Let’s get the cliché out of the way by stating that the sound in this venue was exemplary leaving most others in its trail. However there was something lacking in its ability to create a warm and connective environment which is essential to lift live artist music to the pinnacle of a moving performance. Perhaps the venue was a little stuffy, vacuous in its design and matters were certainly not helped by an unsatisfactory hour long wait between the support act finishing and Kacey entering the stage to the fabulous sound of ‘Pageant Material’. From a fairly decent sized sample of eighty plus shows this year, this was the longest gap between performances and in my opinion is treating a ‘smart phone engrossed audience' with contempt.
One of the endearing features of Kacey Musgraves is her
attempt to re-establish the ‘western theme’ amongst a contemporary crowd’s insistence
to hairbrush the term from the genre. So fair play to the strapline ‘Country
and Western Rhinestone Revue’ matching the visual style and band ethos that goes some way
to defining her sound and stage performance. With reference to the band, their role in
a Kacey Musgraves live show is to remain a little distant and for a large part
this works well enabling the super songs to own the spotlight. Pedal steel
remains the most prominent component and also we did witness on a couple occasions
– ‘Die Fun’ and ‘These Boots are Made for Walking’ – the band being let off the
leash with appealing affect. We know Kacey is going to evolve musically, so why
not in a rock ‘n’ roll direction. So much more preferable to any hint of pop.
Kacey’s show in Manchester last year, in my opinion a far
more inspirational and moving evening, was the start of the leap from SAME
TRAILER DIFFERENT PARK to PAGEANT MATERIAL with the journey being finally
completed in 2015. Ten of the thirteen tracks, excluding the Willie Nelson duet,
from the new album made the set list this evening with ‘High Time’, ‘Fine’ and the aforementioned ‘Die Fun’ being the notable live versions to emerge from the show.
The album remains a firm favourite among the throngs of laudable 2015 releases
and listening to the songs live through this sound quality strengthened the appeal
of the record. A handful of songs from the previous album reminded folks of the
impact of this debut major release with ‘Follow
Your Arrow’ heading the popularity stakes. From a personal angle, ‘Silver Lining’ sounded better and a surprise
candidate in the guise ‘It is What it is’
joined the expanding group of stand-out songs from the show.
There were a number of content similarities between last
year and this year’s gigs. ‘Happy Trails’
remains the group vocal-single mic finale, the Nancy Sinatra tribute complete
with sparkling footwear adds to the glamour and the TLC cover ‘No Scrubs’ appeals to certain strands of
her fan base a little distant from yours truly. The Kacey co-write–Miranda hit
‘Mama’s Broken Heart’ made a welcome
re-appearance as well. Interestingly a steel soaked version of Coldplay’s ‘Yellow’ made a drab song a little more palatable,
but please audience no waving illuminated phones at one of my gigs – thank you.
All evening Kacey’s vocals were on top form and she
continues to emerge as an assured entertainer. Inspirationally she remains work–in-progress,
but is one of the good gals doing things the right way in the murky world of
mainstream country music. This genre term is a much mangled art form in the
chase for the dollar/pound and it is refreshing that Kacey Musgraves acts as a counter
balance from within.
Prior to the irritating and seemingly unnecessary hour long
wait, Sugar and the Hi Lows played a thirty-minute opening set. They came
across as a competent outfit and were unfazed by the surroundings. They were a
little synonymous with some of the modern pop-rock that rolls out of Music City
these days. At least they veered away from ‘Folsom
Prison Blues’ with their Johnny Cash cover in choosing ‘Jackson’. Without recalling the titles
of their songs, the penultimate number had the most appeal with its rock ‘n’
roll feel, while the closing Otis Redding inspired number headed out of the
exit pretty quickly.