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Jim has covered Boston arts and events since 1978.  In addition to this column, JimSullivanInk, he is a freelance columnist for the likes of the Boston Phoenix, the Christian Science Monitor, Search Boston and Hall of Fame Magazine.
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Mike Scott: The Waterboy Returns at Brighton Music Hall, Music and Words PDF Print E-mail
Nov 18, 2012 at 04:25 PM

Sun. Nov. 18

Mike Scott and the Waterboys came on like U2-ish gangbusters in 1984 with the EP "A Pagan Place" and then the following year with the LP, "This is the Sea." He, like Bono, was not daunted by takinMike Scott of the Waterboysg on major emotions and themes. Big music with expressive details, an ability to mix winsomeness, sadness and triumph, none of it sounding ill-placed. It didn't hurt, in my world, that Scott took chose the band's name from Lou Reed's "Berlin" - one of my favorite '70s albums - and one of its more heart-breaking songs, "The Kids." "I am the waterboy," sang Reed. "The real game's not over here." The Waterboys negotiated all kinds of dramatic peaks and valleys, from full-tilt rock to traditional Celtic acoustic instrumentally-based songs; the tenor was prety much always a sense of striving to triumph over adversity. Scott is a Christian, but someone who has no connection with the so-called "Christian Music" community. His own religious views, Scott told me in 1996 was "an understanding that God or the divinity of whatever we choose to call it is inside every one of us and every thing that lives. ... I just do what I do without worrying whether it's in fashion. I saw an inspiring thing that Neil Young said one time: 'I do what I do and if it coincides with what's fashionable, then fine; if it doesn't, well, I've got to do it anyway."
    Scott, now 52, is back, in with a reading and concert at the Brighton Music Hall Sunday Nov. 18 and with a new 14-track album, "An Appointment With Mr. Yeats," slated for a March 26, 2013 release. That "appointment" means a collaboration. Yeats, being dead and all, had nothing to do with this but supplying the words. It was Scott's pleasure to transform that poetry into music on the Waterboys first new album in five years. (Scott's used the Waterboys brand name and also gone out under his own; he admits, the Waterboys' brand gets a lot more attention. His main collaborator in the early years, Karl Wallinger left to form World Party; the lineup since has been rather fluid.)

Wanna win tix? The Boston Irish Tourism people can help. Click on the link: http://www.irishmassachusetts.com/contest_MikeScott.php?scott


     As to Yeats, Scott said, "I love the way Yeats’ poems lend themselves to music. But I also like Yeats as a guy — a dandified, opinionated, larger-than-life character. I feel a kinship to him. My purpose isn’t to treat Yeats as a museum piece, but to connect with the soul of the poems — as they appear to me — then go wherever the music in my head suggests, and that means some surprising places.”
      “When people read about this project," Scott continued, "it’s natural for them to have preconceptions. They tend to think that, because it’s based on poetry, it’s going to be difficult, stiff or wordy. But when they hear the record or come and see the show, they realize it’s really just more music from the Waterboys. I should stress these are songs — rock ’n’ roll, pop, psychedelic and roots songs — not recitations. They’ve got to stand up as contemporary songs, not like poems squashed into musical forms. In fact, the best thing is when people don’t realize they were written a hundred years ago, but just hear them and think, ‘That’s a song,’ and don’t question it.”
      "An Appointment With Mr. Yeats "was produced by Scott and Marc Arciero and tracked live off the floor by an expanded Waterboys lineup consisting of fiddle maestro Steve Wickham, Katie Kim (vocals), James Hallawell (keyboards), Kate St John (sax, oboe), Blaise Margail (trombone), Ralph Salmins (drums), Sarah Allen (flute) and Joe Chester (guitar). Before they recorded the album, Scott and his band premiered the songs at Dublin’s hallowed Abbey Theatre during a five-night run in March 2010. “A stunning reinvention of Yeats’ poetry,” The Irish Times raved.
      The stylistically wide-ranging album gets off to a thunderous start with “The Hosting of the Shee,” as the band brings to life Yeats’ depiction of the warlike gods of old Ireland. “It isn’t just the language of the poem that attracted me,” Scott clarifies. “It’s what he says with it — the way that he allows us to enter an old Celtic dreamscape. I loved going into that world with Yeats. I even asked the drummer to play it in a pre-Christian groove, to play it like a caveman. He never falls into a regular groove; he never puts the snare on the two and the four; it’s a warlike, prehistoric beat.”
      The Kurt Weill-styled “'News for the Delphic Oracle” contains “three verses, each with a very different character, including Yeats’ invocation of the god Pan in the third verse,” said Scott, “so I’ve treated them as three separate pieces.” The blues ballad “The Lake Isle of Innisfree” is actually a home demo, with Wickham’s snarling fuzztone fiddle added later. And the epic rocker “September 1913” is taken from one of Yeats’ most overtly political poems, written about what’s known as the Dublin Lockout. “The laborers went on strike for better working conditions, and the clergy and the politicians resisted the change and tried to blackmail the workers,” Scott explained. “Yeats was very angry, and he asked the question in the poem, ‘Is this what the freedom fighters died for?’ It’s a very powerful poem, and a famous one in Ireland, often quoted to comment on the current Irish situation with the crooked bankers and the financial crisis that’s been going on in Ireland the last few years.”      
     Scott has been on quite a creative roll in recent years, having authored an enthusiastically received memoir, "Adventures of a Waterboy" - which I've just started - while the new album is the result of two decades of dedication and a lifelong fascination with Yeats’ poetry. “My mother is a university lecturer in English literature, so I grew up in a house full of books,” said Scott. “When I was a kid, my mum talked about Yeats in hushed tones — and she pronounced it ‘Yates,’ which rhymes with ‘great.’ So it was a very serious, awe-inspiring name around the house, and I had a sense of Yeats being this magical figure. Later, as a teenager, I began to read his poetry for myself and got to discover him in my own time.
     
     “Then, the first time the Waterboys played Dublin, I bought a volume of his poetry and became attracted to it all over again, but this time with greater understanding. Yeats’ poems seem to be exquisitely and deliberately sculpted, and yet they flow lightly off the tongue. I noticed that a lot of them lined and scanned like song lyrics. To me that was like an open window to go through; I had to put them to music because they were crying out for it. On the Fisherman’s Blues album, I made my first attempt at putting one of his poems to music with ‘The Stolen Child,’ and it became a favorite track on that album for a lot of people. Shortly after, I decided that Yeats’ poetry deserved a whole album, or even a whole stage show, and first I imagined it would be a ‘various artists’ undertaking, but in the end I did it all myself with my own band.”
     
     As the years passed, Scott continually returned to Yeats’ poems, planting seeds in his imagination and cultivating them until they blossomed. “If I’d tried to write 15 Yeats adaptations in a year, I would’ve done a slapdash job on it,” he said. “So I did it without any time constraints, and every few years I would turn another poem into a song. Of course, I was doing lots of other things as well, touring and albums, but I held it in my mind as a project for two decades, and eventually, I had enough adaptations.”     
     Scott is far from the first musician to set Yeats’ poetry to music; hundreds have tried, though few have managed to create such elegantly seamless marriages of music and language. “I went on iTunes, did a Sherlock Holmes job and found over 300 interpretations of his poems — I bought them all as well,” Scott says with a laugh. “My favorite ones are when people bring something fresh and powerful to the task.”
    What's doing on tour and in Boston? It's quick, 5-date Northeastern tour, for a one-hour reading selected from "Adventures of a Waterboy" followed by a 40-minute acoustic set with Waterboys fiddler Steve Wickham. The musical selections will be from the Waterboys' long history and will also feature a preview of songs from "An Appointment With Mr. Yeats."
   (The current interview material comes from Scott's eminently trustworthy publicist Cary Baker.)

Tickets: $20. Starts at 9.
    
158 Brighton Ave, Allston, 617-779-0140  www.brightonmusichall.com  


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