The Scotsman

Quality rock, pithy pop and timeless melodies

- FIONA SHEPHERD

Nick Lowe’s Quality Rock’n’roll Revue

Glasgow Royal Concert Hall

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NICK Lowe has a common sense take on how to deliver quality control at this selfstyled Quality Rock’n’roll Revue show – keep it snappy. If you don’ t like one song, another will be along in approximat­ely two-and-a-half minutes.

Naturally, an audience of Lowe acolytes wouldn’t struggle to find something to love in this affectiona­te leafing through his sterling back pages, especially with his promise of “at least two smash hit songs”. But just to be sure, Lowe has hired a new backing band–crack command o nashville surf rock outfit Los Straitjack­ets, purveyor soft wang for some 30 years, who habitually take to the stage shrouded in Mexican wrestling masks.

This mysterious quartet are the men to bring Lowe’s catholic catalogue to life, deftly handling his diverse predilecti­on for power pop, new wave, pub rock, country and old time balladry as well as their twangtasti­c 2018 collaborat­ion Tokyo Bay– it’s all quality rock’n’roll at the end of the day, whether the mellifluou­s melody of his debut solo single, So It Goes, still fresh and free at 43 years young, or the luscious slow swing of You Inspire Me, now garnished with lashings of tremolo.

Lowe took a mid-set breather, leaving Los Straitjack­ets to deliver a no-nonsense instrument­al set, including a surfing take on maritime classic My Heart Will Go On with some stratosphe­ric vocalisati­on from drummer Gringo Starr.

An instrument­al snippet of I Love the Sound of Breaking Glass, one of said smash hits, was the cue for Lowe to return for further rock’n’roll hi-jinks such as the affectiona­te pastiche Half A Boy and Half A Man and the blatantly Chuck Berry-inspired Dave Edmunds

hit I Knew the Bride (When She Used to Rock’n’roll) – both a reminder, if any were needed by this crowd of connoisseu­rs, that the roots of punk and new wave lay squarely in the primitive sonic simplicity of the 1950s.

In the punk pantheon, Lowe was more lover than fighter and, for all his pithy pop songs and rough-and-ready recording reputation as Basher, there was an unhurried elegance to much of the set, exemplifie­d by the freewheeli­ng melody of Cruel To Be Kind (smash hit number two) and a melancholi­c rendition of (What’s So Funny ’Bout) Peace Love and Understand­ing, a timeless tune which never loses its pop potency, nor its empathetic relevance.

 ??  ?? 0 Lowe’s back catalogue is stuffed with stand-out examples from many genres
0 Lowe’s back catalogue is stuffed with stand-out examples from many genres

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