Irish Daily Mail

Pop’s greatest drama queen and a potted history of rock ’n’ roll... this year’s best live recordings

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WITH the touring circuit open again, live albums are enjoying a resurgence. ADRIAN THRILLS rounds up the current crop — both new and vintage . . .

FLORENCE + THE MACHINE: Dance Fever: Live At Madison Square Garden (Polydor)

))))* THE fates weren’t kind to Florence Welch in 2022. As frontwoman of Florence + The Machine, she delivered an impressive fifth album, Dance Fever, inspired partly by how much she missed touring in lockdown.

Then, when she finally returned to the stage last month, she broke her foot at London’s O2 Arena and — despite hobbling on to the end

of the show — saw the rest of her tour — including Irish dates — postponed until next year.

Her first live album, recorded in New York in September, underlines the cruel timing. Described by Welch as her ‘full circle moment’, it captures her sheer joy at singing in front of a crowd again.

Out now digitally (and as a twodisc vinyl LP in April), it combines tracks from Dance Fever with old

favourites such as Dog Days Are Over.

‘As you can imagine, it’s still a pretty crazy time for live music,’ she says, opening the show with all the zest of a former Glastonbur­y headliner.

As pop’s greatest drama queen, she builds a sense of grandeur with ornate arrangemen­ts and a voice that switches from a fluttery, operatic warble to a rock and roll roar. For all her theatrical­ity, though, a defining characteri­stic of a Florence gig is her ability to nail a hypnotic groove and stick to it, a trait associated more with dance music than rock.

The Dance Fever songs transfer smoothly to the live arena. Free is

all pulsating electronic­s, My Love a swirling anthem. Of the ballads, Daffodil is a twangy, country-blues number that whets the appetite for her next return to the stage.

SAM FENDER: Live From Finsbury Park (Polydor) ))))*

SAM FENDER’S songs are also built for big arenas and the man dubbed the Geordie Springstee­n cemented his position a bright new rock star with a spectacula­r summer on the road. He supported The Killers, wowed Glastonbur­y — and played his largest

headline show to date in front of 45,000 fans in July.

That gig, in London’s Finsbury Park, is celebrated on his first live

album, out on vinyl, and as a bonus CD on the deluxe edition of 2021’s Seventeen Going Under.

Backed by a propulsive guitar band, he’s in his element onstage. Beneath his gregarious spirit, Fender, 28, tackles challengin­g topics: youth suicide on Dead Boys; his difficulti­es in chatting openly with his dad on Spit Of You.

The show finishes with a mass singalong that continues long after he’s finished playing. ‘This is a milestone for us,’ he says. Expect another when he plays hometown shows at Newcastle’s St. James’ Park next June.

TOM PETTY & THE HEARTBREAK­ERS: Live At The Fillmore (1997) (Warner)

)))))

CLASSIC gigs of a different vintage are the focus of a mammoth new Tom Petty box set. Documentin­g his 20-show residency with The Heartbreak­ers in San Francisco in 1997, Live At The Fillmore is a joyous, feel-good listen that Petty, who died in 2017, called ‘the highpoint of our time as a group’.

Out as a 2-CD box (€17), 3-LP vinyl set (€60), 4-CD box (€80) and 6-LP deluxe edition (€200), it features a mix of covers and originals. With songs by Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Ray Charles and Bob Dylan rubbing shoulders with

Petty’s American Girl, sung acoustical­ly, and Free Fallin’, it feels less a concert and more a potted history of rock and roll.

With the setlist changing nightly, the 4-CD and 6-LP editions stretch to 58 tracks. The Heartbreak­ers pay their respects to the British invasion of the 1960s by covering the Stones (Time Is On My Side, Satisfacti­on), The Zombies (I Want You Back Again) and The Kinks (You Really Got Me).

They’re also joined by The Byrds’ Roger McGuinn, who duets on Eight Miles High, and bluesman John Lee Hooker. A sense of the whole shebang as a brilliantl­y-preserved time capsule is summed up by Petty’s aside about the era’s emerging technology: ‘We’re live on the internet tonight... whatever that is.’

JOAN ARMATRADIN­G: Live At Asylum Chapel (BMG)

))))*

FIVE decades on from her 1972 debut album, Whatever’s For Us, Armatradin­g is still capable of conveying intimate, emotional sentiments with a soulful pop song. This live set, recorded last year in London and out on CD and digitally, captures a performer

who, dismissing any thoughts of retirement at 72, continues to chart her own course.

Hits such as Love And Affection and Drop The Pilot feature beside tracks from 2021’s Consequenc­es.

Highlights from the latter include the love song Already There and the reggae-tinged Better Life.

Empty Highway, from 2007’s Into The Blues, is a powerful ballad the equal of anything from her chart heyday.

RINGO STARR: Live At The Greek Theater 2019 (Roccabella) )))**

RINGO’S second live album from LA’s Greek Theater features some illustriou­s pals. Among his AllStarr Band are Toto guitarist Steve Lukather, Santana cofounder Gregg Rolie, Men At Work’s Colin Hay and Average White Band’s Hamish Stuart, all of whom provide sterling support as the ex-Beatle sings solo hits and Fab Four favourites with unfussy charm.

Yellow Submarine and With A Little Help From My Friends are unsurprisi­ng inclusions, but a few of his lesser-known vocal performanc­es are brought into the spotlight, too: the country-ish Rubber

Soul number What Goes On; rockabilly track Act Naturally, from Help!; the White Album’s Don’t Pass Me By.

With the show (out on CD, DVD, Blu-ray and vinyl) structured like

an old-school soul revue, his guests perform three songs apiece by their own bands.

Rolie shines on Oye Como Va, Lukather leads the way on Rosanna and Africa, and Hay sings Down Under.

All well and good... though a little more unadultera­ted Ringo

wouldn’t have gone amiss.

 ?? ?? A sense of grandeur: Florence Welch
A sense of grandeur: Florence Welch

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