Prog

FRANCIS DUNNERY

- GARY MACKENZIE

VENUE BUSH HALL, LONDON

DATE 21/01/2018

There’s real love here in a completely rammed Bush Hall for Francis Dunnery and his band, and the anticipati­on generated by the promise of hearing the whole of the eat Me in St. louis album is palpable.

While Dunnery still seems to have a nuanced relationsh­ip with his it Bites past, fans demonstrab­ly suffer from no doubts or cynicism in their enthusiasm for the music as the opening salvo of a storming Positively Animal and Underneath Your Pillow, a highlight of the night for many, washes across the room. it’s clear that Dunnery has lost none of his astounding abilities on guitar, and his voice is in good shape too.

Musically, it’s as fine a demonstrat­ion of great ensemble playing and respectful interpreta­tion as one could ask for. With guitarist luke Machin, bass player Paul Brown and the hugely talented Peter Jones on keyboards and backing vocals, you know you’re in safe hands. Special mention for drummer Donavan Hepburn, though, who plays throughout with a real sensitivit­y to the original recorded versions yet injects a character, energy and excitement all his own.

if meeting audience expectatio­ns is a measure of overall gig quality, Dunnery and co are scoring high tonight – not only do we get every track from the aforementi­oned it Bites classic, but we’re also given solid extras like bonus tracks Having A Good Day, with its gorgeous keyboard intro from Jones, and a fantastica­lly frantic Bullet in The Barrel. There’s an acoustic rendition of Plastic Dreamer, for which the audience enthusiast­ically provide massed backing vocals, and songs from 2013’s Dunnery solo album Frankenste­in Monster, including the title track and Marijuana Make Those eyes At Me For.

interspers­ed with all this are the requests for volunteers to come up from the audience to sing; female backing group The eatettes (who are lovely, we’re sure, but simply can’t be heard!); a surreal and extremely brief moment with a pantomime horse; a couple of anecdotes from Dunnery delivered in his own ebullient Cumbrian manner; a beautiful rendition of the powerfully fragile

The ice Melts into Water; outings for Dunnery’s Tapboard; and a blindsidin­g digression into Frank Zappa guitar piece Black napkins!

Well over two hours of the band onstage simply flies by, and a deeply satisfying evening finishes, as could be predicted, with The Big Hit Single from the album, Still Too Young To remember, and a half-promise from Dunnery that he’ll be back next year performing The Big lad in The Windmill. He’ll need a bigger venue…

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