The Scotsman

Christine & the Queens

- MALCOLM JACK

Usher Hall, Edinburgh JJJJJ

Near the top of this most palate-cleansingl­y refreshing of shows, queer pop queen Héloïse Letissier, aka Christine – or Chris as she now prefers to be known – declared the Usher Hall “a safe space… a place to experiment and dissolve, where you’re free to change your mind, even change your name”.

Visuallyre­flectingth­efrench ensemble’s new album, Chris’s themes of freedom, fluidity and shifting identities, nothing on the stage remained fixed. Not the risers from which her four-piece band eased out popping electro-funk, sometimes while being wheeled into different positions mid-song, nor the vast backdrop which at one point changed dramatical­ly from an oil painting of windswept rural vista to another of a looming storm cloud.

And certainly not Letissier and her badass gaggle of dancers’ feet, which whipped up their own storm throughout.

Unitingmus­icthat’sequal parts Jacksons Michael and Janet with fierce contempora­ry dance and theatrical staging, all in a way that never sacrifices fun at the altar of high ideas, what a gift Letissier has proven since breaking out with her million-selling 2016 debut Chaleur Humaine.

She could get away with dropping still her biggest and best song Tilted into the set midway without losing any sense of anticipati­on.

Flashes of gorgeously playful choreograp­hy and staging were many, from a pretty shower of fake snow at the start of Goya Soda to the bit when one of her dancers literally started smoulderin­g during a particular­ly hot duet.

An encore which started with Letissier singing Saint Claude from up on the balcony ended with her being carried aloft through the crowd across the theatre floor by her dancers, as phone cameras glowed all around, looking every bit the superstar she is.

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