Carl Palmer:You're Not Finished Yet! - New York City Article

Carl Palmer at The Iridium

Carl Palmer:You're Not Finished Yet!

Nov 21, 2019
Subscribe

“Welcome back my friends / To the show that never ends!” Supposedly, when the Rolling Stones first started, their worst fear would be that someone would mistake them for a rock and roll group - you see, they thought of themselves as a blues band.

Likewise, when pianist Keith Emerson, singer, bassist and guitarist Greg Lake, and drummer Carl Palmer first joined forces 50 years ago (like Crosby, Stills, and Nash, they all were veterans of other successful bands - this was indeed a “supergroup”), few people would have confused them for any other rock band that had existed up to that point.

Photos Coutesy of Beth Naji

Their inspirations were not only Muddy Waters and Chuck Berry but Johann Sebastian Bach, William Blake, and even the contemporary American classical composer Aaron Copland. They didn’t seem like a rock band so much as the world’s loudest chamber music ensemble.

Indeed, when Carl Palmer and his ELP Legacy band started playing on Wednesday, November 20, I kept thinking that this was a band that was so loud that they could be clearly heard all over the Beacon Theater - even though they were actually be playing 25 blocks away in The Iridium. But despite the volume, this is a group of amazing subtlety, in the best ELP tradition, making rock music based on classical forms and sounds as well as the basic blues.

Photos Courtesy of Neth Naji

This was a welcome step at the time, when rock was moving from clubs and smaller theaters into increasingly larger venues such as festivals (like Woodstock, the Isle of Wight, Monterey Pop, and Altamont). Like Queen, also formed in London in 1970, EL&P were determined from the beginning to produce a unique version of rock and roll that was explicitly designed for big rooms and even stadiums: a kind of concert hall rock with equal roots in the European classics.

Click Here for the Full Iridium Event Calendar!

Alas, even though Emerson, Lake, and Palmer had reunited as recently as 2010 (for an audience of 30,000 at the High Voltage Festival in London), both Keith Emerson, and Greg Lake left us in 2016. Now, Carl Palmer tours with a number of bands, including the ELP Legacy. This power trio co-stars Paul Bielatowicz on guitar and most of the vocals, including “Lucky Man,” and perhaps ELP’s biggest hit “song” (or what comes closest to conforming to the traditional definition of a song), and Simon Fitzpatrick playing mostly the Chapman Stick to create what sounds like guitar, bass, and keyboard all at once.

Wednesday’s set at The Iridium included all the ELP hits and favorites - fans of the band heard everything they came to hear, among them two doses of Bach, the iconic Toccata and Fugue in D Minor and “Knife Edge,” from their debut album, Emerson, Lake, and Palmer (1970), with it’s allusions to Bach’s French Suite (also in D minor). Then there was the title number from their third album Trilogy, which is more of a ballad, and, in the mixture of classics and pop, contains allusions to such jazz luminaries as Dave Brubeck and the Modern Jazz Quartet. In fact, the group’s most famous “extended work,” “Tarkus,” contains sections in 5/4 (sometimes given as 10/8) that on some level were certainly inspired by Paul Desmond’s “Take Five.” (“Tarkus” also contains an illusion to Brubeck’s “Blue Rondo a la Turk.”)

Photos Courtesy of Beth Naji

There were solo sections for both Mr. Fitzpatrick and Mr. Bielatowicz (the latter doing a piece that started with Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata”) amd a deep dive through an ELP predecessor, King Crimson’s “21st Century Schizoid Man,” which now seems like an ancient prediction that had recently come to pass.

There were other ELP classics in multiple senses of the word, like their imaginative re-imagining of Carl Orff’s perennially-popular Carmina Burana, and two major crowd pleasers from Copland, the “Hoedown” (from the Rodeo ballet) and “Fanfare for the Common Man,” which climaxed in an epic drum solo from Mr. Palmer. When he announced this would be their last song, a rather aggressive fan in the back row yelled out, “You’re not finished yet!” Indeed.

Click Here To Read Will's New York Nite Life Blog!

Click Here To Read More Exciting Things Happening In NYC!

Welcome! Please subscribe to our blogs and stay informed about the best things to do in New York City.

If you love the Big Apple, be sure to subscribe for the latest happenings in NYC!

Photo Gallery