Christopher Guest at Berklee Performance Center, November 30, 2007
By JIM SULLIVAN | December 4, 2007
 THIS IS SPINAL TAP: Christopher Guest (center) |
“This,†said Christopher Guest from the Berklee Performance Center stage, “is really difficult to believe. Until an hour ago, I thought it was a practical joke.†But, no, on November 30, Berklee School of Music president Roger Brown gave the multi-talented Guest, 59, an honorary doctorate, and then more than two dozen Berklee musicians played songs from Guest’s catalogue, mostly by Spinal Tap and the Folksmen. Long ago, Guest mastered the art of writing songs that succeed as genre parodies and as songs. Not great songs, but memorable songs, stuffed with clichés that ding the dumb/clever bell time and again.
Spinal Tap’s “Tonight I’m Gonna Rock You Tonight†— a statement of purpose and more purpose — kicked it off, with Owen McGreehan singing lead. Guest played electric guitar (and sometimes mandolin) on Tap material; he sang and played acoustic guitar with Ken Zembello and Jon Aldrich as the Folksmen, parodying the peppy optimistic folk of the early ’60s. And they brought the house down with their vocal harmonies during a cover of the Stones’ “Start Me Up.†Adi Yeshaya and Jim Odgren arranged the Folksmen’s “Skeletons of Quinto†as an instrumental, fully orchestrated and melancholic. Kevin Ross and Grace Taylor sang “A Penny for Your Thoughts†(from Guest’s small-town-music-theater send-up Waiting for Guffman) as a soulful duet. This came after Elvis Costello had performed it on video as a poignant acoustic number. (He then credited Guest as having “the soul of an artist†but having “far more wit.â€)
Other video tributes came from Aerosmith’s Tom Hamilton and from Steve Vai. Guest played it cool — by watching others and by ripping off some searing electric guitar leads. The finale — “Big Bottom,†Tap’s celebration of ample female posteriors — began with 50 Berklee student bassists striding down the aisles, ready to thump along with the band, whose line-up by then included president Brown on drums. Big smiles all around.
Related:
Boston music news, November 23, 2007, Fall back, Not ready for prime time, More
- Boston music news, November 23, 2007
Sting has an honorary doctorate from Berklee College of Music. David Bowie has one.
- Fall back
If you cannot remember the past, so Santayana said, you’re condemned to repeat it. Watch trailers for this fall's new releases.
- Not ready for prime time
With the release of yet another film starring former Saturday Night Live stars trying in vain to recapture the glories of their Lorne Michaels days - that would be The Benchwarmers starring David Spade and Rob Schneider
- For Your Consideration
The mock documentary has been around so long that it should have evolved by now into its own parody, the mock mock documentary. Watch the trailer for For Your Consideration  (QuickTime)
- Guest appearance
Those who expect ingratiating clowning and motormouth shtick from Christopher Guest, funny-ha-ha filmmaker of Waiting for Guffman , Best of Show , and A Mighty Wind , guess again. In public, he’s deadpan and somber.
- Primary colors
Now that the holiday hubbub is behind us, we have no dreams of white Christmases or visions of Sugar Plum Fairies to warm a theatergoer’s heart.
- Power failure
There must be something about Bob Balaban, straight man extraordinaire, that reminds Hollywood and indie filmmakers of the people who sign their paychecks.
- Scene and heard
Entertainment companies are pumping out music DVD titles by the hundreds, and 2008 will see a deluge of releases across all genres.
- Future of the Left | Travels With Myself and Another
There's a fine line between stupid and clever, as Spinal Tap once quipped, and don't these Future of the Left guys just know it.
- EXTRAS! EXTRAS!
As much as I lament the continuing decline of attendance at the cineplex, it’s also easy to understand.
- The Simpsons 20 best guest voices of all time
The TV gods are smiling upon us.
- Less

Topics:
Live Reviews
, Berklee College of Music, Roger Brown, Aerosmith, More
, Berklee College of Music, Roger Brown, Aerosmith, Tom Hamilton, Christopher Guest, Christopher Guest, Christopher Guest, Spinal Tap, Elvis Costello, Less