Free concert on July 27th, 2024 in the Kantine, Cologne
Originally Published in Rock Blog
On August 8, 2024
Text by Judith
Photos by Jane Glück
Read the original article here.
The Kantine is slowly filling up. Since the sky couldn’t quite decide on a weather pattern today and is more likely to use the notorious April weather on this summer evening, the organizers of the Kantine Cologne, in cooperation with the music magazine Visions, have moved the concert by Alex Henry Foster & The Long Shadows from the beer garden to the inside as a precaution. It is the crowning conclusion of a European tour that is very important for the band and especially for the frontman.
For the first time since his critical, ten-hour heart operation at the beginning of last year, Alex Henry Foster is finally able to stand on stage again this summer with his five bandmates and do what his heart beats for most – forgive the simplistic metaphor: music. It is clear that he is filled with gratitude and is practically overflowing with happiness. Here stands someone who celebrates life – together with his band and together with his fans. And he and the band have a lot of them! The fans are more than just fans, they form a real community with Alex Henry Foster & The Long Shadows with clear familial traits. They have traveled from all over today for this special final concert, which is also free. A loving gesture from the band that proves that the joy and gratitude are real and want to be shared.
Anyone who has ever been to an Alex Henry Foster & The Long Shadows concert is prepared for emotional highs, goosebumps and tears in the corners of their eyes. Nevertheless, every single performance holds a surprise that leaves even the most loyal AHF fan frozen in awe. The foundation is the music, which can hardly be described in words. A delicate, explosive mixture of post rock, progressive rock, noise, ambient… – to throw around a few genres. But mere genre names do not do this live music justice. Atmospheric, hypnotic soundscapes like in “The Pain That Bonds (The Beginning Is The End)” or “The Power Of The Heart” gently embrace the audience and carry them away before they are pulled back down to earth by progressive, emotional sound cocktails like “Summertime Departures” or “The Son Of Hannah” to lose themselves in complete ecstasy together with the frontman and his band. As always, the acoustic highlight is the super song “The Hunter”.
Alex’s voice, with its captivating spoken word and dreamy melodies, together with the cinematic-sounding instrumentation, forms the wooden cross that has the people in front of the stage like marionettes on strings and thus in their hands. The sound cosmos is like a black hole: it sucks everything in, mercilessly and lovingly at the same time. Smiling faces everywhere, swaying bodies, closed eyes, astonished eyes, shining eyes. The band once again proves its musical virtuosity when it lets off steam and takes turns on countless instruments. Alex Henry Foster and Miss Isabel in particular change instruments as easily as I change my underpants (at home, not in Die Kantine). Full of grace and passion, violin bows stroke guitar and bass strings, while Miss Isabel single-handedly uses an instrumentation similar to that of a big band behind the keys. Ben Lemelin, meanwhile, keeps switching between guitar and drums, so that at times two drum kits push the boundaries of what is possible.
I wonder if Alex Henry Foster will stage dive into the audience with his guitar again today? His doctors advised him against making the happy leap into the crowd himself. Tonight he decides on a compromise: he carefully descends from the stage and walks through the crowd with his guitar around his neck, which parts like the sea before Moses. He heads towards a small, curly-haired girl, greets the girl and hangs his guitar around her neck. While little Mathilda, who has travelled from Great Britain with her father Kevin, cheerfully scrubs her guitar, Foster strolls relaxed through the crowd and greets new and old friends with hearty, intimate hugs. Finally, he walks back to the stage with his newly recruited new guitarist through the still open lock, lifts the girl up, climbs after her and then applauds this brave curly-haired girl, shaking his head in disbelief and finally dancing wildly. He celebrates life, and the band and the audience celebrate with him.
I wonder if Alex Henry Foster will stage dive into the audience with his guitar again today? His doctors advised him against making the happy leap into the crowd himself. Tonight he decides on a compromise: he carefully descends from the stage and walks through the crowd with his guitar around his neck, which parts like the sea before Moses. He heads towards a small, curly-haired girl, greets the girl and hangs his guitar around her neck. While little Mathilda, who has travelled from Great Britain with her father Kevin, cheerfully scrubs her guitar, Foster strolls relaxed through the crowd and greets new and old friends with hearty, intimate hugs. Finally, he walks back to the stage with his newly recruited new guitarist through the still open lock, lifts the girl up, climbs after her and then applauds this brave curly-haired girl, shaking his head in disbelief and finally dancing wildly. He celebrates life, and the band and the audience celebrate with him.
It is such gestures of authentic spontaneity that make Alex Henry Foster and his Long Shadows the biggest fans of the music stage. Everything is real, nothing is fake, you can tell. Foster notes that – unlike many big bands and artists – they do not use backing tracks, that all sounds are created live. The encore is also not an ordinary one, as Foster emphasizes: He actually thinks it’s stupid when bands come back on stage surprised and think about what else they could play. Today, however, he and his band have a gift for their audience as they hurl the 14-minute epic sound gem “Slow Pace Of The Wind” into the cosmos. A worthy encore from a worthy band for a worthy audience.
Lineup
Alex Henry Foster:
vocals, guitar, Moog, percussions
Ben Lemelin:
guitar, drums, vocals
Jeff Beaulieu:
bass
Sef Lemelin:
guitar, keyboards
Miss Isabel:
keyboards, clarinet, trumpet, flute, vocals
Charles “Moose” Allicie:
drums, dulcimer
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