Review of Bob Schneider with Strings Attached Show
Tickets to show this weekend. I've never been disappointed at a Bob Schneider show, and I've never
known anyone who stumbled onto one of Bob's performances and didn't
leave as a disciple ready to spread the word. I've seen Bob perform
under a few different arrangements. As lead of the Scabs, he has an
opportunity to push the limits of raunchiness, singing with the Texas
Bluegrass Massacre, he can put a country twist and instrumentation to
his masterpieces, and as a solo artist, he has an opportunity to go
from mainstream rock to experimental electronica.
My 11-year old daughter has become a big Bob Schneider fan, but I've
always had to regulate what songs she's heard, and I'd never risk
taking her to one of his live shows until she gets a little older. But
a unique opportunity presented itself. Bob Schneider hooked up with
Will Taylor to perform with Strings Attached during their regular
performance season. I have a few reviews that feature Strings Attached,
so you may have already read about the concept. Musicians scrap their
regular band, Will Taylor and the other members of Strings Attached
craft new arrangements to the musician's work. The arrangements
typically include violin, cello, viola, piano, bass, and trumpet. Not
your typical band setup. The result is an unforgettable performance.
When I learned that Bob was scheduled for a Strings Attachment
performance, I couldn't pass up the opportunity to let my daughter see
him live. I knew that the Strings Attached audience was typically older
than Bob's regular crowd, and being broadcast live on KGSR, I knew that
Bob would be forced to tame it down a little. That's not to say that
he'd still have an opportunity to rock.
Always being blown away at Strings Attached shows, I had high
expectation, and Bob delivered. Some songs lent themselves to an easy
translation to the Strings Attached format because they started out as
stripped down, raw tunes. Lorena and I Have Reason to Believe fell into
this category. Beautiful arrangements gave these a more polished feel.
What was more interesting, was hearing songs that had full
instrumentation swapped for string arrangements. I was caught off guard
when Cap'n Kirk emerged from an dramatically altered intro. Most
amazingly, Bob can't help but find and crank out a groove regardless of
the instruments around him. This is a testament to both Will Taylor and
Bob. I imagine that if I gave Bob a touch tone phone and a mic, he'd
find a way to crank out a rump shakin' jam. If anyone's heard Honey
Bomb, they know Bob is a linguistic acrobat. Seeing it live heightens
the appreciation for his talent. Listening to the song crescendo with
the backing of a muted trumpet, piano, cello, drums, and violin was
unbelievable.
I have to admit that even though I have a lot of Bob Schneider's work,
there were a couple of songs I hadn't heard before. One began, "I had a
dream that I was dying... to see you." This had to have been one of the
most beautifully written songs that I'd heard. Now I have it on CD. I
still don't know what it's called. At a Texas Bluegrass Massacre show,
Bob had mentioned that they were recording the performance, and that
people could by CDs of the performance immediately following the show.
I thought, "What kind of crap is Bob trying to pull? How could he
possibly have CDs right after the show?" But before the Strings
Attached show, Will sent an email stating that they would have
recordings of the show immediately following it. I had to get in on
that action. Now I have a CD of the Strings Attached show with possibly
Bob's most beautiful song ever. Since it just shows up as Track 4 or
whatever number it is, I'll just have to keep showing up at Bob's shows
until he mentions the name of the song.
Bob has been considered musician of the year in Austin several times.
Go to a live show, and you'll know why. Bob is one of the few artists
that will go from ballad to jazz to folk to rap to country and somehow
make it appear that these are meant to be strung together.
Tickets to show this weekend.