Thank you, Erland!!
http://www.bt.dk/musik/evigt-unge-bryan ... e-i-tivoliGoogle says:
"Eternally young Bryan Ferry : Croon and class in Tivoli
At least two events can a man be sure to show up underdressed. By his own birth and a concert with Bryan Ferry. At least if you compare with the protagonist on stage.
So of course this evening in Tivoli Concert Hall, where mr. Ferry appeared with a new band - with a Danish guitarist,
The 69-year-old dandy consult fortunately often his favorite tailor Anderson & Sheppard in Savile Row in London to have made a new set coming out on a new tour.
Just a year ago he appeared lately in Denmark - Sønderborg. Three years ago, Aarhus and Copenhagen.
The first thing that jumped into the ears during first track 'Re-Make / Re-Model' was the sound. It sounded miserable as Ferry appeared in Falconer three years ago, but this night was the sound stage so significant, freezing tingling clear as the sky a cloudless January day.
The next thing that Ferry has restored / genmodelleret his band a bit. The long-standing partner in crime, Chris Spedding, is replaced by the Danish guitarist Jacob Quistgaard - or just Quist - and guitarist Steve Jones. Not the Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols, but a guitarist who is particularly known as sekstrenget sound designer, including with the former Roxy member Brian Eno.
Equally unknown Quist is in Denmark, just as excellent, he is on his instrument. It sounded equilibristic in a single totally shaded area with just clarinet, keyboards and acoustic guitar. And in a surprisingly muted 'More That This'.
Quistgaard had several very nice, distinct solos, both spherical denominated in a number like 'Ladytron' and more straight sharp rock'n'roll in the nearly new 'Reason Or Rhyme' from 'Olympia'. Sharp as Ferry's bow tie would look like if he otherwise tied it. It is a wild and daring claim to sling out, but Quistgaard had more space in the new Ferry soundstage than even Phil Manzanera of Roxy in Valby Hallen in 2001.
(See Quistgaard shine on its own youtubekanal:) http: // https: //www.youtube.com/user/QuistTV
The cool, excellent multi-instrumentalist Jorja Chalmers is back. So far remembered with more space and more solos than the last - perhaps even more space than Andy Mackay, when he originally played with Ferry both solo and Roxy Music.
Now was that cool. In addition to being able to wear a page and a pair of high heel, as might be expected in a Ferry-band stole Chalmers passing this reviewer's heart when her response to the audience's tribute after a solo was to lead the index finger to his lips before she clapped as with the three in the choir. It is said that the devil is in the detail - as does his counterpart behind St. Peter's gate and then.
To paraphrase the always edgy closing number 'Editions Of You' there are several versions of Bryan Ferry, as he in the almost ten concerts I've seen with him is balanced more or less successful.
Extremely personal crooner and interpreter, expressionist art-rock style creates (the first Roxy), satyrisk ironist - and this one pop-gentleman who created his own sueave and sexy groove with 'Oh Yeah,' Avalon 'and' Slave To Love '. Pure into the sublime Dylan album 'Dylanesque', where he gave 'Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues' in Tivoli.
The Tivoli tonight was screwed down a little early Roxy. It is clear that Ferry and the new musical director, keyboardist Paul Beard, has worked hard to create organic link between such diverse numbers as mentioned Dylan song, 'Ladytron' and a mildly corny reggae-country (!) Version of 'If There Is Something'.
A colleague said, 'it sounds clumsy' (he can even be). How I experienced it, but it is true that especially the otherwise hard-working drummer hung up along the way. Against that, bassist Guy Pratt - the only member of the band, even remotely is the same age as Ferry - firmly and steadily.
And in the final threesome with the always splendid and ironic 'Casanova' (Casanova, er your name, or do you live there?), 'Love Is The Drug' and 'Let's Stick Together' went that well barn dance in it. But we're talking three greatest hit, concert voted audience, so the finer musical gorumetnuancer very easily sacrificed on the altar of the party sweaty
The music is immortal, the singer hardly. And well, the 69-year-old crooner no longer so vivant on stage as once, his voice can not be so much more, but - blimey - it swung in Tivoli. And then the man still so much style that all the wannabes who have followed up over the decades since the miner's son from Newcastle first got his green boots on stage just to look at and try to learn".
Bryan Ferry, Tivoli Concert Hall, Tuesday evening