The Daily Telegraph

A sonic blitz from the pioneers of trip hop

Massive Attack

- Pop Neil Mccormick O2 Arena, London

Massive Attack were one of the most significan­t British bands of the Nineties, a Bristol trio of producer-writers whose psychedeli­c adventures in trip hop opened up expansive new vistas of sound that still resonate throughout music today. They have always been determined modernists, almost curmudgeon­ly in their refusal to engage in crowdpleas­ing commercial activity. So it was not exactly surprising that they warned audiences in advance not to expect to hear their greatest hits. But this attempt to sidestep nostalgia and comprehens­ively reinvent their dark, strange 1998 masterpiec­e, Mezzanine, for a 21st anniversar­y tour, somehow wound up feeling regressive rather than progressiv­e.

They opened with a cover of dreamy guitar mantra I Found A Reason by The Velvet Undergroun­d. Massive Attack are smart enough to know the parallels they were evoking to a band whose combinatio­n of moody mantras, flashing lights and surrealist cine-montage visuals set templates for the darker side of art rock, krautrock, punk rock and industrial rock. The trio (long since reduced to a duo, supplement­ed by a sixpiece band and two guest vocalists) sampled the original Velvets track for Mezzanine’s Risingson. But shifting live into that shuddering weave of electronic and analogue assault, the effect was to reinforce links to pre-hip hop rock traditions that ultimately overshadow­ed the entire concert. It wasn’t just the footage of Tony Blair, Saddam Hussein, Sarah Ferguson and Britney Spears that made me feel like I had seen it all before.

Eight shadowy figures, all dressed in black, barely visible in the noirish lighting, stirred up a sonic blizzard of noise and groove, shrieking electric guitars and shredding synthesize­rs powering mesmeric beats. Behind them, shrouded by darkness and dry ice, big screens relayed video montages of found footage featuring dancing figures, dead celebritie­s, birds in flight, soldiers in combat, a relentless jump cut mash up of sex, war and politics. Messages flashed on screen as if the film-makers were afraid their thematic concepts might get lost in random visual juxtaposit­ions.

In a packed O2 arena, heads bobbed in synchronis­ed response to the rolling beats, as if 20,000 people were all nodding in agreement.

It was effective, at times shocking, and yet ultimately overfamili­ar. Such montages are routinely churned out by art school students. Anyone who has seen a Pink Floyd or U2 concert over the decades has seen this kind of thing done with greater sophistica­tion.

The sonic blitz was more akin to the industrial rage of Nine Inch Nails than the dubby style Massive Attack pioneered. In place of their own gorgeous hits, punky covers of Bauhaus (Bela Lugosi’s Dead), The Cure (10.15 Saturday Night) and Ultravox (Rockwrok) only added to a mood of oppressive onslaught. The resonant vibrato of reggae veteran Horace Andy brought a glimmer of joy on Man Next Door and Angel, while Cocteau Twins vocalist Elizabeth Fraser helped bring proceeding­s to a graceful close on Teardrop and Group Four, the ethereal warmth of her trippily echoed vocals at odds with the rest of the concert.

This was an ambitious show. The sound was immense, the mood tautly sustained, the visuals sinuously integrated and, in a receptive mood, the combined effect could strike audience members very hard. But it was also dour, one-dimensiona­l and not half as clever as its creators seemed to think.

 ??  ?? Massive let-down: Robert Del Naja, aka 3D, of Massive Attack performs at the O2 Arena for the band’s 21st anniversar­y tour
Massive let-down: Robert Del Naja, aka 3D, of Massive Attack performs at the O2 Arena for the band’s 21st anniversar­y tour

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