Brownstein: The Band’s Last Waltz gets another spin with tribute concert

Like the group’s legendary 1976 farewell show, the performance in the ornate venue Le 9e — featuring dozens of Montreal artists — will be held on U.S. Thanksgiving.

The event has been dubbed I Shall Be Released: A Re-creation of The Last Waltz.

Held in San Francisco on U.S. Thanksgiving night in 1976, The Last Waltz also featured a who’s who of legends, from Bob Dylan to Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison to Muddy Waters, and was captured in Martin Scorsese’s epic of the same name, one of the most memorable rock docs of them all.

Mitch Melnick’s Billy Bob Productions, which staged the 2016 concert here, has gone whole hog for Thursday’s event. Actually, whole fowl: In partnership with the show’s Le 9e production team, they will be serving up a U.S. Thanksgiving turkey dinner prior to the show, at the venue’s Île-de-France restaurant. Alas, that bird has flown, with those tickets already all gobbled up. However, tickets for the concert itself remain.

Melnick, along with guitarist Shane Murphy and drummer/producer/bandleader Howard Bilerman — speaking at the latter’s hotel2tango recording/rehearsal studio — hadn’t really contemplated a followup to the 2016 show.

“Earlier this year, Jeff Baikowitz, basically the linchpin behind bringing Le 9e back to life, asked me to check out the space,” Bilerman recalls. “He said the venue was already reserved for much of the year for corporate functions, but he wanted to do some cool stuff the rest of the year. I put two and two together, remembering that the original Last Waltz was a turkey dinner, ballroom dancing and music in a big ballroom. So I pitched this to Mitch.”

Melnick, not quite a ballroom-dance devotee, was intrigued.

“This came right out of the blue, not something I ever had in mind,” says Melnick, whose Billy Bob Productions has put together tributes to all manner of musical genres, along with those to his fave poet/performer of all, Dylan. “So we went out and brought together the usual suspects who did the first show, like Shane, Howard and Arcade Fire’s Tim Kingsbury, and some newcomers.”

A scene of some of the performers in The Last Waltz, a documentary on The Band's farewell show.
The Band’s all-star 1976 concert The Last Waltz and Martin Scorsese’s documentary of the show long ago attained legendary status.Photo: Postmedia files

Among the 30 singers and musicians performing are Dawn Tyler Watson, Basia Bulat, Katie Moore, Michelle Tompkins, Mike O’Brien, Chris Velan, Rob Lutes, Rob MacDonald, Alec McElcheran and Josh Trager. They will be playing with either Bilerman’s Mile End Band or, newly assembled for the occasion, the West End Band.

Murphy, one of the premier blues guitarists in the country, concedes he wasn’t a fan of The Band when he first heard them.

“But I was just 10 at the time,” quips Murphy, whose latest disc, Easy Street, was released in July. “But as I grew up, the depth of their material really grew on me — that whole mix of gospel, country, rock and blues. What I find most fascinating is this band, a pillar of Americana, is actually Canadiana, with four-fifths of the group from here.”

“Interestingly, the fact that The Band was able to do that concert on Thanksgiving back then was because they were mostly Canadian and, unlike some American groups who were unable to do the show, they didn’t have to be back home to take part in dinners with their families,” points out Bilerman, who has also drummed with Arcade Fire. “So their parents wouldn’t have been pissed at them.”

A man plays guitar while two other men smile and watch him from a facing couch.
“Hopefully this is the beginning of what could be a monthly or bi-monthly series of shows” at Le 9e, says Mitch Melnick, right, with Shane Murphy and Howard Bilerman at the latter’s hotel2tango studio.Photo by Dave Sidaway /Montreal Gazette

The sold-out 2016 Last Waltz tribute cost patrons $35. The concert-only ticket for Le 9e is $99.

“We made $350 that night at the Corona and gave the profit to Shane for his next album. We also set a record for alcohol sales then — which has since been broken,” Melnick notes. “This one is a different vibe — a three-hour show, but with half the capacity of the first show.

A rock concert was likely not what Lady Flora Eaton, the widow of John Eaton, had in mind for this art-deco space she inspired when it first opened in 1931.

“I haven’t told Mitch about this yet, but I have created a special death-metal anthem for the occasion,” Murphy cracks. “I think it should wake up the ghosts in the building — a real showstopper.”

AT A GLANCE

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