Friday, November 10, 2017




THEATER

Garage 33 Theater
The B-Side: "Negro Folklore From Texas State Prisons"

"THE B-SIDE is based on the 1965 LP “Negro Folklore from Texas State Prisons,” which features work songs, blues, spirituals, preaching, and toasts from inmates in Texas’ then-segregated agricultural prison farms. The album was brought to The Wooster Group by performer Eric Berryman after he saw the Group’s previous record album interpretation EARLY SHAKER SPIRITUALS. In THE B-SIDE, Berryman plays the album and transmits the material live, by channeling, via an in-ear receiver, the voices of the men on the record. Accompanying him are Jasper McGruder and Philip Moore. Berryman also provides context from the book Wake Up Dead Man: Hard Labor and Southern Blues by Bruce Jackson, the folklorist who recorded the album at the prison in 1964 and is now a SUNY Distinguished Professor at the University at Buffalo."






THEATER

Review: ‘The B-Side’ Is an Extraordinary Masterclass in Listening
THE B-SIDE: "NEGRO FOLKLORE FROM TEXAS STATE PRISONS" A RECORD ALBUM INTERPRETATION


NYT Critic’s Pick
Off Off Broadway, Play, Experimental/Perf. Art, Special Event
Closing Date: November 19, 2017
Performing Garage, 33 Wooster St.
212-966-3651


By BEN BRANTLEYOCT. 31, 2017



Philip Moore, Eric Berryman and Jasper McGruder sing along with a historical recording in “The B-Side: Negro Folklore From Texas State Prisons” at the Performing Garage.

Music seldom sounds more exciting than when you’re introduced to it through the ears of a passionate fan. Surely, you’ve had a friend who sat you down and asked you to lend full attention to what was about to be played for you — a Schubert sonata performed by Radu Lupu, perhaps, or Jimi Hendrix doing “All Along the Watchtower.”

You may have even been told, with unconditional sincerity, “This song will change your life.” And if it didn’t quite do that, the focus of an aficionado’s enthusiasm and expertise made you hear layers and meanings that you would never have inferred had you come across the same work by chance on the radio or as background music at a party.

That’s the experience, heightened to the point of transcendence, that’s on offer in the Wooster Group’s extraordinary “The B-Side: ‘Negro Folklore From Texas State Prisons,’” which runs through Nov. 19 at the Performing Garage in SoHo. Like this troupe’s marvelous “Early Shaker Spirituals,” staged in New York in 2014 and scheduled for revival in December, “The B-Side” is quaintly subtitled “A Record Album Interpretation.”

Yes, the focal point here is a vinyl disc that is removed from an attractively illustrated jacket and placed on a turntable. An actor, Eric Berryman, lowers the record player’s arm, a piece of anatomy that may be new to younger audience members. Sound flows as the disc circles. And the act of listening somehow becomes a process that extends to and heightens all the senses.

The charismatic Mr. Berryman was not recruited to this project by a director or casting agent. He is a man with a long and serious relationship with the album at the center of this show, a 1965 compilation of work songs, spirituals, blues and toasts, performed by African-American convicts in rural Texas and compiled by the folklorist Bruce Jackson.Continue reading the main story
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Before he sets needle to vinyl, Mr. Berryman gives us a bit of matter-of-fact introduction to what we are about to hear and how this performance came into being. Several years ago, he had seen “Early Shaker Spirituals.” While working in a Chinese tea shop as a waiter, he met that show’s director, the Wooster stalwart Kate Valk, and told her he had an idea for her.

And so Ms. Valk wound up staging “The B-Side.” It is a task to which she — and a design team overseen by Elizabeth LeCompte, the Wooster Group’s artistic director, with lighting by Ryan Seelig and sound by Eric Sluyter — have brought a rigorous elegance and clarity.

Mr. Berryman’s prefatory remarks are delivered with the smooth, Everyman diction you associate with actors doing voice-overs or pitching their résumés at auditions. It is not a tone that prepares you for the voice — no, make that voices — that subsequently emanate from Mr. Berryman and his two fellow performers, Philip Moore and Jasper McGruder.

For what these men do is something you have probably done when alone at home. They sing along with the record, their voices layering and merging with, in this case, those of convicts doing hard labor a half-century ago. Perhaps unlike you, Mr. Berryman and company do so with a concentration, lucidity and visceral force that suggest profound and old acquaintance with the music.

I mean, really, really old — as in centuries old. Not that any of these performers are geriatric. But they become conduits for the songs of prisoners who were themselves conduits for an oral tradition that stretches back to at least the early days of slavery in this country. This is music that feels viral not in the technological sense of current usage, but in the sense of residing in the bloodstream.

Mr. Berryman occasionally annotates the separate numbers (there are 14 in total) with readings of passages from Mr. Jackson’s book of oral history, “Wake Up Dead Man: Hard Labor and Southern Blues.” As in Mr. Berryman’s introduction to the show, none of these descriptions is politically or emotionally shaded. They’re neutral, so as not to block our view of the main event here.

That’s the music, of course, and the recorded spoken-word toasts. Performed a cappella, the songs spin tales of mythologically mean prison guards, and loves and lives lost, and the backbreaking purgatory of unendingly repetitive physical tasks.

The actors do not try to re-create the wood-hacking and hoeing that was the daily lot of the men they are channeling. Mostly, they are uncommonly still, conflating the acts of singing and listening. Gestures and movements are severely rationed, so that each one reads incisively.

Only once does Mr. Berryman fully cut loose, to deliver a parody of an evangelical spiel, which releases him from the aural backdrop of the record and has him sprinting into the audience as an animated cartoon of a money-collecting preacher. Entitled “Daniel in the Lion’s Den,” it is the penultimate piece in the show.

For the final number, the work song “Forty-Four Hammers,” Mr. Berryman falls silent to become the quintessential listener again. He takes a chair and watches old grainy film showing an unbroken line of chain-gang members chopping wood in unison. (Robert Wuss is the video designer.)

That found footage is projected against images, on a sleek monitor, of Mr. Berryman’s apartment in Harlem, where his vinyl record collection fills shelves. His home could be said to have always been the setting for this show — or rather any place where you feel safe developing an intense and intimate relationship with the art of others.









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