Classic Rock

Mike Garson Plays Aladdin Sane

Liverpool 02 Academy Pianist on Bowie classic plays it again.

- Stephen Dalton

Two years after David Bowie’s death, the mass musical celebratio­n of his legacy shows no sign of fading. The latest in a parade of long-time Bowie sideman to tour with the focus on a single classic album is piano maestro Mike Garson, who has assembled a pan-generation­al collective and various starry guests to play Aladdin Sane.

Orchestrat­ing proceeding­s from his grand piano perch, the shiny-domed Garson has the louche air of a Bond villain on his day off. His florid avant-jazz style can feel excessive, especially when he inserts Beatles and Gershwin melodies into a marathon expanded reworking of Aladdin Sane itself, but such baroque maximalism suits the album’s undertow of velvet-lined glam-cabaret decadence, amping up the high-camp melodrama of Time and the sublime perfumed sexiness of Lady Grinning Soul. (Swoon.) Jazz singer Gaby Moreno’s warm, feminised slant on these androgynou­s anthems shows how effortless­ly Bowie blurred gender lines. It is also great to witness huge 80s hits like Let’s Dance and Absolute Beginners electrify a mid-sized venue, triggering lusty mass singalongs.

The sole jarring note in this big-hearted celebratio­n of Bowie’s genius is guest vocalist Steve Harley, who turns the supple folds of Changes into a graceless trundle before self-indulgentl­y deflating the party mood with his own 1973 ballad Sebastian.

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