Kylie, iTunes Festival, Roundhouse | reviews, news & interviews
Kylie, iTunes Festival, Roundhouse
Kylie, iTunes Festival, Roundhouse
The voice is thin, the music naff and terrible - but do give us the glitter and sparkle
Does Kylie exist without spectacle? Take away the 6ft headgear, the sparkly hotpants, the spangly corsets, the team of super-fit dancers dressed like futuristic liquorice allsorts, and what’s left? If you find whatever it is, please let me know.
But if it’s spectacle you’re into – and who doesn’t enjoy a bit of sparkle and shimmer now and again? – there’s fun to be had at a Kylie gig, even as you’re aware that all you’re admiring is the pristine production and the manufactured aura of the Kylie brand. "Wooo", the audience go at a spectacular but brief light show between two indistinguishable tracks. And in the hour I spent among the diehard Kylie brigade – though not so diehard from what I could gather of those nearby looking bored and disengaged – that five-second light show was practically all the spectacle I got to see. Other than the video backdrop – which wasn’t a projection of what was happening on stage – it was mainly the backs of people’s heads I got to admire. If you weren’t allocated a seat upstairs you’d have been lucky – yeah, yeah, lucky, lucky, lucky – to catch a glimpse of the tip of one of Kylie’s feathery headdresses.
It soon became very clear that the Roundhouse gig was organised chiefly for the benefit of a live broadcast, and the audience were simply there to provide atmosphere. A pity, then, that there was so little of that last night. Kylie was playing an “intimate” venue in preparation for her appearances at the soulless O2 Arena next week, and, sad to say, this was probably the most boring gig I’ve been to since Badly Drawn Boy sometime in the early Noughties. Is Kylie to music what the chain-smoking, woolly-hatted, indie singer-songwriter was to spectacle? – though in BDB’s case, the music was stultifyingly dreary too.
Kylie’s dreariness took me by surprise. I expected to go home skipping. But if there’s no spectacle – if you can’t see the stage for the sea of heads – then what’s her point as a live performer? Not even the most devoted fan could say she’s got much of a voice. And as for the music – what is it but a backdrop for all those cheeky costumes and choreographed moves? The Hi-NRG mulch of much of her recording career isn’t improved with a live set, and there was only one highlight while I was there – naturally, everyone perked up when she started singing “Can’t Get You Out of My Head”. But when it was over they seemed instantly to droop again, at least during the music, though she did interact charmingly with the audience and got a good response.
There’s nothing else to add. For me, it was tedium writ large. I slipped out an hour early, and on the tube home I spotted fellow early escapees still sporting their Kylie ticket wristbands.
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Comments
What a vile review - 1 star?
"Most pop stars don't sing
"Most pop stars don't sing live - your critique of Kylie's voice is very unfair". Maybe I'm naive, but that amazes me. What would you go to a live show for if not to HEAR the performer live? Sometimes when the wrappings fall, there's nothing underneath at all.
Yes David - I'd agree that
Very narrow minded review.
lord. the single most biased
So you left an hour early...
To clarify, I stayed for an
To clarify, I stayed for an hour, and was told beforehand that the performance would last two. And yes, Rikh, Can't Get You Out of My Head was indeed a highlight. I'm sure it must have been a very different experience seeing it livestreamed.
First this isn't even a
What/ who is the ArtDesk I
I just think you don't get
Do your job as a journalist
Does Kylie exist without
Totally agree with the
Look, it's a review using
Jack - Kylie is touring her
I respect Kylie. A few years
It interests me, though, that
It interests me, though, that we move from Alice Coote's 'it's all about the voice' statement in the operatic, Taragate furore - I didn't believe that any more than I believed Tara was fat, and I enjoyed seeing the magnificent Jessye Norman on HARDtalk pooh-pooh a beleaguered critic's percentages of 75 per cent voice and 25 per cent acting in riposte - to 'it's not really about the voice at all'. I respect Ismene's opinion, as I haven't seen Kylie live, and I've been very happy to bop to some of her hits, but is it ALL about presentation and peripheral star quality? Should we really be grateful for a pop singer just because she actually sings live, live?
Hated some of those analogies between 'live' performance and 'dead' art, by the way. Ludicrous.
Whoa - I'm "bitter", you
Whoa - I'm "bitter", you "feel sorry for my sexual partners", my “opinion pieces should be carefully moderated in future" (cos, like, we live in a Kylie police state...) LOL - calm down boys and girls. I wrote a review of the concert (and it can only be my informed experience of it) - not the livestream, nor her reputation as the beloved one, nor her popular appeal or her record sales or her staggering stamina or her dance moves. Yes, I might have struggled, pushed and fought my way with gritted teeth to the front – it was a pretty dense crowd though – but the point was simply this: completely take out the showgirl spectacle and heed not the rabid fanboy adoration, and it can be pretty dull and miserable at a Kylie concert, because, you know, the music, (apart from a couple of brilliantly catchy hits) is – if you people are completely honest – not good. And the whole point of this one was the livestream. Lots of people left early because it wasn’t much fun for them. And if you can’t actually see the performance, and loads of people there couldn’t, that’s exactly it. And now even my colleague Ismene, who wasn’t there, “won't let words said against her go by without protest” – yet concedes her voice is weak and her music naff. Er, yes. Quite.
Oh dear, the writer tells it
You're making a lot of
Fisun Güner is perfectly