Friday, February 12, 2010

Please Don't Tell Me How the Story Ends; 2/11 Kris Kristofferson Concert Review

I saw Kris Kristofferson tonight in concert at Jesse Auditorium on the University of Missouri Campus in Columbia with my dad. I'd been in Jesse Hall many times, but never in the Auditorium as far as I could remember. It's a pretty intimate venue. I got tickets that were about 13 rows back and right in the middle. A little far back, but a great view still.
The time on the tickets said 7 PM so we got there a little around 6. I wasn't sure if that was opening door time or the actual start time. We had to wait around awhile, and even ran into people we know from our hometown, small world and the doors opened at 6:30. And right around 7 or a little after the house lights dimmed and a local dj came out and did the intro and announcements. And then Kris came out. I didn't know how the set-up would be, if it'd be him or a band or something else. But throughout the whole night, it was just Kris, his guitar and harmonica.
Here's a partial set list, based on an earlier tour stop. It's pretty close to the same order, but he played 33 songs by my count tonight. Will be reedited if I see another set-list. Here's a link to another set list from another earlier stop

Shipwrecked in the 80's
Closer To The Bone
Darby's Castle
Me and Bobby McGee
Best Of All Possible Worlds
Here Comes That Rainbow
Help Me Make It Through the Night
Casey's Last Ride
Nobody Wins
Daddy's Song
The Heart
Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I'll Ever Do Again)

---Intermission----

Jesus Was A Capricorn
Come Sundown
Duvalier's Dream
Just the Other Side of Nowhere
Jody and The Kid
The Pilgrim Chapter 33
To Beat The Devil
The Promise
The Final Attraction
Sunday Morning Coming Down
The Silver Tongued Devil and I
For The Good Times
-----encore------
A Moment Of Forever
Please Don't Tell Me How The Story Ends
Why Me Lord
?



Other songs I know he played were Johnny Lobo, Sky King.
For a man of 73 and the life and times he's lived and experienced, he looks pretty good. And he was in good spirits, joking around with the crowd all night. After the first song he said, "...I used to work at Columbia Records. I have a son named Jesse. Coincidence? I think not." Then following the next couple of songs, he mentioned how he was battling a cold and in self-deprecating manner said, "...Not like you can really tell the difference... I know just what you all paid good money for, to see an old fart up here blowing his nose." He did have to wipe his nose quite a bit. And through the later part of the first set, didn't use his harmonica, because "No way I can reach that, so I guess I won't use it."
He added all kinds of ad-libs throughout the night during the songs. Toward the end of Best of All Possible Worlds, he said that Roger Miller could do a great outro-guitar part, but that he can't, "...So the song ends here." And I can't remember the song, but it was inspired by Roger McGuinn keeping a camera watching the front of his driveway and Kris and some others wanting to play a prank by letting his neighbors know about it.
Kris' voice is no longer gravelly like it used to be, but now it's more of a weathered voice that has lived through the songs and into old age. You can feel the emotion he still pours out, straining to get some of those notes. I already mentioned the wit and wryness that comes out in some of his songs, but he runs the whole gamut. You can feel the pain and sorrow, he sings then watch as he turns in ballads of redemption and takes on freedom and love.
He didn't say very much political. He did mention during one song about America having 'the most people in prison of anywhere else in the world,' and after Nobody Wins, said "This is what Dick Cheney said to George Bush in the shower." But I'd read a review from a show a year before and it looked like he said the same thing then.
In the second part of the set he had a song called Sky King, to the tune of Big Bad John about his army flight instructor that was hilarious. And a song called the Final Attraction, he said was about watching Willie Nelson perform from the side of the stage and later mentioned heroes and friends that have fallen (Hank, Johnny and June, Roger Miller, Mickey Newbury) and accidentally mentioned Willie, when he meant Waylon. He also in the first part of the show mentioned his friend and guitar player Stephen Bruton who recently passed away.
Highlights for me, were seeing the classics of course, but my faves in particular of his are, The Pilgrim Chapter 33, The Silver Tongued Devil and I and Loving Her Was Easier. Before the Silver Tongued Devil, he played Sunday Morning Coming Down and mentioned why he was wandering the streets on a Sunday morning, was because the bars were all closed on Sunday mornings in Nashville. "But by sundown," led him going into the Tallyho Tavern. He stopped after the first verse and related how his son at age five, heard him playing it, and told him it was a bad song, because "You're trying to blame your problems on someone else!" Gotta love it because he picked that up, but still too young to get the dual nature of the song. He didn't play the second verse though, don't know if he forgot or what...
But for the encore he was gone maybe 2 minutes, and came back, "Guess you could tell I wasn't going very far," or something along those lines.
All in all a great performance. I talked with a guy sitting next to me, who'd seen him the year before and said me and my dad would enjoy it. Said, he'd play his hits, some new stuff and not draw songs out, which he didn't. He played for a little under 2 hours, with the 10 min or so intermission("Get whatever you can get done in 15 minutes" Kris said before the break).
Another legend that everyone should see while he's still with us...