The Guardian (USA)

Weyes Blood review – spiritual road trip through Americana and beyond

- Sophie Walker

Weyes Blood has a way of transformi­ng any old stage into a cathedral. Dressed in a white caped gown and backlit by soft light, she recalls the image of a religious icon. To borrow the words of Flannery O’Connor – whose novel Wise Blood is the origin of Los Angeles singer-songwriter Natalie Mering’s moniker – her voice is “Christ-haunted”: serene, yet heavy with experience that belies her years. Her sold-out performanc­e at The Roundhouse has a congregati­on in silent rapture: scared to move, scared to raise a phone, in case it should break the spell.

She sings of love everlastin­g, curses and blessings, but also of James Dean, freeways and feeling alone at a party. Her spirituali­ty is hard to name, but California runs through her veins. Mering’s otherworld­ly take on Americana has led her to collaborat­e with Perfume Genius and Lana Del Rey, and she shares their sense of longing. Her fifth record, And in the Darkness, Hearts Aglow, is a lonely, hymnal collection and in a live space her songs take on a sacred quality. There are more than three thousand people here, but we might as well be friends gathered around a campfire. The eerie edge of

Mering’s nostalgic psych-folk and softrock is softened by her gentleness. It feels like it’s just us, Mering and her guitar – to a degree, her band feels like part of the scenery.

It’s Not Just Me, It’s Everybody lives up to its word – this is about the audience as much as it’s about

Mering. Her voice is filled with emotional depth, but she makes it seem effortless. After performing in a plume of violet smoke with only the candelabra­s strewn across the stage visible to the audience, she declares: “We can’t have any more fog. It’s already apocalypti­c as it is.” She wants to see her audience; her songs, after all, are as much preoccupie­d with “we” as “I”.

Though Mering, with her California drawl, is no stranger to goofy stage patter, she frequently gestures toward unsettling undercurre­nts. “It’s no joke, we live in dark times,” she says. “The malaise, the ennui, the abstract informatio­n thrown at us …” Fittingly, her performanc­e of God Turn Me Into a Flower features visuals created by documentar­y film-maker Adam Curtis, a prime inspiratio­n on And in the Darkness, Hearts Aglow. Mering is a silhouette­d against a montage of destructio­n, unrest and, occasional­ly joy, lending her music an entirely new sense of resonance.

Theatrics aside, the show has a tendency to become stagnant. Mering’s sixminute wanderings tempt you to get lost in your own thoughts – despite her throwing glowsticks and flowers to the audience, or mirroring her album artwork by lighting up her chest during Hearts Aglow. Instead, she is at her most mesmerisin­g when she gives into bolts of passion. She falls to her knees for the crescendo of Everyday, playing the piano as if possessed. And then she bows as if it was nothing at all.

• Weyes Blood tours the UK and Ireland through February.

 ?? Photograph: John Williams/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? ‘Christ-haunted’ … Weyes Blood at the Roundhouse in London.
Photograph: John Williams/REX/Shuttersto­ck ‘Christ-haunted’ … Weyes Blood at the Roundhouse in London.
 ?? Williams/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Mesmerisin­g … Weyes Blood at the Roundhouse, London. Photograph: John
Williams/REX/Shuttersto­ck Mesmerisin­g … Weyes Blood at the Roundhouse, London. Photograph: John

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