The Scotsman

Still inspiring after all these years

- DAVID POLLOCK

Primal Scream

Barrowland­s, Glasgow

NOW that Bobby Gillespie is not far off his 60th birthday – although he in no way looks it, and could pass for a slightly underfed man of two decades younger – the Glasgow-founded Primal Scream are beginning to resemble the Rolling Stones in a manner which isn’t just musical. At odds with their notoriousl­y hard-living younger days, the Scream are also proving to be remarkably resilient. Having lived through their eras of youthful novelty and borderline self-imitation, they’re now finding a new kind of cool as energetic elder inspiratio­ns to young and old.

Although their sound (as evidenced by the decadesspa­nning greatest hits they’ve just released) has fluctuated between the trailblazi­ng and the trend-following, what we can see – now they’re in the latter stages of a career which hopefully still has a while to run – is that they’re a first-rate pop group who haven’ t allowed stylistic compromise to deter their way with a great chorus.

Unmistakab­le in pink suit and shirt, Gillespie – who has recently become a cult hero after his sullen but steadfast refusal to dance with Andrew Neil and Michael Portillo on television made him a viral hit – affects a masterful stage style which sits somewhere between puppyish enthusiasm, careful regard for the fans and a dash of stil l couldn’t-care-less swagger. Between his energy and the guitar poses thrown by more recently-recruited bassist Simone Butler, there’s a youthfulne­ss to Primal Scream which seems almost unnatural in a band approachin­g their 40th anniversar­y.

Their music, too, feels raw and vibrant, in some cases two or even three decades after it was released on now-classic records; the blissed-out psychedeli­a of Don’t Fight It, Feel It and the loose groove of Loaded, both from the seminal Screamadel­ica album; the righteous fury of Burning Wheel, from Vanishing Point, and the anti-establishm­ent electro cataclysm of Swastika Eyes and j ag ged,krautpunk Kill All Hippies, both from xtrmntr.

From their earlier days, there was the lovelorn I’m

Losing More Than I’ll Ever Have and there were two songs from the very earliest days of the C86 scene in Glasgow – Velocity Girl and Imperial – which featured Gillespie’s cofounder Jim Beattie on guest

guitar, received by the singer with a warm “Primal Scream loves you!”.

Movin’ On Up, Country Girl and Rocks, the band’s three signature tracks, each earned a paint-strippingl­y loud crowd singalong near the end of the set, and Come Together, with its upbeat tone and reworked lyrical call for “socialism, solidarity, rock ‘n’ roll,” sounded like a determined antidote to the times. Nostalgia has rarely sounded so much like the future.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Cult hero Bobby Gillespie defies his years with energy and a masterful stage style
Cult hero Bobby Gillespie defies his years with energy and a masterful stage style

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom