NEW YORK, NY.- Laurie Anderson sounds like shes ready to have fun again.
That much was clear after the first minute or so of her thrilling multimedia show Tuesday at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. This one-night-only, 100-minute set, titled Let X = X, featured new arrangements of several 1980s-era Anderson songs. It also featured a fun backing band in the jazz combo Sexmob, reliable purveyors of a good time.
Hasnt Anderson earned a romping concert? So far in this century, she has kept her eye on grave matters. She mourned a changing, vulnerable New York City after Hurricane Sandy in Landfall, with the Kronos Quartet. She has likewise mourned the death of her longtime partner, Lou Reed, across multiple projects including in her graceful, meditative film Heart of a Dog. And she detailed human rights violations in Habeas Corpus, a 2015 collaboration with a former Guantánamo prisoner, Mohammed el-Gharani, at the Park Avenue Armory.
I attended and admired all those. But I have never witnessed her really enjoying a groove at least not in the same way that Ive enjoyed on some of her first recordings, such as Home of the Brave or United States Live. On Tuesday, though, at the tail end of one spoken interlude that detailed a variety of her heroes such as Gandhi and Philip Glass she concluded by mentioning James Brown. When Anderson named the tune Get on the Good Foot, Sexmob slide-trumpeter Steven Bernstein and drummer Kenny Wollesen indulged her with a musical quotation. Then Anderson whooped a funk-accurate exultation and danced a bit in front of her array of electronics.
It wasnt the only time she behaved like that. From the moment she strode onstage and triggered the synth samples of From the Air, she seemed to be enjoying herself, and reveled in the droll lyrics of that number: Good evening. This is your captain. We are about to attempt a crash landing.
Tuesdays concert wasnt a historical re-creation of past recordings; Sexmobs sound is a beefier one than on Andersons albums. With musicians who can double on electric guitar and bass clarinet, its members offered a rich range of textural variation throughout the evening. Walk the Dog was no longer spare, but galvanic. This new backing-band energy seemed to make Andersons high, digitally pitch-shifted vocals avoid rote, greatest-hits-show style. Similarly, a medley of Born, Never Asked and It Tango had fresh, more syncopated force.
Recitations of childhood memories that appeared in Heart of a Dog were also part of the set, along with some basso profundo observations from Fenway Bergamot, Andersons male alter-ego (as heard on the 2010 album Homeland).
And when Anderson and Sexmob played Only an Expert perhaps her only banger from this century she also took the opportunity to address the gravity of breaking news from the current Israel-Hamas war. (She avoided assigning blame for a hospital bombing in Gaza that day, while acknowledging the undeniable fact that it happened.) Originally, the songs litany of state-sponsored crimes was a gloss on Americas invasion of Iraq, ironically noting:
Even though a country can invade another country
And flatten it and ruin it and create havoc and civil war in that other country
If the experts say its not a problem and everyone agrees theyre experts
And good at seeing problems then invading those countries
Is simply not a problem.
But on Tuesday, she slipped in a new travesty: and bomb hospitals. (At another point, she invited the audience to scream cathartically, Yoko Ono-style against genocides happing everywhere and the holding of hostages in Gaza.)
In a concert that otherwise offered breezy, rocking, swinging fun, such invocations of unsettling current events rode a fine line. But to my eyes and ears, Anderson pulled off that tricky task. In this moment, all sophisticated, adult-coded entertainment is obligated to compete with our awareness of sobering topics, the ones that Anderson has focused on in recent years, like increasingly dangerous waves of water and lethal tides of government-sponsored dehumanization.
There was a great deal else in the show: her electronically modified solo violin playing; a performance of her Jules Massenet-inspired pop hit, O Superman; aperçus from her friend Sharon Olds, a pathbreaking confessional poet; video art of Andersons design that embraced concepts of artificial intelligence. But it was her willingness to keep tragic contemporary material in view even when enjoying the breadth of a half-centurys catalog that amounted to its own form of spiritual advice or moral instruction.
When Anderson appeared for an encore, she led the audience in tai chi movements. This risked objections of blase appropriation, but her creative practice has always made space for genuine gestures of cultural synthesis. And on Tuesday, it was good to see these aspects of her art operating in counterpoint once again.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.