Tricky’s First American Show in Seven Years Full of Rage, Smoke
For a man so perpetually stoned, he gave a high-intensity performance bouncing between menace and catharsis at what was his first American show in seven years. Last time through, he opened up for prog-metal heroes Tool on an arena tour, and met with a mostly disinterested crowd and a chorus of boos. “That was a tough crowd, wasn’t it?” he said. “I had a great time, though. It was incredible, it was just hard.”
Tomorrow sees the release of Knowle West Boy, Tricky’s first disc in five years and a refreshing return to form. At the Fillmore, he dove into new songs like the hard-hitting rocker “Council Estate” and “Past Mistake,” a stark, Joy Division-meets-Massive Attack slow creeper. Another of the album’s tracks, “Joseph,” was stretched into a climactic twenty-minute jam to close out the evening, with Tricky visibly seething, trying to hit just the right match of energy and emotion. “When I’m onstage, I get frustrated because I can’t do certain things,” he said. “I’m not a singer, I’m not a dancer. I have to go for rage, and then it changes my attitude, and my frustration comes out and becomes part of the song. Onstage, it’s like a fight. You’re fighting to be your best, so you get frustrated, and all these different emotions come out.”
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