‘Mind the Gap’ was the tour headline with its connotations
spanning style, sound and the Atlantic divide. However the evening was all
about two fiercely independent artists bridging the gap between the signed and the unsigned world, whilst being totally united in a determined drive to plough through
their own vision of music. This was life at the epicentre of the twenty-first century
music model, spiced by crowd funding, social media, digital sharing and
reaching out to connect with the fans. Rocking it all the way from Georgia, USA
was the dynamic Sonia Leigh, being guided through these isles with a little
help from the polished tones of Hereford-based UK singer-songwriter Sasha
McVeigh.
This concluding date of their short, but action packed, tour anchored in the Birmingham suburb of Kings Heath and an enthusiastic audience gave this brief liaison a fitting farewell. In line with other shows on the tour, a couple of local artists briefly opened before Sonia and Sasha split the standard 90 minute headline portion into a pair of roughly even sets, each showcasing their respective and slightly contrasting careers to date. Perhaps aligned to this being the show closest to Sasha’s home town and the fact that Sonia needed to make a speedy exit to return to London, it was a case of the US first followed by the UK, although we all secretly knew the night wouldn’t end before some form of onstage collaboration.
This concluding date of their short, but action packed, tour anchored in the Birmingham suburb of Kings Heath and an enthusiastic audience gave this brief liaison a fitting farewell. In line with other shows on the tour, a couple of local artists briefly opened before Sonia and Sasha split the standard 90 minute headline portion into a pair of roughly even sets, each showcasing their respective and slightly contrasting careers to date. Perhaps aligned to this being the show closest to Sasha’s home town and the fact that Sonia needed to make a speedy exit to return to London, it was a case of the US first followed by the UK, although we all secretly knew the night wouldn’t end before some form of onstage collaboration.
This was the second time a Sasha McVeigh live performance
was witnessed after she supported Lindsay Ell in the city around a month ago.
The development between the two shows was the switch from solo acoustic to full
band which included a three-piece combo of drums, bass and lead guitar. The
three guys in the band also did the honours splendidly for both artists. Sasha is rapidly
heading towards her debut album release in June and it was interesting to
listen to a number of familiar songs in the new format. Two such numbers
bookended her slot as she opened with ‘No
Strings Attached’ and closed with a song, popularised by a live version on
You Tube, called ’Mr Brown Eyes’. Sharing
her passion, inspiration and dreams via affable audience banter and
introspective song writing is a therapeutic outlet for Sasha and she disguises little
pride in symbolising her song ‘Time of My
Life’. The stand out songs from her set included ‘Someone to Break My Heart’ and ‘Crooked Road’, the latter being part of the ubiquitous section
where acoustic ruled the roost again.
During this segment, Sasha delivered a superb version of ‘Jolene’. While on the surface covering
such a popular and well-loved song is safe ground, it does leave a critical door
open for wondering - do we as audiences need another one?. Having passed the
critic test on this occasion, a medley of Zac Brown covers is not my preferred method
of listening to fine songs and she did much better last month with an
entertaining full version of ‘Chicken
Fried’. First and foremost, Sasha is a song writer of unlimited potential and
possesses a smart eye for maximising her appeal. It will be interesting to watch
how the career of this talented artist evolves and in what direction it veers
before ultimately settling.
In contrast to Sasha being technically at the outset of her
recording career, Sonia Leigh is going through a period re-establishment after high
level association This included mixing with seriously popular US artists, label
contracts and the enviable status of co-writing such fantastic Zac Brown tracks as ‘Sweet Annie’ and ‘Goodbye in Her Eyes’. Without resorting
to versions of these songs, Sonia spread her set right from the first single dating
back to 2011 in ‘My Name is Money’ through
to the current release of ‘Put it in Your
Pocket’. Also with an eye to the future, Sonia introduced the sassy number ‘Booty Call’ with an intention to pursue
a US issue of it, alongside a humorous invitation for anyone offended to leave.
Of course no one did leave as they were witnessing a high calibre
charismatic performer who has made the most profound effect on me as any live
act in the first four months of 2015. Armed with the most authentic of achingly
resonant bruised vocals and possessing the raw emotion of post-punk new wave
rock n’ roll, Sonia Leigh kicked ass for three quarters of an hour. Whether hitting the full throttle or
powering into something slower but still intense, this dark and diminutive
figure with the most delectable southern twang owned the stage with utmost
authority. The itchy feet of genre restriction guides the style of Sonia, but
it has to be said that the performance of ‘Bar’
was dripping in pure 24 carat country gold.
www.sashamcveighmusic.com
www.sonialeigh.com