Seen ’em Live #10

Annoyingly it’s taken me almost a week to get round to writing this, but Saturday 14th October saw us heading to Manchester Cathedral. Despite being born and brought up in Manchester and still working there (on my increasingly infrequent visits to the office), I’d only ever set foot in the cathedral once before. That was for a memorial service. Won’t go into details, but obviously a prominent person in the life of the city who I’d met via work a few times, and I was there in that capacity.

This time it was to see what struck me as a rather intriguing event when I first saw it advertised. We’ve seem Gary Numan a couple of times recently (both occasions at Manchester’s Albert Hall) and been blown away by the performance. If you’re not familiar with his more recent output, it’s a lot heavier than the songs he made his name with – and even the old tunes that he does play get the heavier treatment. I wasn’t sure Mrs TGG would be that keen, but I think she enjoyed those shows even more than I did. So when he announced an acoustic tour, she was straight on it and grabbed some tickets for a show that was sold out in a matter of minutes.

At this point, I’m going to say there is a far better review than anything I could write. It’s on the Louder Than War website – link here: https://louderthanwar.com/gary-numan-manchester-cathedral-live-review/

I concur with that review. It was one of the best shows I’ve attended, largely due to its unique nature, but also because Gary Numan and his fellow musicians truly pulled it off.

Even leaving aside the amazing reworking of so many songs, it was a real deep dive into his back catalogue. He admitted that one song had only been included because his daughters had told him to, and that he couldn’t actually remember writing it, let alone recalling which album it was from. Another older track he confessed to not remembering what it was about. As the review above states, there was a very personal feel to what he was sharing with the audience. Normally, he says next to nothing at a show, but following him on Facebook does give an insight to life in the Numan household, and it was that openness which came across here.

It was also great to see everyone on stage, including the man himself, laughing, joking and clearly enjoying themselves. Here’s a clip of one you’ll know performed on the night and filmed from just to the left of where we were.

Not sure how long it will be on there for, given the brevity of some live performances’ existence on the service, but hopefully it illustrates what the shows on the tour were all about.

TGG

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Seen ’em Live #9

When I wrote the piece How It Should Be a few weeks back, I listed a variety of reason for the inactivity on this blog. One reason I didn’t include was Being Ill. Ill in the sense of taking time off work, not partaking in the usual leisure activities that one does, not wanting to eat a cheese and onion pie or drink a pint of beer. That level of ill. The level of ill where everyone else in the house doesn’t want to go anywhere near you – for several days. The level of ill that as it endures, you start to worry about missing a live music event which you’ve been looking forward to.

Given that this involved a band I’ve never previously seen, but whose first six albums I dutifully bought, there was a fairly significant level of worry attached. Thankfully, while still not feeling 100%, I did make it on Friday night to the Bridgewater Hall in Manchester to see The Waterboys.

Like the Ben Watt song mentioned a while back in Unsung Songs #3, my first recollection of The Waterboys was hearing A Girl Called Johnny on the radio during a spell of homework avoidance. The “what the Hell was that I just heard?” moment lingered and as a result of never seeing the single on sale, I ultimately purchased the first album. As I did the next five, up to 1993. Then, the band seemed to have a break and even when things started up again I never really re-engaged, until I borrowed a CD copy of 2011’s An Appointment With Mr. Yeats from my local library.

Since then I’ve been dipping in and out, thanks to the existence of music streaming and the odd CD purchase.

The current tour isn’t billed as plugging a particular album despite a new release in 2022 and indeed nearly half the set comes from 1985’s This Is The Sea and 1988’s Fisherman’s Blues. Given that I haven’t seen them previously and that these albums are chronologically slap bang in the middle of my peak love of the band, I’m not unduly disappointed by this.

The band played without a support act, doing two sets and the obligatory encore of The Whole Of The Moon. It does seems as though they have been mixing the set list up a bit between shows on this tour and the fact that some shows have seen a cover of Prince’s Purple Rain has intrigued me. Sadly we didn’t get that in Manchester.

However, it was a great show with a highlight for me being the end of the first set which saw a cracking version of The Pan Within with keyboard players Brother Paul and James Hallawell trying to outdo each other duel-style with some truly amazing playing. There was also a first play on the tour for a cover of a traditional song “Dim Lights Thick Smoke (and Loud Loud Music)”. Mike Scott explained how this was a song they thought would suit the band well – until he saw how misogynistic the lyrics were. He said that he and Brother Paul had re-written the lyrics on the journey over from the previous night’s show in York – and then duly played it, to a great reception.

There is one new song that they have been playing at every show – It Was Over. Sadly its brief appearance on YouTube also seems to be over, so I can’t provide a link to it. I will however provide a link to the show opener – 2019’s Where The Action Is.

It really shouldn’t have taken me 40 years before I saw Mike Scott and co live. Would I see them again? Oh, yes.

Saturday saw another trip to Manchester for a rather different show. I’ll write about that as soon as.

TGG

2 responses to “Seen ’em Live #9”

  1. baggingarea Avatar

    Missed this, would love to have gone but baulked at the ticket price. My loss.

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    1. thegreatgog Avatar

      I baulk at many ticket prices, but usually end up going. I’d only be chucking the money at board game Kickstarter projects otherwise.

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