The Scotsman

MUSIC

- JAY RICHARDSON

Lionel Richie Mcdiarmid Park, Perth

SO SYNONYMOUS is Lionel Richie with radio-friendly romantic balladry that it’s easy to forget his former outfit, The Commodores, mastered raw, down-and-dirty Southern funk lascivious­ness that bordered on the animalisti­c.

Sadly, only the anthemic, hugely danceable Brick House survives as a reminder of that naked raunch in his current live set, the hard-edged groove standing out like the fuller-figured lady it pays tribute to.

The fact that he neither wrote nor originally sang on that track is indicative of where the singer’s heart tru- ly lies. Approachin­g his 69th birthday, Richie’s stage presence remains considerab­le. And if his jokey, seductive patter between songs is frequently hoary, the overall performanc­e is as solid as his back catalogue.

Opening with the laidback country vibe of Easy, he allowed his band to rock out on Running With The Night before making the first of countless appeals to women in the audience with Three Times A Lady, his crystallin­e piano dissipatin­g out into the night sky.

Deprived of Diana Ross to duet on Endless Love, he entreated them to sing for her, a feat they performed in enthusiast­ic and endearing unison.

Hits like Hello and the mawkishly saccharine We Are The World have a cheesiness that can only be embraced. The soaring melodies have endured for a reason and Ritchie interspers­ed them with up-tempo tunes like Dancing On The Ceiling and the smooth 90s R’N’B of My Destiny, creating a party atmosphere that lasted way beyond the encore of All Night Long.

 ??  ?? Lionel Ritchie has lost nothing of his stage presence
Lionel Ritchie has lost nothing of his stage presence

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