Vancouver Sun

Britain’s red-headed one-man act set to get a groove on at Rogers

- STUART DERDEYN sderdeyn@postmedia.com twitter.com/stuartderd­eyn

The solo pop star is a stadium rarity. Obvious reasons exist for this: Arenas are large, impersonal coliseums designed for the modern equivalent of gladiatori­al events — sports.

Recognizin­g this, bands from Pink Floyd and The Rolling Stones to U2 have made mega production­s a part of their concert experience­s because a band and a couple of lights just doesn’t cut it in huge venues. Renowned solo artists don’t appear without backing bands, dancers and bells and whistles galore.

Yet Ed Sheeran sells out all over the world and performs with an acoustic guitar, a pedal board and charm. Music writers the world over have speculated on how the affable Brit pulls it off.

Here are five reasons that a fellow with mediocre rapping skills, ballads that can make your teeth hurt and nothing remotely fashionabl­e about him can hit No. 1 in 14 countries with his third album.

1. Experience

Cliché though it may be, experience counts. Coming up the ranks, Sheeran was one of those who wouldn’t miss an opportunit­y to perform. Open mikes, opening slots, late-night club closers — the U.K. press universall­y admits that the guy worked. That type of incessant gigging gives an air of confidence to any performer.

2. Energy

It says something that those who saw Taylor Swift on the Red Tour still mention Sheeran’s opening set. For all Swift’s massive production, up to and including Sheeran performing a duet with her, she was equally matched by the ginger-haired lad from Farmingham, Suffolk. How did he manage this? By playing like he was close to exploding for his whole short opening set. The exposure he received playing all of the North American dates on this tour contribute­d greatly to why he’s selling out his headlining tour this time.

3. Material

OK, this is divisive, as many have had to hold back their gag reflex since The A Team first entered into heavy rotation on radio. Love it or loathe it, the tune had one of those hooks that won’t leave, and Sheeran’s knack for this type of tune extends right up to Shape of You. Don’t forget that he has also co-written hits for everyone from One Direction (Moments) to Taylor Swift (Everything Has Changed), as well as Justin Bieber’s impossible­to-avoid Love Yourself. In other words, he’s a hitmaker. Plus, Thinking Out Loud might herald a new song movement where millennial writers feel sad for their ancient boomer parents.

4. Exposure

From Swift’s tour to opening slots for The Rolling Stones, Sheeran is like a ginger hobbit bobbing up on stage. Oh yeah, he had a Top 10 single on the soundtrack for The Hobbit: Desolation of Smaug, titled I See Fire. His music has graced hit films from The Fault in Our Stars to Bridget Jones’ Baby. And don’t forget that he turned up singing a folk tune on the season 7 premiere of Game of Thrones as a Lannister army soldier. He must have sounded pretty good too, because Arya Stark didn’t kill him.

5. Technology

Owing to modern sound processing and effects gear, Sheeran can be a one-man band looping every slap on his guitar body into drum tracks, and treating his voice all sorts of ways. That he demonstrat­es this to adoring audiences in humorous and self-deprecatin­g speeches doesn’t hurt.

 ??  ?? Ed Sheeran
Ed Sheeran

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