The Chronicle

Idiosyncra­tic artist shines

- By SIMON RUSHWORTH

Paul Gilbert at Newcastle Riverside

Quirky is being kind when describing Paul Gilbert’s rather bizarre rendition of A Herd Of Turtles. But the Riverside crowd had been warned by way of a perfectly wacky preamble.

Gilbert happily explained that it was Johnny Cash who had inspired him to pen a rare piece of poetry but that, on reflection, its delivery required his best attempt at a Ringo Starr accent. The guitar part, he went on to reveal, was part-James Brown and part-Bachman Turner Overdrive.

To say the finished product – a fusion of furious riffs and faux Scouse spoken word – was eclectic doesn’t really do the whole experience justice. You really had to be there.

You also had to be there for a glorious medley of Carry On My Wayward Son, Runnin’ With The Devil and While My Guitar Gently Weeps; Gilbert’s technique of using the lead guitar for the lead vocal parts is a wonder to behold.

You had to be there for the subsequent mash-up of U2’s (Pride) In The Name Of Love and Led Zeppelin’s Whole Lotta Love. And you had to be there to soak up the sheer variety of mind-boggling material taken from new long-player Behold Electric Guitar.

Gilbert might be best-known as the drill-wielding fret burner at the heart of early 90s MTV darlings Mr Big, but this was never going to be a show paying homage to the band that pays his bills.

A perfunctor­y take on 1991’s Green Tinted Sixties Mind (the single released before global chart topper To Be With You) offered a respectful nod to a glorious past, but Gilbert is about much more than big hair and radio friendly hooks.

In 2019 he’s about pushing the envelope and pulling the kind of pantomime faces that would make Lee Evans jealous. Behind a pair of heavyframe­d black glasses lies one of modern rock’s most intriguing brains.

In the past Gilbert might have lacked the confidence to leave everything out there – crazy chord progressio­ns, daft anecdotes and dizzying displays of self-centred soloing – but the recently relocated Portland native appears at one with himself, and unwilling to compromise.

Beautiful in its brazen simplicity, a colossal cover of Gonna Fly Now (Theme From Rocky) provided an early highlight, but those looking for standout moments simply didn’t know where to turn next.

Surrounded by a classy band of equally instinctiv­e musos, Gilbert barely stopped smiling – his infectious enthusiasm repaying the faith of fans hanging on every note.

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