Raised in Akron, Ohio, Joseph
Arthur began writing and playing music in his early teens, after inheriting
an electronic keyboard from his aunt and taking piano lessons. While in high
school, at age 16, he played bass in a blues band. Days after graduation in
1990, he moved with the band to Atlanta, Georgia, supporting himself with day
jobs at a music store and a tattoo shop along with night gigs playing local
clubs. In the mid-1990s, a demo tape of Arthur’s songs made its way to Peter Gabriel, who liked the lyrics and
released Arthur's first EPs and albums. Arthur released his 11th studio album, Lou: The Songs of Lou Reed, on May 13,
2014.
Arthur is a unique singer-songwriter, in that he often
appears solo, adding backing tracks by playing a guitar lick and looping it.
The stage is also often a gallery of his artwork, and he paints yet another on
a canvas as he recites his lyrics. All of this he did over two hours during his
fifth annual New Year's Day concert at City
Winery, which was simulcast on Yahoo Live. Halfway through the set, he
recorded then looped several layers of guitars, took off his hat, jacket and
scarf and painted on a blank canvas as he sang "I Miss the Zoo," walked
to center stage to create additional electronic sounds on his Theremin, and
then returned to painting and singing. The set opened with "Robin," a
tribute to Robin Williams, and
included four songs by the late Lou Reed.
The original 90-minute set ended with two duets with opening act Chuck Prophet. The 45-minute encore
consisted of seven songs, including "In the Sun," which was covered by
Gabriel for a Princess Diana tribute album and again a decade later by R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe and Coldplay's
Chris Martin in 2006 on a charity
single to benefit victims of Hurricane Katrina. Arthur spent a lot of time
chatting to the audience, some of that chats as long as the subsequent song.
Overall, with such a long and varied presentation, some of Arthur's mix of
poetic lyrics with a layered sonic palette seemed to click majestically; on the
other hand, a lot of the set meandered. Some of it was pleasant, some was more
abrasive and jarring. It was as if individual songs stood out impressively by
themselves, but the whole course was too much for one sitting.
Visit Joseph Arthur at www.josepharthur.com.
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