A blog on gigs, music, art and London.

Sunday 15 May 2011

Sufjan Stevens, Royal Festival Hall, 12/05/11 & 13/05/11

The below review originally appeared on musicOMH.

Last week saw the mercurial Sufjan Stevens return to the UK to play a handful of highly anticipated shows, his first in this country since 2006. Last year's The Age Of Adz album had provoked a mixed reaction from fans and critics, some lauding the brave, adventurous change of direction, others lamenting the dearth of his trademark guitar based songcraft. This pair of shows at the Royal Festival Hall saw him draw heavily on this new material for his two and a half hour set. Support came from labelmate DM Stith who played a short acoustic set before returning to the stage later as part of Stevens' ten piece band.

The show began in darkness with Seven Swans, opening in quiet acoustic fashion before exploding into life and volume. The song also provided the first glimpse of his continued sense of theatre, the band being dressed in fluorescent patterned outfits and Stevens sporting a pair of large white wings. A screen that periodically dropped down from the ceiling to provide a 3D light show ensured an impressive visual spectacle, supplemented by video projections and neon décor. Too Much saw guitars pushed to the fore and a slight toning down of the electronics of the recorded version. The strings were also omitted, unfortunate in some ways as these were one of the stronger aspects of the album. The Age Of Adz, introduced as "a love song to the apocalypse", continued in similar vein. Various layers of the album version were stripped out, leaving burgeoning trombones and surging guitars.

The three songs played from the All Delighted People EP provided a small change in mood. Heirloom and Enchanting Ghost were faithfully reproduced and a tender, pretty version of The Owl And The Tanager played by Stevens on piano, alone on stage. For the second night he dropped the latter in favour of Now That I'm Older from The Age Of Adz. Surprisingly, one of the weaknesses of the show was Stevens' attempts at communication with the audience. At one point he indulged in a lengthy speech on the origins of the album, and also on one of his key inspirations, outsider artist Royal Robertson. It sounded like a justification for the nature of the set, although during the second show he curtailed it and suggested it was simply an attempt to contextualise the album.

Indeed, he talked about the music extensively throughout both shows, at various stages calling it "self-interested", "solipsistic" and "process music". He spoke about his decision to move away from "cerebral music" to sounds that engage the body and focus on beats. Stevens accordingly showcased some of his new dance moves, to mixed results (occasionally even eliciting unintended laughter from some in the crowd).

Synthesisers, bass and percussion made up much of the sound of I Walked, Get Real Get Right and I Want To Be Well. To close the main set Impossible Soul was successfully reinvented as a high energy, day-glo, strobe-lit, science fiction tinted opus, brimming with positivity and colour. Stevens shed any remaining sense of self-consciousness, continuously moving around the stage and undergoing three costume changes along the way. He ended by delivering some of the vocals whilst standing on top of the piano. It was a marked improvement on the slightly unfocused, drifting version that closed the album and it inspired the audience to gather at the front of the stage, dancing in celebration.

He returned to familiar ground for the encore, which featured a sublime trio from Come On Feel The Illinoise – Concerning The UFO Sighting Near Highland Illinois, John Wayne Gacy Jr and a euphoric Chicago, complete with coloured balloons raining down from the ceiling (Casimir Pulaski Day replaced John Wayne Gacy Jr for the second night). These shows undoubtedly reflected Stevens' current attitude to creating music and his propensity for regeneration as both an artist and performer. To see how long he can keep doing it for and in which direction he next heads will be fascinating.

I also took a few photos that you can view here (although I would strongly suggest you take a look at AnikaInLondon's wonderful photographs here)


Laura Cantrell, Union Chapel, 08/05/11

Against all the odds I managed to catch Laura Cantell play a show at Union Chapel last week. I say all the odds as the gig took place just over 24 hours after I got back from a trip to India.

The below review originally appeared on musicOMH. You can see the photographs I took here.

American songstress Laura Cantrell has been relatively quiet in recent years, her last major release being 2005's Humming By The Flowered Vine, an album which witnessed a slight broadening of her musical palette and a fractional toning down of her country stylings. However, new album Kitty Wells Dresses sees her firmly return to country territory. The album is a tribute to country singer Kitty Wells, one of Cantrell's musical heroines. Her show at Union Chapel was ostensibly in support of this album, although ultimately the gig contained a generous selection of material from all of her albums.

She is accompanied onstage by two musicians playing mandolin and guitar. They begin the show with her cover of Trains, Boats And Planes by Burt Bacharach, one of several covers that would feature in the set. The early part of the gig sees her concentrate on songs from her first two albums. The reflective Do You Ever Think Of Me showcases her mellifluent, crystalline vocals and a pared down, lovelorn When The Roses Bloom Again immediately follows.

Queen Of The Coast is preceded by a touching, funny anecdote about John Peel, his patronage still clearly a source of pride and support for her. Indeed, most tracks are afforded detailed introductions, the stories behind the lyrics being shared with the audience. This serves to further enrich the songs and instill even more in the way of authenticity into her music.

The trio of songs played from the new album, It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels, I Don't Claim To Be An Angel and the title track, provide some of the most overt country moments of the show and she also debuts three new, unreleased songs during the course of the evening, one being a result of her ongoing Radio Free Song Club project.

She returns to her back catalogue later in the set, most notably with Don't Break The Heart, with its cautionary lyrics and sensitive musicianship. She also includes a cover of Letters by Lucinda Williams, full of rich storytelling detail. The sweetly melancholic Churches Off The Interstate and quietly defiant Not The Tremblin' Kind close the main set.

For the encore she is unexpectedly joined by a visibly delighted Charlatans frontman and alt-country music fan Tim Burgess, who lends backing vocals to her cover of Love Vigilantes by New Order. The clear, pure vocals of Cantrell and low-slung Mancunian drawl of Burgess may seem an unlikely combination but it is so successful that Cantrell confesses she wishes they had closed the gig with it.

Instead, a plaintive rendering of The Whiskey Makes You Sweeter and a freewheeling Yonder Comes A Freight Train close the show in impressive style, which sees her consolidate her position as one of contemporary country music's leading ladies.

The set list went approximately like this (this does not include two new songs that I didn't catch the names of):

Trains Boats And Planes
Do You Ever Think Of Me
When The Roses Bloom Again
California Rose
Queen Of The Coast
Kitty Wells Dresses
It Wasn't God That Made Honky Tonk Angels
I Don't Claim To Be An Angel
Don't Break The Heart
Can't Wait
Letters
Bees
Churches Off The Interstate
Not The Tremblin' Kind

Love Vigilantes (with Tim Burgess)
The Whiskey Makes You Sweeter
Yonder Comes A Freight Train