City Winery
155 Varick St.
Friday, May 4, $25-$45, 8:00
212-608-0555
www.citywinery.com
www.richardbarone.com
On May 31, 1987, Richard Barone gathered a group of his friends at the Bottom Line and recorded the instant downtown classic Cool Blue Halo. The Tampa-born Barone, a longtime Greenwich Village resident, will be re-creating that amazing performance on May 4 at City Winery when he and the same musicians, in addition to special guests, will celebrate the album’s twenty-fifth anniversary by playing it in full one night only. Barone will reunite with Jane Scarpantoni on cello, Nick Celeste on guitar, and Valerie Naranjo on percussion and keyboard, with such special guests as Fred Schneider, Tony Visconti, Garth Hudson, the Bongos’ Rob Norris on bass, Deni Bonet on violin, Richard Kerris on drums, and Candy John Carr on bongos. A mix of old and new songs and a few covers, Cool Blue Halo features eleven tracks filled with gorgeous melodies, beautiful harmonies, and lush arrangements. Barone kicks things off with the Bongos’ “The Bulrushes” and his own mesmerizing “I Belong to Me”: “I am a face in the window / passing through another day,” he sings, continuing, “I’ve heard the cool cool music of Mingus and Miles in the afternoon / in the afternoon / I’ve felt the cold blue halo / gotten by an angel in my room / in my room.” Barone delivers lovely renditions of the Beatles’ “Cry Baby Cry” and David Bowie’s “The Man Who Sold the World” along with such other originals as the yearning “Flew a Falcon” and the lilting “Love Is a Wind That Screams” before concluding with the Bongos favorite “Numbers with Wings.” Barone is putting together a limited edition box set that will include a remastered version of the original album, a live DVD of the May 4 concert, and never-before-released bonus material that you can preorder here to help fund the project’s completion; various deluxe packages also come with tickets to the concert, handwritten lyrics, signed CDs, and other paraphernalia. Barone will be back at City Winery on May 8 for the fundraiser “Occupy This Album: a compilation of music by, for and inspired by the Occupy Wall Street movement and the 99%,” for which Barone contributed “Hey, Can I Sleep on Your Futon?”