fri 22/11/2024

Adam Ant, Shepherds Bush Empire | reviews, news & interviews

Adam Ant, Shepherds Bush Empire

Adam Ant, Shepherds Bush Empire

Punk meets panto season with the Dandy Highwayman back in the saddle

Adam Ant: the Peter Pan of insect-based pop returns in style© Imelda Michalczyk

Nostalgia is not what it used to be. With kids who were not even born when Mick Jagger first shimmied across the stage singing the praises of the Rolling Stones, it was nice to see an audience at the Shepherds Bush Empire, give  or take a few young goths of no fixed hairstyle, almost perfectly fitting the expected Adam Ant demographic. Well-preserved women who loved the pop hits, bulkier men who liked the punk phase.

 I may have missed that meeting, but Antmusic clearly lives onThe end of the gig, however, found both sociological sub-sets united in one of the most bizarre rock rituals I've ever seen and one you certainly don't get at Rolling Stones gigs. When the acoustic strummed guitar chords of "Prince Charming" rang out during the encore it seemed as if everyone but me had been briefed to break into the dance from the pop video, crossing and uncrossing their arms across their chest. I may have missed that meeting, but Antmusic clearly lives on.

Before that memorable moment the charismatic star, looking trim in hat, Hussar's waistcoat and piratical hankies, had delivered a thrilling set that shuttled between his two eras, punk rocker and chart topper. From the opening thrash of "Press Darlings" he reminded his audience that there has always been a pop sensibility to his music, even when it had a sadomasochistic subtext, as on "Whip in My Valise", which, he cannily pointed out, covered similar ground to Fifty Shades of Grey.

The nimble 58-year-old's battles with depression have been well-documented, but he seemed in good spirits and happy to give the fans what they clearly wanted. He played some new tracks – "Vince Taylor" and "Cool Zombie"  both had a fetching rockabilly tinge – but concentrated on the hits. And boy, did he have some smashes. The BBC's recent Imagine documentary on the science of music barely touched on the way that a melody can have such a powerful Proustian effect on memory as it did here. When the familiar clicking riff that opens "Antmusic" began, I was immediately transported to the common room and heated arguments with confused, long-haired straights over the merits of the band's Top of the Pops appearance.

While the years have taken a slight toll on the voice and the upper range is not what it was, it hardly mattered as he enthusiastically yodelled his way through "Kings of the Wild Frontier". One might have reservations about a Londoner born Stuart Goddard identifying with oppressed native Americans, but the tune still packed a knockout punch. This compensated for the band, The Good The Bad and The Lovely Posse, being a little lumpy in other places. While the male and female two-drummer set-up recalled the Burundi-meets-Glitterband arrangement of his heyday, the sheet metal powerpop of influential axe anti-hero and chum Marco Pirroni was missing. The band's current bassist and guitarist – both blond and muscular – were way too handsome, and looked as if they had left their surfboards in the dressing room.

Ant was joined for a few songs by Georgina Baillie, best known as the granddaughter of Andrew Sachs who was dragged into the Sachsgate scandal. Baillie's low-key vocals did little to suggest she is going to shake off her history and be remembered as a great singer, but then this was very much Adam Ant's night. He was clearly having a great time, swinging the microphone stand around, grimacing, playing guitar and dancing wildly like a punk rock James Brown.

Even the naffest of numbers, "Goody Two Shoes" and "Vive Le Rock", had a quaint cartoonish appeal, and he showed great taste in resisting the career nadir "Ant Rap". When he returned for the extended encore he paid tribute to Marc Bolan, another pin-up pop star whose similarly rollercoaster career also went from underground to mainstream, with a frisky cover of T Rex's "Get It On". And then it was time for "Prince Charming" and that campest of dances. The panto season starts here. 

Follow Bruce Dessau on Twitter

Watch Adam Ant perform 'Stand & Deliver' at Bestival 2012

There has always been a pop sensibility to his music, even when it had a sadomasochistic subtext

rating

Editor Rating: 
4
Average: 4 (1 vote)

Share this article

Comments

Nice review. It was a great gig - it's a shame though, that Adam won't give credit to the other person responsible for writing all those hits - Marco Pirroni. Still, he'll get royalties from each performance of all the songs he wrote the music for. That aside, Adam is still a thrilling performer when he's on form. At 58!

Think you have to be very careful on the Marco thing. I believe that whilst the hits came with 'Ant/Marco' credited...I'm not entirely sure Marco actually contributed that much. Apart from some brilliant guitar playing, of course.

its pretty clear who was the musician and who was the performer and if Marco didnt contribute much,then why does Ant/Marco sound totally different to just Ant? and judging on what I have heard of the dreadfull Blueblack hussar album,why cant Adam write songs without Marco?

Adam's first album Dirk Wears White Sox, was written completely by Adam, no co writer.

Darren mate, your comment 'Ant/Marco' credited...I'm not entirely sure Marco actually contributed that much.... is disgusting and very very unfair ... I am a massive fan of all things and run a forum too. Q1.How many hit records did Adam have before Marco came along? A1. None, Zilch Zero is the answer !! also do not discredit Chris 'Merrick' Hughes from the 'ADAM AND THE ANTS' success either.. Adam, Marco and Merrick were a team and I don't reckon it woulda happened without all 3 !! Cheers & Love 2ya Paul Jack Griffiths xx

Add comment

The future of Arts Journalism

 

You can stop theartsdesk.com closing!

We urgently need financing to survive. Our fundraising drive has thus far raised £33,000 but we need to reach £100,000 or we will be forced to close. Please contribute here: https://gofund.me/c3f6033d

And if you can forward this information to anyone who might assist, we’d be grateful.

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com

Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.

To take a subscription now simply click here.

And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?

newsletter

Get a weekly digest of our critical highlights in your inbox each Thursday!

Simply enter your email address in the box below

View previous newsletters