30
Oct/13

TRIBUTE TO LOU REED: LOU REED’S BERLIN

30
Oct/13
Museum of the Moving Image pays tribute to the late, great Lou Reed with special BERLIN screening on November 2

Museum of the Moving Image pays tribute to the late, great Lou Reed with special BERLIN screening on November 2

LOU REED’S BERLIN (Julian Schnabel, 2007)
Museum of the Moving Image
35th Ave. at 36th St., Astoria
Saturday, November 2, $12, 7:30
718-777-6800
www.movingimage.us
www.loureed.com/inmemoriam

In December 2006, Lou Reed resurrected his 1973 masterwork, Berlin, a deeply dark and personal song cycle that was a critical and commercial flop upon its initial release but has grown in stature over the years. (As Reed sings on the album’s closer, “Sad Song”: “Just goes to show how wrong you can be.”) The superbly staged adaptation, directed by Academy Award nominee Julian Schnabel (Basquiat, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly), took place at Brooklyn’s intimate St. Ann’s Warehouse, featuring Rob Wasserman and longtime Reed sideman Fernando Saunders on bass, Tony “Thunder” Smith on drums, Rupert Christie on keyboards, and guitarist extraordinaire Steve Hunter, reunited with Lou for the first time in three decades. The band is joined onstage by backup singers Sharon Jones and Antony, the Brooklyn Youth Chorus, and a seven-piece orchestra (including cello, viola, flute, trumpet, clarinet, and flugel). Amid dreamlike video montages shot by Schnabel’s daughter, Lola, depicting Emmanuelle Seigner as the main character in Berlin, as well as experimental imagery by Alejandro Garmendia, Reed tells the impossibly bleak story of Caroline, a young mother whose life crashes and burns in a dangerously divided and debauched Germany. “It was very nice / It was paradise,” Reed sings on the opening title track, but it’s all downhill from there. “It was very nice / It was paradise” might also now serve as a kind of epitaph for one of the most important poets of the last fifty years. Berlin is having a special screening November 2 at 7:30 at the Museum of the Moving Image in honor of Reed, who passed away on October 27 at the age of seventy-one.