so i went to Michael Dorf's 20th anniversary show for the "Old Knit" last night (he couldn't say "Knitting Factory" because he's no longer affiliated with it, AFAIK)... pretty star-studded event:
Lou Reed
Laurie Anderson
Joe Lovano
Don Byron
DJ Spooky
Roy Nathanson
Bill Ware
Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth)
Marc Ribot
John Zorn
Mike Doughty (Soul Coughing)
Medeski Martin and Wood (actually, Chris Wood was a no-show)
Gary Lucas
it was a ramshackle event, with lots of technical glitches and an aborted attempt at a grand finale... but there were some fantastic -- even historic -- performances. i was right down front in the center, so that added to the coolness.
some highlights for me:
John Zorn joining Lou Reed on stage for Reed's "Rock Minuet." it was the first time the two living legends had ever performed together. Reed was almost moved to tears during Zorn's solo, and they bear hugged each other afterwards. Lou planted a wet one right on Zorn's lips.
DJ Spooky and Lee Ranaldo duet... it was supposed to be a multimedia piece with an old propaganda film from Soviet Angola projected behind them... but the projector was fubar. still, it was a fantastic piece... i love watching Ranaldo free form. he was creating these mesmerizing soundscapes by dragging the head of his guitar slowly along the floor, playing the body of it with drumsticks, manipulating the feedback and bowing the strings. together with Spooky's beats, it was absolutely hypnotic.
Joe Lovano, Roy Nathanson, Don Byron, Bill Ware and others opened the show with a fantastic version of Eric Dolphy's "Out to Lunch." i could listen to Bill Ware's vibes all day long.
Laurie Anderson was predictably brilliant. it was just Laurie, her synth and her drum machine. she played two tunes which were simultaneously thought-provoking, soothing, hilarious and transporting. i don't really know of any other artist who can do that.
anyhow, other than being a bit disorganized, it was a great celebration of a legendary and important venue. hats off to Michael Dorf.
Lou Reed
Laurie Anderson
Joe Lovano
Don Byron
DJ Spooky
Roy Nathanson
Bill Ware
Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth)
Marc Ribot
John Zorn
Mike Doughty (Soul Coughing)
Medeski Martin and Wood (actually, Chris Wood was a no-show)
Gary Lucas
it was a ramshackle event, with lots of technical glitches and an aborted attempt at a grand finale... but there were some fantastic -- even historic -- performances. i was right down front in the center, so that added to the coolness.
some highlights for me:
John Zorn joining Lou Reed on stage for Reed's "Rock Minuet." it was the first time the two living legends had ever performed together. Reed was almost moved to tears during Zorn's solo, and they bear hugged each other afterwards. Lou planted a wet one right on Zorn's lips.
DJ Spooky and Lee Ranaldo duet... it was supposed to be a multimedia piece with an old propaganda film from Soviet Angola projected behind them... but the projector was fubar. still, it was a fantastic piece... i love watching Ranaldo free form. he was creating these mesmerizing soundscapes by dragging the head of his guitar slowly along the floor, playing the body of it with drumsticks, manipulating the feedback and bowing the strings. together with Spooky's beats, it was absolutely hypnotic.
Joe Lovano, Roy Nathanson, Don Byron, Bill Ware and others opened the show with a fantastic version of Eric Dolphy's "Out to Lunch." i could listen to Bill Ware's vibes all day long.
Laurie Anderson was predictably brilliant. it was just Laurie, her synth and her drum machine. she played two tunes which were simultaneously thought-provoking, soothing, hilarious and transporting. i don't really know of any other artist who can do that.
anyhow, other than being a bit disorganized, it was a great celebration of a legendary and important venue. hats off to Michael Dorf.










