Review: Serge Gainsbourg Tribute at Hollywood Bowl 
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/music_blog/2011/08/review-serge-gainsbourg-tribute-at-hollywood-bowl.html
 

August 29, 2011 

Dear good people of France: Give singer Mike Patton a permanent residency at 
the most disreputable lounge in Paris, posthaste. Dressed like one of the 
lowliest hit men of the “Sopranos” crew, the former Faith No More and Mr. 
Bungle shredder brought a louche elegance to Serge Gainsbourg’s “Requiem pour 
un Con” at the Hollywood Bowl. 

There was no shortage of singers pleased to slip into Gainsbourg’s white 
Repetto shoes at Sunday night’s Beck-produced Gainsbourg tribute, including his 
progeny, Lulu — but Patton, possessed of a slithery outlaw charm, was the 
evening’s breakaway lead. As the bass slinked around beatnik conga drums, he 
half spit and half savagely whispered in French his regards to life lived as a 
jerk. Occasionally he wriggled his eyebrows or widened his eyes, as if he’d 
just spotted a cold-blooded femme across the room. 

With the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra conducted by Scott Dunn and Gainsbourg 
collaborator Jean-Claude Vannier and a crack live band reunited from Beck’s 
2002 album, “Sea Change,” the true star of the evening was Gainsbourg’s 
towering songbook, a four-decade flirtation with every style of music that 
caught his eye — from chanson to ye-ye pop to Afro-Cuban jazz, American folk 
and reggae. A re-creation of the “Lolita”-like concept album written by Vannier 
and Gainsbourg, 1971’s “Histoire de Melody Nelson” was performed in its 
entirety for the evening’s sweeping finale. 

When dealing with material that demands so much personality, perhaps more than 
it does technical skill, the singers who brought their own style to Gainsbourg 
fared the best. The diminutive goth singer Zola Jesus brought a throaty swagger 
to her version of “Harley Davidson,” but she also knew when to downplay her 
Joplin-at-the-opera tones, as evidenced by her gentle backup vocals on the 
breezy meringue, “Sea, Sex and Sun.” 
Beach House chanteuse Victoria Legrand, one of the few onstage with proper 
Gallic blood (her uncle is French composer Michel Legrand), lent her wisp of a 
voice to various compositions throughout the night, including a gorgeously 
subtle duet with Patton on “La Decadanse.” 

Wearing a red silky blouse with a sparkly bow tie, Legrand often sang with her 
hands in her trouser pockets, a shy smile occasionally breaking out. Her 
demureness worked best when paired with Patton’s dangerous charisma but when 
she sang a duet with Grizzly Bear’s equally polite Ed Droste, both seemed like 
they might fade in the foam of Gainsbourg’s chanson, until drummer Joey 
Waronker’s solo came along and provided spine. 

Sean Lennon, outfitted in a cape and introducing himself as “Captain 
Lawnmower,” supplied a fitting sense of camp for the night. Charlotte Kemp 
Muhl, his model accomplice, gamely fulfilled the role of outré sex symbol. 
Somebody had to do it, and Kemp Muhl has the pretty yet petulantly coy vocal 
chops, not to mention a criminally lascivious scarlet pout, to revive the 
orgasmic “Je T’aime … Moi Non Plus.” 

Beck didn’t turn in the most electrifying performances of his career, but, 
staying true to his role of master curator, his song choices were some of the 
best of the night. Highlighting Gainsbourg’s most audacious moments as 
provocateur, his songs written for the French teen star France Gall are rife 
with references to LSD and oral sex. Don’t expect Justin Bieber to cover these 
soon. 

For the finale of “Melody Nelson,” a clean-cut and dapper Joseph Gordon-Levitt 
stepped in to provide gravelly speak-singing, dove-tailing particularly well 
with Legrand on the trippy conclusion, “Cargo Culte.” Behind them, the rhythm 
section stalked, Justin Meldal-Johnsen’s bass thrumming low and guttural, the 
perfect reminder that Gainsbourg never forgot the dark side of sex, or life. 

. 

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