Cavaillon
28 November 2018
Theatrical ensemble BOT have been presenting their Ramkoers (Collision Course) production around Europe for the last few years, frequently performing in disused factories and other spaces that allow them to bring their post-industrial cabaret to venues appropriate to their subject matter. Tonight’s show is performed on the generously sized stage of La Garance in Cavaillon, one of the more recent additions to a region already brimming with theatrical history, so while the atmosphere of grimy decay may be absent, the sound and sightlines are crystal clear.
Though La Garance and French theatre in general are no stranger to avant-garde antics, musical or otherwise, it’s unlikely that many in the audience tonight will have witness anything quite like Ramkoers. That is, unless they are familiar with the live activities of the likes of Faust or Einstürzende Neubauten, both of which are obvious touchstones to tonight’s event, which firmly places BOT in a line of art that can be traced back at least as far as Luigi Russolo‘s intonarumori noise-making devices of the early twentieth century.
But where those bands are often concerned with (semi-)controlled chaos and high-energy ructions sent forth at high volume into the waiting ears of an audience they have schooled in the ways of musical sturm and drang, BOT take a good dollop of inspiration from both the self-built sound-making devices and story-telling methods of Tom Waits. in his clang-boom-steam years. This aesthetic is particularly present in the deadpan humour and melancholy songs (presented entirely in Dutch, but the emotional content is transmitted clearly enough), shot through with bursts of ya-da-a-ya-la vocalising and melancholy wordless harmonies.The way in which tonight’s performance is constructed allows the ensemble to build tension and dramatic moments perfectly, and this is evident from the moment that a bright red oil drum rolls erratically into position at the middle of the stage, while kilted performers make their entrances and get to work. A pump organ is wheeled in on its side, the organist pedalling away as he is tilted into position and a glockenspiel is hung in place on the gantry set at the mobile organ’s side once it has on longer served as the handle. All the while a disembodied voice is singing; and another delighted cry comes softly from the spectators as the oil drum is titled upright, revealing the head and shoulders of BOT’s main singer, who has been chanting from the uncomfortable-looking position inside the drum all the while.
As the evening progresses and the stage lights gradually descend, so more and more pieces of Heath Robinson-esque instrumentation are brought on and added to the ever-changing soundscape. A disembodied mechanical hand is set tapping out a monotonous note on an infant’s toy keyboard, and is soon joined by a 360-degree rotating piano, rolling back and forth across the stage for all the world as if Leonardo de Vinci had set it in motion, keeping up the one-note rhythm. When things might become too plangent or repetitive, the group will suddenly drop everything and bash out a strident tune on timpanis, scrawl out some distended electric slide guitar or go running through the audience with a megaphone. At one point, a massive gantry is lowered on chains from the ceiling and later becomes the rails for a washtub on wheels to be set to and fro like a bizarre see-saw while its occupant blows serenely on a euphonium.
So by the time the auditorium is in darkness and a rotating double-light device illuminates the room to the sound of a hand-cranked siren wails, the end can only come suddenly with all the signalled inevitability of the sound of air deflating from a balloon and the clonking descent of cowbells rocking down poles applied to the gantry. Their well-deserved standing ovation goes on for a good few minutes, and afterwards there is a chance to inspect the various devices and decompress back to normality, unwelcome as it may be when the alternative could be both as entertaining and enthralling as witnessing this Ramkoers.
-Richard Fontenoy-