think I am a fool to have neglected it." (Montaigne, Book I, Essay 35 (publ. 1580))
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