S/D Laurie Anderson

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mRq1xgKykM

lols lane (Eazy), Tuesday, 18 June 2013 03:43 (twelve years ago)

Home of the Brave extremely formative for me, hard to imagine anyone not enjoying listening to this

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 18 June 2013 05:32 (twelve years ago)

I'm gonna give Big Science another try. I like it but I'm a Strange Angels stan.

A deeper shade of lol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 18 June 2013 12:17 (twelve years ago)

I am OK with Big Science but think United States is where it's at

align="justify" font="ancient" (flamboyant goon tie included), Tuesday, 18 June 2013 12:58 (twelve years ago)

four months pass...

Bunch of bizarre old LA PSAs!

http://networkawesome.com/show/collection-laurie-anderson-psas-1/

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 4 November 2013 03:34 (twelve years ago)

my dad always use 2 tok abt hr...... bt a on a vln bow

color definition point of "beyond "color, eg a transient that, Monday, 4 November 2013 03:35 (twelve years ago)

tape8

color definition point of "beyond "color, eg a transient that, Monday, 4 November 2013 03:36 (twelve years ago)

*

color definition point of "beyond "color, eg a transient that, Monday, 4 November 2013 03:36 (twelve years ago)

taebtraeh ym ot netsil

Hideous Lump, Monday, 4 November 2013 03:45 (twelve years ago)

*farts*

forbz (Matt P), Monday, 4 November 2013 03:49 (twelve years ago)

two years pass...

from June, on "Hamilton": "It's history lite. It's musical lite. It's just...just horrible."

http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2016/06/laurie-anderson-qa-hamilton-trump-hillary/485054/

The Hon. J. Piedmont Mumblethunder (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 15 September 2016 14:52 (nine years ago)

seven months pass...

Was unaware until recently that she had made a CD-ROM game in the mid 90's.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kPYOSLqN5Ns

JoeStork, Thursday, 20 April 2017 04:28 (nine years ago)

That's so cool, thanks for sharing

Carlotta's Portrait (Ross), Thursday, 20 April 2017 06:36 (nine years ago)

four weeks pass...

"The Big Top" is really doing it for me lately.

Cities with...no basements
No foundations
Cities that could be moved in a minute
Portable cities
Portable towns

JoeStork, Friday, 19 May 2017 23:31 (nine years ago)

Yeah that's top 10

"The Canadians took this very seriously" one of her best punchlines

in a soylent whey (wins), Saturday, 20 May 2017 11:03 (nine years ago)

four weeks pass...

Some of my favorites.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 19 June 2017 02:34 (eight years ago)

Great list

Unchanging Window (Ross), Monday, 19 June 2017 03:30 (eight years ago)

No "Blue Lagoon"? It's such a beautiful fever dream.

Hideous Lump, Monday, 19 June 2017 03:40 (eight years ago)

Or Another Day In America which includes one of Anderson's best lyrics

And you know the reason I really love the stars is that we cannot hurt them
We can't burn them or melt them or make them overflow. We can't flood them or blow them up or turn them out
But we are reaching for them
We are reaching for them

Unchanging Window (Ross), Monday, 19 June 2017 04:13 (eight years ago)

^^^ top-notch lyrics, there she nails it!

Ich bin kein Berliner (alex in mainhattan), Monday, 19 June 2017 12:48 (eight years ago)

seven months pass...

Touring :)

kolakube (Ross), Wednesday, 7 February 2018 20:55 (eight years ago)

she's kind of always touring something around these days, often variations on one show. but is she doing shows with Kronos in support of Landfall?

akm, Thursday, 8 February 2018 15:23 (eight years ago)

Looks like she's playing shows in support of her new book all the things I lost in the flood. Seems to have also instantly sold out :-/

kolakube (Ross), Thursday, 8 February 2018 15:32 (eight years ago)

Was transfixed by her live show in 1988, how is she now?

Guayaquil (eephus!), Thursday, 8 February 2018 15:52 (eight years ago)

I saw her a year or so ago do a "The Language of the Future" show (this is a show that varies a lot apparently) and it was great. Was it as great as Empty Spaces, which was the first thing I saw (probably what you saw in 88)? No, it's much more scaled down. But it was better than that Noah/Whale thing she did in the 90's that I hated.

akm, Thursday, 8 February 2018 15:58 (eight years ago)

Still mesmeric.

"Minneapolis" (barf) (Eric H.), Thursday, 8 February 2018 15:58 (eight years ago)

oh it was moby dick, not noah. whatever.

akm, Thursday, 8 February 2018 16:01 (eight years ago)

a coworker of mine did sound for an artist at the Day for Night fest a couple months ago and got to see Laurie Anderson. he said she was great, a lot of telling stories... anyway at some point in the set, his best friend came up to him and asked to leave because he was bored because she "wasn't playing any of the hits" lmao

having said that... does she play O Superman these days?

flappy bird, Thursday, 8 February 2018 18:08 (eight years ago)

She didn't when I saw her perform.

vicious almond beliefs (crüt), Thursday, 8 February 2018 18:54 (eight years ago)

My gf fucking hated her lol. She doesn't like spoken word

vicious almond beliefs (crüt), Thursday, 8 February 2018 18:55 (eight years ago)

So do you just sing to her all the time?

"Minneapolis" (barf) (Eric H.), Thursday, 8 February 2018 18:57 (eight years ago)

no I don't think she's done o superman since United States. .... maybe she did a restrospective show at one point, not sure.

akm, Thursday, 8 February 2018 19:27 (eight years ago)

She performed o superman on the post 9-11 live in New York album

scrüt (wins), Thursday, 8 February 2018 19:29 (eight years ago)

I've posted about this before, but she did O Superman here literally on the night of 9/11.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 8 February 2018 19:30 (eight years ago)

only live recordings of O Superman i've found are from those 2001 shows

flappy bird, Thursday, 8 February 2018 19:30 (eight years ago)

This is what Greg Kot wrote in 2013 (I was his +1 at this show):

On the night of Sept. 11, 2001, Laurie Anderson decided to go ahead with her scheduled performance at Park West, even though her city had been devastated earlier that day. Here's my Tribune review of that performance.

It was one of those moments "when everything changes," Laurie Anderson sang, in a voice that sounded like she was narrating a documentary: Slightly detached, pleasant in its lilting enunciation, yet ominous. "But you don't know yet, whether it's for the better or the worse."

Nothing would be the same after Tuesday, and everyone at the Park West that night -- most especially Anderson -- knew it. Her songs, some of them written as many as 20 years ago, were eerily evocative of a collective mood that desperately cried out for some sort of public expression.

The staging was stark and somber, in contrast to the multimedia extravaganzas of past Anderson tours. The singer, dressed in black and flanked by three brilliant musicians who conjured atmospheres that exquisitely suited her songs, was in tune with her listeners. She set out to help them make sense of a world that had suddenly, shockingly lost its bearings.

In times of crisis, we look to our artists not necessarily to provide answers, but to give shape and dimension to the doubts and anxieties washing over us. Their work can be a balm or a purge, an acknowledgment that our private fears are shared by others.

That is why Anderson's concert Tuesday was not only welcome, but necessary. Throughout the entire nation, on a day when terrorist attacks reduced many of us to a stunned silence, public performances of any kind were at a premium. But Anderson's instincts were correct: It is far preferable to face the unspeakable together, especially if the artist in question is up to the task, and she was.

The Park West was packed for this homecoming by the 54-year-old native of Glen Ellyn, and she immediately addressed the harsh reality of the day, dedicating the 105-minute performance "to all those who have died today."

It was a straightforward, dignified remark, and it set the tone for what followed: a performance that avoided pathos or melodrama, or too-obvious song selections such as her harrowing "From the Air," yet struck exactly the right chord of empathy and awareness, longing and humor.

The resonance and sturdiness of Anderson's songwriting was put to the test, and it did not falter. Her great themes aren't particularly unique: the intersection of humanity and technology, the price of progress, and the loss of our identity and freedom. But she invests them with quirky insight, haunted musicality and depth of feeling that make her more than just a performance artist coldly tinkering with her high-tech gadgets.

She opened with a melancholy instrumental, performed on violin, with funeral bells chiming and Skuli Sverrisson's bass tracing a path to "Statue of Liberty," chilling in its appropriateness: "Freedom is a scary thing," Anderson sang, "so precious, so easy to lose."

The same was true of "Strange Angels," and its chant of "here they come, here they come," with Sverrisson's bass figures taking on the role of a second voice. For Anderson, who has performed many of her concerts solo backed by intense multimedia sound and imagery, the presence of a band so sensitive to her needs was appropriate and oddly comforting. Only when the music became more strident, approaching the cadences and tempos of conventional rock, did it fail to impress. Mostly, Sverrisson, percussionist Jim Black and keyboardist Peter Scherer were concerned with coloring in the spaces behind Anderson's minimalist keyboards, violin and sing-speak vocals, and they did so beautifully.

Before the austerity became too oppressive, the house lights briefly came on and Anderson suggested the audience draw pictures of her so that she could sell them at her next tour stop. "Good luck with your drawings!" she cheerfully said as pencils and paper were passed out. It was difficult not to laugh at the absurdity, which was precisely the point. She also broke up several songs with spoken-word interludes, which had the earmarks of fables, twisted bedtime stories or nursery rhymes for grownups.

When Anderson got back to business, the concert found its emotional center. "O Superman" remains one of the great compositions of the last two decades, a terrifying portrait of trust, security and love misplaced that Anderson performed solo at her keyboard, the electronically altered beats a cross between rhythmic breathing and a dehumanized last gasp. It was followed by "Slip Away," which sounds like an agnostic's postmodern response to the bluegrass Bible-belt masterpiece "O Death."

With "Love Among the Sailors," Anderson pulled all the threads together, and brought the audience to its feet. The last verse bears repeating, because it so eloquently gave voice to what so many must have been feeling on this day: violated, threatened, but still somehow yearning for community.

“There is a hot wind blowing

Plague drifts across the oceans

And if this is the work of an angry god

I want to look into his angry face

There is no pure land now, no safe place

Come with us into the mountains

Hombres. Sailors. Comrades.”

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 8 February 2018 19:36 (eight years ago)

Landfall album is streaming now on NPR:

https://www.npr.org/2018/02/08/584036854/first-listen-laurie-anderson-kronos-quartet-landfall

erry red flag (f. hazel), Thursday, 8 February 2018 22:46 (eight years ago)

three months pass...

How about landfall eh

Ross, Wednesday, 9 May 2018 20:34 (eight years ago)

little overlong - were only human

Ross, Wednesday, 9 May 2018 21:12 (eight years ago)

landfall is OK (I'm kind of over the kronos quartet in general) but her current live show for the book/album is just in fucking credible. one of the greatest live performances from anyone ever.

kurt schwitterz, Wednesday, 9 May 2018 21:17 (eight years ago)

"The front cover of the CD has the title Live at Town Hall, New York City September 19–20, 2001, however the official title of the album is just Live in New York." 23 tracks, intense, committed: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_in_New_York_(Laurie_Anderson_album)

dow, Wednesday, 9 May 2018 23:47 (eight years ago)

i saw a plane today
flying low
over the island--
but my mind
was somewhere
else

difficult listening hour, Monday, 14 May 2018 07:24 (eight years ago)

Laurie if you're sadly listening

The birds are on fire

The sky glistening

While I atop my roof stand watching

Staring into the spider's clypeus

Incinerated flesh repelling

While I am on the rooftop yearning

Thinking of you

Laurie if you're sadly listening

Selfishly I miss your missing

The boundaries of our world now

changing

The air is filled with someone's

sick reasons

And I had thought a beautiful

season was

Upon us

Laurie if you're sadly listening

The phones don't work

The bird's afire

The smoke curls black

I'm on the rooftop

Liberty to my right still standing

Laurie evil's gaunt desire is

Upon we

Laurie if you're sadly listening

Know one thing above all others

You were all I really thought of

As the TV blared the screaming

The deathlike snowflakes

Sirens screaming

All I wished was you to be holding

Bodies frozen in time jumping

Bird's afire

One thing me thinking

Laurie if you're sadly listening

Love you

Laurie if you're sadly listening

Love you

flappy bird, Monday, 14 May 2018 17:52 (eight years ago)

four weeks pass...

Thanks flappy bird. Here's what I scratched out just now, with heaphones on, during my maiden voyage through Landfalland vice-versa:

Xgau not that into it but he not likely for chamber setting even w more words vocal shading ditto electronic than he mentions: some tough, gorgeous, tensile levels of blues is a feeling stuff, prismatic searchlight watchlight in the ceiling, the dipper filling and dipping again---as compelling in its way as heart of a Dog
How they built it
http://kronosquartet.org/projects/detail/landfall

dow, Tuesday, 12 June 2018 23:13 (seven years ago)

Building another story, sure as Heart of a Dog.

dow, Tuesday, 12 June 2018 23:15 (seven years ago)

Still haven’t got through landfall as it’s so ducking long

Slippage (Ross), Tuesday, 12 June 2018 23:36 (seven years ago)

Poem up there by Lou Reed was in the NYT on 10/9/01 - https://www.nytimes.com/2001/11/11/magazine/songs-for-the-city-laurie-sadly-listening.html

flappy bird, Wednesday, 13 June 2018 04:44 (seven years ago)

six months pass...

Any SF residents get to see the Lou Reed drones concert in Nov? A recording has just surfaced, 4 hours!

MaresNest, Saturday, 12 January 2019 19:42 (seven years ago)

one month passes...

i saw laurie anderson last night for the first time! i hope to see her again soon. she played quite a bit of stuff from what i assume was her latest album (and first Grammy winner) Landfall. i have to assume because i sto;; haven't heard Landfall, but i know it's a chamber orchestra based album (which won her a first grammy, too), the artwork projected behind resembles the cover of Landfall, and she played as a duo with a cellist. the show alternated between these beautifully performed duets (his cello and her electric violin) and her more familiar synth and vocoder songs, spoken-word pieces, stories and jokes. at the beginning she played a story by her recently deceased chicago wordsmith friend ken nordine over the speakers, before asking everyone to honor yoko ono's 82nd birthday by screaming as loudly as possible for 10 seconds (my throat still hurts).

i was amazed at how adeptly she created a dreamlike web of circling repetition throughout the evening. alternating pieces with the string duets helped, but there were also funnies stories about writing to jack kennedy as a child for advice about how to run for student council, to be referenced much later in the show with references to "jack" and promising to people whatever it is they want. i would recognize certain snippets of songs, but they seemed to be reappropriated and mixed together with other songs. sometimes dreams themselves were referenced - And ah, these days. Oh, these days / What are days for? / To wake us up, to put between the endless nights - or a warning to never tell anyone about your dreams, because they make you sound insane because they never make any sense. it's hard to explain, but it was mesmerizing.

at the end she talked a bit about lou reed and performed some tai chi.

about an hour after her show i was walking around the museum, checking out some "soundscapes" (actually just pairs of speakers) and ran across her doing an encore performance in the spot where the stars of the lid soundscape was supposed to be:

https://i.imgur.com/6iQyVZa.jpg

Karl Malone, Tuesday, 19 February 2019 03:35 (seven years ago)

I saw her do a Q and A for Home of the Brave and she was super duper gracious and kind.

encino morricone (majorairbro), Wednesday, 24 September 2025 07:35 (eight months ago)

one month passes...

Just learned about:
The Blue Horn File - Live at the Mudd Club, NY, June 25 1979
Laurie Anderson, David Van Tieghem, Peter Gordon

Have to go to work but will listen later tonight

Noob Layman (WmC), Wednesday, 29 October 2025 21:00 (seven months ago)

whoa cool.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Monday, 10 November 2025 03:25 (six months ago)

this is what I would classify as 'difficult listening hour' though it's only about 20 minutes long

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Monday, 10 November 2025 21:24 (six months ago)

Definitely makes me want to see this tour/setup:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfq36DRVul0

the way out of (Eazy), Wednesday, 19 November 2025 05:48 (six months ago)

Yeah, I think she's playing with them at Big Ears, one of many things I'm looking forward to.

Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 19 November 2025 13:34 (six months ago)

yeah I saw her with them last year and it was incredible. as a full-time nostalgist I appreciate her willingness to do older material in this configuration.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Wednesday, 19 November 2025 18:52 (six months ago)

never miss laurie live she's always top tier

kurt schwitterz, Wednesday, 19 November 2025 19:52 (six months ago)

that is 100% true

fluffy tufts university (f. hazel), Wednesday, 19 November 2025 19:55 (six months ago)

3rd-ed

challopvious (sleeve), Wednesday, 19 November 2025 19:58 (six months ago)

three months pass...

Let X=X is a triple-LP set of twenty-three songs recorded live during a 2023 tour by Laurie Anderson and the jazz band Sexmob—Steven Bernstein and Briggan Krauss on brass, Kenny Wollesen on percussion, Douglas Wieselman on winds and guitar, and Tony Scherr on bass. The album includes many favorite songs from throughout Anderson’s career, performed in new arrangements—plus one by Lou Reed and Metallica, “Junior Dad.”

Includes digital pre-order of Let X=X (Live). You get 1 track now (streaming via the free Bandcamp app and also available as a high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more), plus the complete album the moment it’s released.
Download available in 24-bit/48kHz.
digital album releases March 20, 2026
item ships out on or around May 8, 2026


anyway that's what it says here, with that advance title track to boot:
https://laurieanderson.bandcamp.com/album/let-x-x-live

dow, Thursday, 5 March 2026 02:47 (three months ago)

(Some good Sexmob or Sex Mob platters on Bandcamp as well, ditto other experiences instigated by or incl. Steven Bernstein.)

dow, Thursday, 5 March 2026 02:51 (three months ago)

very cool. the show I saw her do with sexmob was kind of a dream come true, for someone who doesn't revist her 'back catalog' I never thought I'd see her perform some of that stuff again.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Thursday, 5 March 2026 14:33 (three months ago)


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