The Daily Telegraph - Features

Like The Beach Boys doing Frank Zappa

- By James Hall

Pop

10cc

Royal Albert Hall, London SW7 ★★★★★

Stockport art rock band 10cc may be best known for the silky ballad

I’m Not In Love and jolly singalong

The Things We Do for Love, but this absorbing Royal Albert Hall show demonstrat­ed the veteran band’s underlying – and very English – eccentrici­ty.

Formed in 1972, the original group splintered after four years at the height of their success when Kevin Godley and Lol Creme left. Bass player and singer Graham Gouldman is the only founding member who has remained constant. But fans in London were treated to a reunion of sorts when Godley emerged from the wings towards the end for a handful of tracks. It was his first guest appearance with the band for a decade, and it provided purists with a 5cc shot of nostalgia.

Not that 10cc’s music fits easily into the “nostalgia” bracket. While 77-year-old Gouldman may have looked like a retired headmaster, the band’s songs are too intricate and shape-shifting to sound old.

Art for Art’s Sake from 1975 started with a proggy Pink Floyd guitar intro courtesy of long-term member Rick Fenn before it was interrupte­d by a rapid-fire scat vocal interlude by Gouldman. This was music that was intelligen­t without being intellectu­al – a tricky act to pull off.

The Dean and I and Clockwork Creep showed just how structural­ly complicate­d and lyrically surreal some of 10cc’s oeuvre is. The latter song is about a conversati­on between an airplane and a bomb hidden in its hold. It sounded like The Beach Boys doing Frank Zappa by way of Reeves and Mortimer. Indeed, you could well imagine the comedy duo also singing that “life is a minestrone” while death “is a cold lasagne”. 10cc embodied the kind of musical whimsy that Paul McCartney’s Wings could only ever flirt with.

Godley teased us. His face appeared on a screen and he “sang” pre-recorded vocals to Somewhere in Hollywood. It was artfully done, as befits a man who left 10cc to direct music videos, such as Duran Duran’s Girls on Film. When the 78-year-old walked on for 1974’s Old Wild Men, cracks of frailty could be heard in the lyrics: “Old men of rock and roll came bearing music/ Where are they now?”. He then performed Godley & Creme’s song Cry live for the first time ever. It was moving, and Godley seemed genuinely taken aback by the positive reaction.

Next year marks the 50th anniversar­y of 10cc’s best album, The Original Soundtrack. Could Godley join the fold for more shows? Who knows. But even in their dotage, 10cc are a band full of surprises.

No further UK dates

 ?? ?? Beguiling eccentrici­ty: 10cc linchpin Graham Gouldman
Beguiling eccentrici­ty: 10cc linchpin Graham Gouldman

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom