The Independent

JORJA ON MY MIND

Jorja Smith, Shepherd’s Bush Empire, London

- REVIEW BY VISHAL RANA

Jorja Smith has already won a Brits critics’ choice award, featured on a Kendrick Lamar-curated album, collaborat­ed with Stormzy and Drake among others, and can now add a sellout UK tour to her list of accolades. Not bad for a 20-year-old.

The West Midlander is incredibly talented; her singing seems effortless and her stage presence is everything you’d come to expect from someone who is on the cusp of making waves.

Smith opened her second night at Shepherd’s Bush Empire with “Something In The Way” and “Where Did I Go”, introducin­g herself to the sellout crowd – which included none other than the legendary Tom Jones.

Dressed in an oversized white T-shirt coupled with a pair of box-fresh Nike Cortez, she excuded coolness as she effortless­ly made her way through a set list including new single “Let Me Down” and crowd favourite “Beautiful Little Fools”.

“Lifeboats” saw Smith play with the norm and introduce political grime to her repertoire as she commented on issues around austerity and poverty in Britain, in a thought-provoking performanc­e that proves, as it has so many times before, how music can be the perfect medium for political understand­ing.

“Carry Me Home” followed, in which Maverick Sabre made a surprise appearance during the collaborat­ion to the delight of the crowd. An equally impressive cover of Frank Ocean’s “Lost” followed before Smith jumped back into Project 11 with “Blue Lights” and “Teenage Fantasy”.

Clearly enjoying herself, Smith could be forgiven for forgetting the lyrics to a couple of tracks on occasion, in what seemed a case of being joyfully overwhelme­d in the moment, as opposed to nerves getting the better of her. The Walsall native closed the night with upbeat Preditah collaborat­ion “On My Mind”: a perfect nod to the mini garage revival currently taking place.

 ??  ?? Smith beguiled the crowd with effortless singing and oodles of presence (Rex)
Smith beguiled the crowd with effortless singing and oodles of presence (Rex)

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