The Sunday Telegraph

The Jools in music’s crown

Enjoys the 25th anniversar­y celebratio­ns of – and an eclectic guest list

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Where could you find heavy-rock superstars, a venerable legend of popular music, a householdn­ame Brit rocker, American jazz crooner, chart-topping grime rapper and super-hot African desert blues band all on the same show? Foo Fighters, Van Morrison, Paul Weller, Gregory Porter, Dizzee Rascal and Songhoy Blues would make for a pretty peculiar festival bill, but their very eclecticis­m made them ideal guests to celebrate the 25th anniversar­y of Later… With Jools Holland.

Indeed, once you throw the bumbling, fumbling, enthusiast­ic piano-playing host into the equation, the line-up starts to make sense. Later has been BBC television’s flagship music show for a quarter of a century, which is remarkable in a business driven by fads and fashions, divided by trends and genres. Top of the Pops is history. The Old Grey Whistle Test has faded into the archives. But Later still rocks, pops, raps and swings on, a one-stop-shop for music fans that thrives because it focuses on a key ingredient, the vital element of pop culture that unites, rather than divides: the music itself.

For its anniversar­y, the show relocated from its usual studio base in Maidstone, Kent, to London’s most venerable venue, “the showbiz centre of the world!” as Holland proclaimed. Instead of a small number of invited guests, there was a paying audience of several thousand, looking down on a circle of bands arranged around the stage and the auditorium floor and all facing inwards. It is not often you see a band of the stature of Foo Fighters playing on the floor, with their backs to half the audience. But the Royal Albert Hall is a gorgeous venue, and banks of enthusiast­ic fans injected into the proceeding­s the kind of extra warmth and energy that really helps performanc­es come alive. Foo Fighters were storming. Songhoy Blues were rivetingly joyous.

Van Morrison sang R’n’B standards with a voice still astonishin­g in its fluid ululations. Dizzee Rascal stalked the floor like a prizefight­er while his DJ shook the walls with subsonic electronic­a. Only Paul Weller was a little underheate­d, in pastoral acoustic mode. The old mod has been on the show 15 times, and treated the occasion like a relaxed night amongst friends.

Other guests affirmed Later’s crucial commitment to promoting new music. Colombian-American singer Kali Uchis made her debut, conjuring up slinky hip hop R’n’B grooves. British newcomer Jorja Smith showed off her rich, jazzy modern soul. Singersong­writer KT Tunstall brought the house to its feet with a stomping rendition of Black Horse & The Cherry Tree. It was her performanc­e of that very song on Later in 2004 that launched her to fame.

Comedian Paul Whitehouse, a regular audience member, joked about Holland’s longevity. “Regimes have come and gone, kings and queens have gone, presidents,” he snorted. “Fifty years of Later – what do you think?”

“I think we could do it!” shouted Holland, although at 59 he is no longer the skinny young gun who made such a successful shift from pop stardom with Squeeze to TV presenting with Channel 4’s riotous pop series The Tube in 1982, eventually launching Later in 1992.

There remains something endearingl­y amateurish about Holland that has led to criticism over the years of his role as the BBC’s favoured music broadcaste­r. He is one of the worst interviewe­rs on television, barely able to articulate questions, and rarely following a coherent line of thought. Yet the fact is he gets good quotes, because musicians like talking to him. He is one of them.

His musical ability is his not-sosecret weapon. As a genuinely gifted piano player, he really understand­s the connection­s between the different genres the show places before viewers, encouragin­g listeners to open their ears and hearts to his guests. He sensitivel­y backed American jazz singer Gregory Porter on a phenomenal version of Nat King Cole’s Mona Lisa that inspired a standing ovation. And I can’t think of another TV host who would have the skills or chutzpah to slip into the legendaril­y demanding Van Morrison’s band for a show-stopping rendition of his 1964 classic Gloria, performed by Morrison with surprising joy, delight and humour. Roll on the next 50 series.

 ??  ?? Rocking, popping, rapping and swinging on: Jools Holland talks with Foo Fighter Dave Grohl
Rocking, popping, rapping and swinging on: Jools Holland talks with Foo Fighter Dave Grohl

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