THE BOHMAN BROTHERS, Oxford Improvisers, Old Fire
Station,15/1/19
There’s a doctorate to be written about the crossover
between leftfield comedy and improvised music.
There are high profile fans, of course – Stewart Lee got air time for an
improv duo through his Comedy Vehicle
series, as well as facing the Celebrity Mastermind
third degree on avant-guitar trailblazer Derek Bailey, whilst Vic Reeves snuck
an Evan Parker solo onto a top 20 album (“Pack it in, Parker!”) – but there is
also a partly shared outlook. Perhaps
it’s because both stand-ups and improvisers are often relegated to the sort of
pub corners and dysfunctional function rooms that the lowliest of toilet venue
rockers would sneer at, perhaps it’s that both art forms always make the most
sense in an intimate live environment, or perhaps it’s just that in both cases
the unexpected is rarely regretted or ignored, but embraced and incorporated
into the show.
The Bohman Brothers combine the absurdity of the oddest
comedy with the most dadafiedimprov.
They have the classic comic double act dynamic, one uptight and starchy
in his collar and tie, the other relaxed and wayward in a potting shed
sweater. It’s Morecambe and Wise, Bert
and Ernie, ego and id. An introduction
in which welcoming platitudes are haltingly and exhaustingly mumbled over a
recording of car crashes has the surreal mundanity of vintage Ted Chippington,
a feeling bolstered by the fact that the duo make their close-miked scrapes and
percussive skitters, not from catgut and drumskin, but from rubber bands,
classroom geometry sets and a couple of fetching old-school toast racks.
We’ve sat through self-conscious art music trying not to
laugh before now, so it’s wonderful tonight to see guffaws invited with such
deadpan hilarity, and cut-up texts - think Burroughs meets Mark E Smith meets
spam emails - are delivered impeccably: after all, timing
is a key concept in both music and comedy, and The Bohman Brothers’ strange,
yet strangely ordinary, performance embodies both. Coincidence, perhaps, but we are overjoyed
that the final word enunciated, in a hilarious exchange of contrasting extracts
from an old guide to tree frogs and a medical Mills & Boon novel is
“mother-in-law”. Fluxus? They’ve only just met us!