The Guardian (USA)

James review – shamanic Mancs provide spiritual nourishmen­t

- Dave Simpson

Tim Booth shuffles on in an outsize wool hat and Afghan coat and without speaking a word, starts singing: “We’re all going to die.” It’s a typically perverse opening from a band who have long ploughed their own furrow, and darkly but amusingly tees up one of their most absorbingl­y wilful shows. If having Happy Mondays as a support act suggested a night of Madchester nostalgia, James’s first 75 minutes takes in just three copper-bottomed smashes – She’s a Star, Born of Frustratio­n and a rapturousl­y received Come Home.

Instead, an adventurou­s setlist careers through six songs from recent Top 3 album All the Colours of You to surprise Hymn from a Village, a Factory Records single from 1985. Clearly not content to become a heritage act, Booth seems on a mission to prove that James still say something. The songs’ themes range from the pandemic and the transitory preciousne­ss of life to George Floyd’s murder and the state of the US, with lyrics that are wonderfull­y observed (Curse Curse’s acrobatic leap from the couple having sex next door to, well, God) or simply powerful (Miss America’s “live the dream, as long as you’re white”). After a brief trip to 1990 for Gold Mother, Booth chuckles that during the baggy explosion James were “writing songs about childbirth”.

It works because newer songs such as climate change anthem Beautiful Beaches more than live with the old and Booth is such a livewire, charismati­c performer. In full flow – hyperactiv­ely shake-dancing, beatifical­ly grinning, at one point using a megaphone to shamanical­ly shout to the spirits – the 61-year-old seems to transcend global worries to reach a highly engaging enlightene­d contentmen­t. The singer’s smile widens at the arena-sized wave of clapping that greets 2001’s sublime Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) and the band finally unleash whoppers Sound, Laid and the perennial Sit Down, during which the band sit down and seated audience members stand up. The hits bring crowd euphoria, but James are still on a quest for humanity’s deeper truths.

• James play Utilita Arena, Birmingham (26 November) and Motorpoint Arena, Cardiff (28 November). Then touring.

 ?? ?? Highly engaging … Tim Booth of James performing in Leeds. Photograph: Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Highly engaging … Tim Booth of James performing in Leeds. Photograph: Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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