Concert Review: Tom Waits at the Fox Theatre, St. Louis, MO, June 26, 2008

It’s an understatement to say that expectations were high and the crowd was madly eager for Tom Waits’ St. Louis show at the Fox Theatre on Thursday night. Playing St. Louis for the first time since the mid 1970s (and not, as one snide person commented to me, for the first time since the American Civil War), Waits and his excellent backing band delivered a performance that made it well worth the, er, wait.

By now the Waits stage persona has been written about and described to death: the odd twitches and gestures, the stomping and hollering, and the overall theatrical/carnival barker qualities that are impossible to miss, and that Waits himself has been willing to embellish and exaggerate over the years. Still, those descriptions don’t adequately reflect what it’s like to see Waits live on stage. A day after the concert, with a slight and bizarrely enjoyable ringing still in my ears, I suspect I’m not the only fan or critic struggling to suitably describe what a tremendous show this was.

I’ve long thought that the main reason people attend concerts is because they want to participate in a communal experience and walk away from the show with a few lasting musical memories. Well, ok, I’ve actually maintained that the primary reasons people attend concerts are to get shitfaced and/or stoned, drunkenly request “Freebird” at the most inappropriate point in the evening, get a night away from the brats (sorry, children), or behave like inmates freshly escaped from the mental ward. And after all that, people attend live performances for the communal experience and the memories.

If that’s true, Waits and the band didn’t disappoint. In a set that ran a little over two hours (and even then felt far too short), what was perhaps most noticeable was Waits’ ability to convey a song’s themes and moods in a live setting. In this way, Waits could somehow go from the slow and beautiful solider song “Day After Tomorrow” to the hilariously demented “Cemetery Polka” without the contrasts seeming forced or out of place. Waits’ stage movements were clearly at least partly choreographed; even when glitter rained down on him during “Make It Rain,” it somehow managed to fit into the mood onstage.

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Article Author: Eric Dennis

Eric Dennis is a music enthusiast/junkie who really needs to ease off the sarcasm sometimes. In his free time he enjoys dodging thunderbolts from angry Skynyrd fans. He regularly writes for blogcritics.org and spectrumculture.com.

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  • 1 - Glen Boyd

    Jun 27, 2008 at 8:13 pm

    And still no Seattle date. Damn!

    -Glen

  • 2 - Jeanine

    Jun 28, 2008 at 4:55 pm

    It was such an amazing show!! Well worth the wait!

  • 3 - Mat Brewster

    Jun 29, 2008 at 9:22 pm

    Nice review. I'm still aching over the fact that he's coming to my home town, but I'm gonna be out of the country at the time.

  • 4 - Ryan B.

    Aug 14, 2008 at 11:25 pm

    I was at that show and was next to the guy that shouted "I want to have your baby Mr. Waits!" The dude was a loon.

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