BREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16

BREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

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Words by Ed King / Pics by Rob Hadley

Not everyone will get this, but it feels like I’m back in The Hummingbird.birm_rev-logo-main

It’s a cold, cold, COLD November night. It’s a Sunday. I’m standing in the O2 Institute, on the same dance floor where I’ve dropped a Bez sized batch of pills at Club Andromeda in the mid 90’s, watching Bo Ningen ROCK THE FUCK OUT. As support act for Primal Scream you’re always going to be singing from the shadows, but this Japanese ‘four piece noise rockers’ are throwing themselves into the room. Literally, at one point.

It’s all a little stadium for my liking, and the solos seem to be an extended masturbation without any real input to the songs, but after about four unflinchingly high energy tracks I BREVIEW: Bo Ningen – supporting Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Reviewam probably the only one not transfixed. Although that could be the silver flares. But if you want to see something outrageous and committed, check out Bo Ningen.

The room fills out and starts clapping the sound technician, as the poor bastard flits on and off stage with an air of addled urgency. Primal Scream have been on tour since the end of the festival season – with dates in each month, before the main crunch came in November. They’ve been to Japan, they’ve been to Canada. They’ve been to North and South America. Now they’re in Birmingham, just over half way through a nineteen date UK tour. And it’s a Sunday.

But the crowd wants blood, some of whom perhaps literally; the four middle aged, fat skin heads behind me start throwing plastic glasses at the tall, scarf waving glam rocker at the front. The mum-dad-daughter to my right start twitching into their beer and orange juice, whilst the people sat down on the balcony start to lean over and stare precariously around the stage. Tension, builds.BREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

Then, to the soundtrack of a more confident cheer, Primal Scream take the stage; the room foot stamps so hard I wander if the Kate Tempest gig downstairs can hear it. Without any need of introduction, the guitar riff and keys from ‘Movin’ On Up’ sweep across the hall. Bobby Gillespie grabs the mic, perches one foot one the wall of monitors at the front of the stage and croons out into the crowd. Suited and booted a pink polka dot shirt.

Beat, beat, beat goes the backing track, and we move from ghost of LPs past to the lead single from Primal Scream’s latest album – the fast paced, techno pop rock ‘Where the Light Gets In’. As far as I can see (there was a big speaker stack making me both blind and deaf) Gillespie is the only vocalist, with no Sky Ferreira stand in on stage.

Without pause we go back to the back catalogue, as the bluesy drawl and strut of ‘Jailbird’ swaggers around the room, giving the crowd a chance to play along. ‘I’m Yours, Your Mine’ echos through the O2 Institute in a rare show BREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Reviewof Birmingham crowd participation. Reminiscent to the sampled beginning of a popular Primal Scream track, people are clearly here to ‘have a good time’; by the time the first guitar solo of ‘Accelerator’ kicks in, most of the beer is now on the floor.

The set jumps across Primal Scream’s significant portfolio, Gillespie jumps across the stage – bouncing from Innes to Butler and back over the monitors. And apart from a small shout out to the founding members of Jackbites, all that comes off stage is music.

The band look fueled, but tired; it’s been months on the road, across many far flung territories. Bobby Gillespie looks like… well, Bobby Gillespie. On a Sunday. His vocals painfully weak at points – especially in the down tempo blues ballad ‘Cry Myself Blind’, which sounds more like a 3am wedding reception karaoke attempt. As a child of Screamadelica I keep my fingers crossed they don’t play ‘Damaged’.

But the energy is ferocious; the whole room, from balcony to bar, is alive and focused. Even the fat skinheads are dancing – elbow jostling in a circle, like a race hate hen party on Broad Street. And I still can’t work out which side of the mum-dad-daughter triptych is the reason they’re here, and whose been dragged along because ‘I bet you’ll enjoyBREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review it’. But it’s not often you get to see a family dance it out at a rock concert so who the fuck cares. Even the much older couple at the back of the balcony are now dancing arm in arm, wrapped around each other in metronome unison with broad grins on their faces. I think the pills have kicked in.

Standout moments come from ‘100% Or Nothing’ – the last single from Chaosmosis – and the bass slapping relentless mess fest (and government health warning) ‘Shoot Speed Kill Light’, as Butler points her axe to the sky and leads a demonic grin charge into the crowd. Eventually the continued (and somewhat obvious) heckles to ‘PLAY LOADED’ are finally answered, and by the time Peter Fonda stammers out his call to arms the room is already lost; Gillespie left to do nothing more than watch over his flock and shake those maracas.

BREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review‘Country Girl’ brings the main set to a close, with a somewhat messy start – that “shows we’re not true professionals” – and the most enthusiastic moment of audience participation Birmingham has probably seen in a while. The house lights stay down so we know there’s an encore, but for much longer than it takes to wring out a shirt and rack up.

I begin to wonder if this really is it and edge my way to the back of the room – not to get out early, but in case there’s a mini riot. Mercifully the slow sample start and electro riffs of ‘Kill All Hippies’ comes rolling off stage, before the pillar shaking finále of ‘Rocks’ throw this Sunday service crashing into the walls of fuck you.

Then it hits me. I remember standing in this and other venues as a drug rinsed, precocious teenager asking ‘you reckon on day we’ll all be old but still coming and raving, like they do at tea dances and stuff?’

The answer is yes.

It’s tonight.

We still party hard.

And if Gillespie wants it, and can smooth out them Sunday vocals, there’s still a place for a front man.

For more on Primal Scream, visit www.primalscream.net

For more on Bo Ningen, visit www.boningen.info

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For more from the O2 Institute, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2institutebirmingham

For more from Gigs and Tours, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.gigsandtours.com

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BPREVIEW: Lissie @ O2 Institute 03.12.16

BPREVIEW: Lissie @ O2 Institute 03.12.16

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Words by Ed King

On Saturday 3rd December, Lissie Maurus (aka Lissie) performs at the O2 Institute – with support from Teddy Thompson.Birmingham Preview

Being held in the Institute2 room, doors open at 7pm. Tickets are priced at £22.50 (+booking fee) as presented by Live Nation and SJM Concerts. For direct gig info and online ticket sales, click here.

Bouncing onto the UK music scene in 2010, Lissie’s debut album – Catching a Tiger – reached No12 on the UK Album Charts. Eventually catching the A Playlist on Radio 2, the debut’s third single, ‘Cuckoo’, would introduce Lissie’s gritty kaleidoscope of blues, rock, folk and country across the UK airways. With two (arguably stronger) singles already in circulation – ‘In Sleep’ and ‘When I’m Alone’ – 2010 seemed to be the Year of Maurus. The press loved it, the public bought it, Columbia Records seemed loudly proud that they’d released it… and low, all was bountiful.

But the fickle nature of humans, music and industry brought the rising balloon to an early standstill. Back to Forever, that always fun ‘difficult second album’, came out in October 2013 – full of ‘fist pumping’ tempos, anthemic chord structures and power ballads laments.

Despite being a hugely engaging record for anyone born the wrong side of 1980, the mass appeal didn’t seem to be there; Back to Forever was a significant shift from the live-at-union-chapelgritty Jewel-with-balls approach of Lissie’s debut LP. The skies darkened and the phone stopped; the holy trinity weren’t so supportive of Lissie’s sophomore album… and low, all was bare.

But deities, doors, and metaphors aside, this is the pivotal point that makes Ms Maurus such and interesting prospect once again. Lissie left Columbia to release her third album, My Wild West, via her own Lionboy imprint in early 2016 (with Cooking Vinyl and Thirty Tigers) – a superb 12 track LP, mixing jangly guitar walls of sound with stripped back piano, rolling thunder production with honest vocal leads.

An absolute step up, My Wild West gained the critical acclaim it so deserved – positioning the now autonomous artist as someone to watch. Again. Plus Lissie still has the major UK tour operators on her side, so, you know. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

In November 2016, Lissie would further release Live at Union Chapel – a 12 track foray across the singer/songwriter’s portfolio, with one in homage to Joni Mitchell. And why not indeed. To read the Birmingham Review of Live at Union Chapel by Lissie, click here.

‘My Wild West’ – Lissie 

Lissie performs at the O2 Institute on Saturday 3rd December, as presented Live Nation and SJM Concerts. For direct gig info and online tickets sales, click here.

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For more on Lissie, visit www.lissie.com

For more on Teddy Thompson, visit www.teddythompson.net

For more from the O2 Institute, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2institutebirmingham

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BPREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16

Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16
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Words by Ed King

On Sunday 4th December, Primal Scream perform at the O2 Institute. Just let that sink in…

Doors open at 7pm with an 11pm curfew. Tickets are priced at £30.25 (+booking fee) as presented by SJM Concerts. For direct gig info and online ticket sales, click here.Birmingham Preview

With arguably the best name and most fractured career path of any 90’s Indie band, Primal Scream are a corner stone of modern rock. Alongside other Madchester contemporaries, this shoegaze-bluesy-rock-dance-hybrid from Glasgow would become synonymous (and still are) with the crest of the UK Indie scene.

Swinging and missing until the release of Screamadelica in 1991, their second album on another important Indie foundation block – Creation Records, it was the meeting of musical minds from rock and dance that would establish Primal Scream on a serious level. Introduced to Alex Patterson, Thomas Fehlamann, Jimmy Miller and Andrew Weatherall, the cross genre production team took Primal Scream into uncharted territory – fusing their raw rock edge and flower power indulgence with pristine dance euphoria. Brave, bold, and fuck me it worked.

Lead single, ‘Loaded’, charted at No16 in the UK Singles Chart – whilst subsequent singles, ‘Come Together’, ‘Higher than the Sun’ and ‘Movin on Up’ have outlived their peers like a reinforced cockroach with an assault rifle. Screamadelica would also be the winner of the inaugural Mercury Music Award in 1992 – beating Young Disciples, chaosmosisJesus and the Mary Chain, U2, and (mercifully) Simply Red.

Over the next 15 years, Primal Scream would go on to release a further eight studio albums, giving them a more expansive portfolio than their recorded/released peers with an LP grand total of 11. Alongside extensive touring on both sides of the pond and beyond, the boys (and occasional girl – Simone Butler has been in the lineup since Mani’s departure) stayed busy.

Plus the hop scotching of genres and approaches would piss of the fad following music press off no end, encouraging almost schizophrenic commentary from the NME – including a colourful one line summary of the 1994 Give Out But Don’t Give Up. ‘This record was about as innovative as shitting in a ditch.’ Nice.

Primal Scream are now back on the road with studio album No 11, Chaosmosis – released to the world via the band’s own imprint, First International (via Ignition Records), in March this year. Check out the latest single from Chaosmosis below.

‘100% or Nothing’ – Primal Scream

Primal Scream perform at the O2 Institute (B’ham) on Sunday 4th December – as presented by SJM Concerts. For direct gig info and online ticket sales, click here.

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For more on Primal Scream, visit www.primalscream.net

For more from the O2 Institute, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2institutebirmingham

For more from SJM Concerts/Gigs and Tours, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.gigsandtours.com

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THE GALLERY: Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16

Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16 / Paul Reynolds © Birmingham Review

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Words by Ed King / Pics by Paul Reynolds

On Saturday 19th November, Laura Mvula came to the O2 Institute – with support from Oliver St Louis.

Laura Mvula was back in Birmingham at the midway point of her UK Autumn tour, a couple of months (and a Christmas) before she sets off for North America and Australia, with one Cape Town gig in between. For Laura Mvula’s full tour schedule, click here.

But we get the homecoming and that’s what it’s all about. One of the finer artists to come from Birmingham in recent years, Laura Mvula is an intelligent tapestry of homegrown success – with traditional roots in a gospel chorus and burgeoning branches that cover jazz, funk, soul and all things angelic; what, a, vocalist. Plus she’s written songs about Kings Heath, and I can only think of one other human on this blue ball that’s found a muse in B14.

Laura Mvula shot to fame after her debut album, Sing to the Moon, came out in March 2013. But her follow up album of original tracks, The Dreaming Room, came out in January this year and is gaining ground on the hyperbole surrounding its predecessor.

With a set list marrying old and new, Birmingham’s O2 Institute crowd got to bear witness to the cherry pickings from Laura Mvula’s portfolio – including seminal tracks from both LPs, such as ‘Green Garden’, ‘She’, ‘Overcome’, ‘People’ and ‘Phenomenal Woman’.

Paul Reynolds was at the O2 Institute for Birmingham Review, shooting an extended photo feature to go into THE GALLERY. See a selection of Paul’s shots below, or click here for the full Flickr of pics (or on the link above). There’s some on our Instagram page too.

Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16 / Paul Reynolds

Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16 / Paul Reynolds © Birmingham Review

Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16 / Paul Reynolds © Birmingham Review

Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16 / Paul Reynolds © Birmingham Review

Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16 / Paul Reynolds © Birmingham Review

Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16 / Paul Reynolds © Birmingham Review

Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16 / Paul Reynolds © Birmingham Review

For more on Laura Mvula, visit www.lauramvula.com

For more from the O2 Institute, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2institutebirmingham

For more from Metropolis Music, visit www.metropolismusic.com

For full gig listings & online tickets sales from Gigs and Tours, visit www.gigsandtours.com

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BPREVIEW: Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16

BPREVIEW: Laura Mvula @ O2 Institute 19.11.16

Words by Ed King

On Saturday 19th November, Laura Mvula performs at the O2 Institute in Birmingham – with support from Oliver St Louis.birm_prev-logo-main-lr

Doors open at 7pm with an 11pm curfew. Tickets are priced at £22 (+booking fee) as presented by Metropolis Music. For direct gig info & online tickets sales, click here.

Did someone say homecoming..?

Laura Mvula was quickly added to the list of Birmingham’s musical luminaries following the release of her stellar debut album, Sing to the Moon, in March 2013. Signed to RCA after a series of showcases, and building more industry momentum than live gig experience, her debut LP would chart across the world – reaching No9 on the UK album charts and No1 on the UK R&B Album Charts.

Nominated at the 2013 BRIT Awards, BBC’s Sound of Poll, Mercury Music Prize, Q Awards, and winning at the MOBO and Urban Music Awards, that year Laura Mvula was a rising balloon. Her music is original yet traditional, with deep rooted gospel and classical strains pushing a mellifluous yet firm vocal lead, alongside choral support and a slight harmony obsession. Her work speaks of relationships, family, home, empowerment and loss. It connects. And by the the-dreaming-roomend of the 2013 it was hard to not know the name Laura Mvula, or the musical endeavors of an artist who was, until relatively recently, penning ‘song structures’ during her breaks on the CBSO reception desk. Birmingham born and raised, schooled at Swanshurt then the Conservatoire, the city had another artist with real depth to be proud of.

Now, time to do that all again… no pressure.

Just under three years later and Laura Mvula released her follow up album, The Dreaming Room, in January 2016 (although there was a re-recording of Sing to the Moon with Metropole Orkest in 2014 to distract us for a bit). Guests on the sophomore LP include Nile Rodgers with ‘Overcome’ and Wretch 32 with ‘People’, released as singles in January and April 2016 respectively.

There was a shift in the production team too, with the man who first lined Laura Mvula up with RCA, Steve Brown, being replaced with Mvula’s now Musical Director, Troy Miller. Instrumental members of the London Symphony Orchestra further helped to produce The Dreaming Room, developing the multi-layered character of Mvula’s musical approach.

The Dreaming Room was released through RCA in July 2017 – with its latest single, ‘Show Me Love’ released on the imprint in May the same year.

‘Show Me Love’ – Laura Mvula

Laura Mvula comes to the O2 Institute in Birmingham on Saturday 19th November – with support from Oliver St Louis. For direct gig info & online tickets sales, click here.

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For more on Laura Mvula, visit www.lauramvula.comPrint

For more from Oliver St Louis, visit www.olivierstlouis.net

For more from the O2 Institute, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2institutebirmingham

For more from Metropolis Music, visit www.metropolismusic.com

For full gig listings & online tickets sales from Gigs and Tours, visit www.gigsandtours.com

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