^
Hmm, that is odd! As I already wrote, the Hole show in Boston last week was phenomenal--one of the best shows I have ever attended.
LobotomyBaby posted:i was very disappointed with the album.
i wouldn't have been if i hadn't heard the demos over a year ago.
the demo versions..although not as well produced..are just much better written.
she changed her singing...less feeling
the song structures...ugh
I'd like to hear those.
This is from the Boston Phoenix. If you go to the link there is a video of her playing "Closer.'
[
thephoenix.com]
Three hours late, Courtney Love stormed into the Ames Hotel on Court Street a week ago Wednesday, faced a small group of radio-station contest winners, and explained that her tardiness was the result of a mid-day romp in the sack with an ex-boyfriend who's now a professor at Harvard University.
The room ate it up. But at the end of the short, full-band acoustic session, Love admitted she'd been joking about the Harvard shag — it just sounded like a good excuse for being late. The fans seemed almost let down.
The brief interaction, which preceded a gig by Love's band Hole that night at the House of Blues, sums up this new era of the well-put-together complete train wreck that is Courtney Love: there is build-up, there is elation, there is disappointment, there is payoff. Both of Hole's performances — the acoustically restrained rage at the Ames and the full-on grunge blowout on Lansdowne — were riveting. And against the backdrop of the not-half-bad new album, Nobody's Daughter (Mercury), and a much-talked-about-around-the-Interwebs VH1 Behind the Music special on Love's life, it's clear that the woman who in the '90s went from Kurt Cobain's drugged-out widow to Golden Globe–nominated actress (The People vs. Larry Flint) is on the comeback trail.
But the question remains: are we ready for a Courtney Love revival? And do we necessarily want one?
Now 45 years old, Love claims to be five years clean. She still has a black cloud hovering overhead, however, and now it appears that drugs have given way to real-life adult issues, like finances and what she calls "money karma." At the Ames, a simple question about songwriting spurred a diatribe about her money situation, bank loans, and legal problems — all of which is detailed toward the end of the VH1 special.
Love was down with the first half of the 90-minute biography, which documented her troubled early years and her eventual romance with Cobain as she found her musical way. She took issue (no surprise) with VH1's portrayal of her after Cobain's suicide as an endless string of drug abuse, hostility, and failures. Yet anyone who was alive and casually following Love's trials and tribulations through the second half of the '90s knows that the portrait wasn't far off the mark.
"The first hour was fine; the second could have done so much more, editorially," she said at the Ames. "It had great ratings, and they want to show it again and again, and I said no fucking way. It's aimless."
After her stop in Boston, Love threatened to go to VH1's headquarters in New York to do some re-editing. At the House of Blues, she made the same threat, and she warned the crowd that if you want anything done right, you have to do it yourself. There was a sparkle in her eye, however, when she noted — both at the Ames and at the House of Blues — the show's glowing ratings and buzz.
Love knows people will watch. She's keenly aware of her surroundings at all times. At the Ames, she stopped mid thought to ask a female reporter from the Herald to identify herself as a member of the press.
"Don't print my 'pass list,' " she warned the reporter after running through a laundry list of Hollywood big-budget films she claims she turned down in the late '90s. "Except passing up The Matrix to record Celebrity Skin, because everybody knows that."
After the session, when that same reporter approached her, Love asked about the paper's political leanings and whether the interview was for some type of page 6 gossip column. (It was.) After politely answering the reporter's nonsensical question, she turned away, giving an overzealous fan the opportunity to get in the face of the Herald scribe and protest, "She's had a tough life, you don't know what's she's been through!"
Fans still adore Love, and she knows it. She's charming without trying, sincere just by appearing. There's a magnetic charm about her, and in a world of Lady Gaga and her countless imitators, an ass-kicking, rocking-out Courtney Love might be what music truly needs. As pop music has taught us in the past 15 years, her kind of charisma can't be created.
On stage, page 6 became irrelevant: Hole were both a time bomb and a time machine. Transporting the crowd back to the '90s — and it was a two-thirds-full House of Blues decked in cargo shorts, band T-shirts, and ball-chain necklaces eager to revisit the period — the opening grunge crunch of a "Pretty on the Inside"/"Sympathy for the Devil" medley proved that the band still have balls. Walking out on stage and singing an off-key blip of the Standelles' "Dirty Water" while puffing on a Marlboro Light doesn't hurt in warming the crowd up either.
But as the band spanned their gritty catalogue and showed that the weighty-pop '90s hits "Doll Parts," "Violet," "Malibu," and "Celebrity Skin" still hold up quite well in a fragmented era of rock, you couldn't escape the feeling that Love could stop the affable nice-girl routine on a dime and jump into the crowd throwing 'bows. More than a few heads probably stayed for the duration of Wednesday's 95-minute set just to see her explode, to catch a meltdown that would be on YouTube by the time the last person left Lansdowne.
At one point, an object was tossed on stage, just missing Love, who didn't notice it. One can imagine what would have gone down had it smacked her in the face mid song. But no such hostile interruption took place, and the show hit a high point during new single "Pacific Coast Highway," which sounds an awful lot like 1998 radio hit "Malibu." That Belinda Carlisle–aided ditty remains Hole's highest Billboard charter, at #24.
"I wrote it for Stevie Nicks as well — and didn't give it to her as well," Love said at the Ames.
A Doc Martens boot full of covers, the band also paid sonic tribute to Leonard Cohen, Judy Garland, and of course, Fleetwood Mac. (Hole's cover of "Gold Dust Woman" was first released on the Crow 2: City of Angels soundtrack.) A cover of "Closer" was the sexiest rendition of the Nine Inch Nails classic since Trent Reznor first thought up the savage chorus.
The heavy serving of cover tracks could be explained by the new backing line-up. Gone are long-time guitarist Erik Erlandsen and fashion-mag-pretty bassist Melissa Auf der Mar, and though Hole always had a reputation of being sort of a girl band (despite Erlandsen's presence as player and co-songwriter), Love has rounded out this new incarnation with dudes: guitarist Micko Larkin on guitar (a Pete Doherty doppelgänger, though lankier), Stu Fisher on drums, and Shawn Dailey on bass (the target of more than a few curious beer tosses at the Ho

.
"This is no rent-a-band," Love said on stage. "We lived in the same house for five years, so shut up!"
It's strange that though grunge is still a staple of rock radio, Hole are generally left out of the picture. Bands like Pearl Jam, Nirvana, and Stone Temple Pilots are revered while Hole are relegated to random plays. Courtney Love has already experienced one successful music career, a life in the tabloids, and a fairly impressive run as an actress — and her story is far from finished. A few more hits seem inevitable; so do more acting gigs.
"I'd like to do acting, and I'd really like to direct," she said at the Ames. "I really need my reputation to be back." And, uh, what reputation is that? From Hole to VH1 to her flirtation with Hollywood to her notorious tweets, there's room for argument. But however you want to think about Love, she's back.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 07/01/2010 02:13PM by RhettButler.