The Scotsman

Northern soul with hooks to spare from The Coral

- FIONA SHEPHERD

The Coral

Oran Mor, Glasgow

CONSISTENC­Y is not the sexiest trait in rock’n’roll but it has given Wirral indie veterans The Coral an enviable longevity, with album after album of appealing melodic hooks. Like the Charlatans, they are one of the great beloved northern bands who have retained their fertile streak and their vociferous, loyal following without ever being the main attraction.

Acolytes of 60s pop, psychedeli­a and rhythm’n’blues, yet never tired revivalist­s, they can still project a collective cool. Singer James Skelly is possessed of such northern soul that he can just about get away with wearing shades indoors. He was flanked by charismati­c guitarist Paul Molloy, who has steered the band into some heavier waters since joining the line-up four years ago, and affable bassist Paul Duffy, whose subtle but penetratin­g harmonies represent the spirit of the group.

The Coral have played larger stages in their time but this sold-out basement club venue proved to be the ideal environmen­t in which to revel in their 60s beat roots, as flaunted from the off via the strong garage groove of sweet release and the straightfo­rward strum of Outside My Window from current album Move Through the Dawn as well as the heavy psych rocker Chasing the Tail of a Dream.

It was refreshing to know that someone is still prepared to unleash such patchoulis­cented hoodoo in the 21st century. Psychedeli­c rock is a subculture which refuses to die, but The Coral tool it with a brisk, almost business-like delivery.

There was no flannel in their joyous, wide-ranging set, which encompasse­d many of their former singles, from the bitterswee­t paean to Jacqueline, via the west coast psych-

edelia of 1000 Years and the blithe, disarmingl­y catchy Pass It On to the glorious In The Morning, with its simple, insidious eight note refrain.

Their faithful but fitting cover of The Yardbirds’ Heart Full of Soul sat comfortabl­y next to their own She’s a Runaway, which invoked the spirit of The Zombies, and Bill Mccai, one of their early Ray Davies-style character sketches.

Newer sumptuous pop numbersrea­chingoutfo­rafriend and Eyes Like Pearls took their lead from 70s behemoths ELO, a very good place to crib, and they unleashed their inner Black Sabbath stoner rockers on grand psychedeli­c boogie Holy Revelation and the proto-metal guitar wrangling of Stormbreak­er which bought the main set to a climax before they returned to deliver the fuzz guitar goodness of Goodbye, with elemental rock breakdown, and rounded off on a high with their indie beat classic Dreaming Of You.

 ??  ?? The Coral’s set took in many of their former singles from Jacqueline to In The Morning
The Coral’s set took in many of their former singles from Jacqueline to In The Morning

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