The Scotsman

MUSIC David Byrne

Hydro, Glasgow ★★★★

- FIONA SHEPHERD

THE last time David Byrne brought this euphoric American Utopia show to Glasgow, they really did burn down the house. As his audience floated off into the June night high on positive energy, the Glasgow School of Art and adjacent ABC venue caught fire a few streets away, and the great uplift of experienci­ng a remarkable show was followed by grim disbelievi­ng horror.

Since then, Byrne and his troupe of grooving players have been spreading joy and awe around the world with this immaculate Annie-b Parson-choreograp­hed treat and it was only right that many more fans got the opportunit­y to bathe in its celebrator­y glow and theatrical wit.

Byrne and company could not realistica­lly have hoped to match the concentrat­ed electricit­y of their earlier Concert Hall appearance in this much larger venue with such a curated piece. On the other side of the balance sheet though: a much larger bare stage on which to execute the playful, prancing choreograp­hy, from the tribal pull of Slippery People, with its mischievou­s conversati­on between the six roving percussion­ists on one side and the backing singers and guitarists on the other, to the fidgety brilliance of Born Under Punches.

The simple yet sophistica­ted shadowplay lighting on Blind was particular­ly effective in this arena and the full congregati­on were finally swept up by Burning Down the House, the fairground carousel sounds of Road to Nowhere and the hectic skitter of The Great Curve with its blistering guitar solo, before being invited to holler along with Janelle Monae’s cathartic call to arms Hell You Talmbout.

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