The Scotsman

Space

St Luke’s, Glasgow

- MALCOLM JACK

Outsiders in the Britpop universe even back in their midto-late 1990s chart-scaling days, quirky Liverpudli­an pop-rock band Space exist today somewhere on the far outer rim of the music industry solar system. If you weren’t even aware until now that they had reformed within the last few years, much less selfreleas­ed two albums, don’t feel like you were alone – nor that you necessaril­y missed a great deal.

Musicians of clearly a glasshalf-full rather than half-empty dispositio­n – and half-full would have been a more than generous way of describing the venue – they rattled off a mixture of greatest hits and new material with a joy and energy that suggested they’re simply happy to still be playing for anyone these days.

Plainly well-oiled frontman

Tommy Scott slurped gamely from a bottle of red wine between songs while engaging in a mixture of arcane and in many cases unprintabl­e banter with the audience. Frequently he hopped down off the stage mid-song for a dance and a hug and a selfie or two with members of a crowd who, while few in number, were very much in the spirit of things.

To be reminded first-hand of the continued existence of one of the most annoying top ten singles of the late last century in The Ballad of Tom Jones was the sort of Proustian rush this reviewer could have very much done without. More pleasingly, their other bestknown numbers Female of the Species, Me and You Versus the World and Neighbourh­ood’s various oddball dalliances with electronic­a, punk, lounge music and easy listening proved that, then as now and to their credit, Space were never a group to run with the pack.

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