D'Angelo performs Live in Oakland, California (Photo by Ashleigh Reddy for OKP)
"This is For Us" - D'Angelo & The Vanguard Bring The Second Coming To The West Coast [Exclusive Photos + Recap]
He may not have returned to a better world, but thanks to the thunderous return of D'Angelo, the world is a better place. The soul legend appears to be fully rejuvenated and at the top of his game, awash in the glory of Black Messiah and backed by a band that, yes, might be his strongest ensemble yet. With the luminous Kendra Foster on backing vocals, Chris "Daddy" Dave atop the drum throne and Pino Palladino commanding all things low end, D'Angelo's Vanguard truly has become the new standard in live performance. Soul music's advance guard invaded the West Coast last week with raucous concerts in both Oakland and Los Angeles--and while his live sets are truly moments in time that must be seen and heard to be believed (cf. , Okayplayer was there to document history in the funking. Above these words lies an exclusive photo gallery of images taken at both shows, and below is an in-depth recap of the Oakland date, penned by Isa Nakazawa. Nakazawa eloquently labeled her show notes This is For Us and it takes only a few sentences of her bright, moving prose to realize just how singular and moving a 2015 D'Angelo performance can become. If you want to experience a 'Second Coming' watch D's electrifying Bonnaroo set. But if you want to understand what it *means* to be there...read on, as you scroll through the brilliant photography of Ashleigh Reddy and Cognito (Frolab) above.
All we wanted was a chance to talk /‘Stead we only got outlined in chalk.
Oakland needs a win. Rent is too high, food is too fancy, helicopters are too loud and many in the sky. The air is thick with 40 years of hoping and another black man was shot and killed by the cops in broad daylight yesterday morning. It was on Lakeshore and none of the media reports add up. And neither does this game. Everyone is aching with an all too familiar pain. But it’s opening night for D’Angelo & The Vanguard’s Second Coming Tour and no loss can stop the spirit filling up The Fox.
The lobby feels more like a family reunion than strangers feigning fellowship. People exchange hugs, buzzing with a childlike excitement shared by Bay Area musicians Martin Luther, Mara Rhuby, HNRL and Goapele. In spite of the backdrop of madness, everyone is in the mood for a love song. People start to chant “D-ANG-ELO” moments before The Vanguard appear on stage, dancing beneath hues of purple and blue light. They begin to play “Aint That Easy” as D’Angelo struts from the shadows in a cream fedora and textured trench adorning a black and silver glittering guitar. But we aren’t here to marvel at an outfit--and as his voice hits the air, we are reminded of why we came.
“We're gonna do this for Freddie Gray, Michael Brown, Oscar Grant and a lot of others that we don't know the names of. This is for us." D’Angelo’s words resonate with a city in perpetual mourning as The Vanguard’s spirited live rendition of “The Charade” offers a much-needed salve. People are dancing together in crowded aisles, joining in call-and-response chants and disrupting the scripted roles of audience and performer. And while D’Angelo isn’t overly nostalgic, he invokes the likes of Prince and James Brown with every signature guttural grunt (“uh!”). #BlackMessiah knowingly emerges from a rich musical tradition and simultaneously invites us to dream, to imagine a brighter day and to dare to manifest it. After all, “Black Messiah is not one man. It’s a feeling that, collectively, we are all that leader.”
Well-versed in the art of anticipation, D’Angelo seems to bluff a closing that turns into two encores making the uncertainty worthwhile. A slow and playful walk back to the mic, now fitted in an electric blue fedora reveals his love for subtle theatrics. As “Untitled (How Do You Feel)” begins to play, the roaring crowd, D’Angelo and The Vanguard blend into a euphoric chorus united; however temporary, in song and sweat.
And as the music inevitably fades and we head for the exit, let us not be naïve as to what awaits us. The world still aches from this morning’s headlines, this city is still at war with itself and so are we. If we are to reduce music to mere entertainment, we miss the point of its power entirely – to transform, to disrupt, to awaken and to redefine life itself. That work; however, isn’t up to D’Angelo & The Vanguard, it’s up to us. - Isa Nakazawa
“With the veil off our eyes we’ll truly seeAnd we’ll march on
And it really won’t take too long
And it really won’t take us very long
Revealing at the end of the day...the Charade”