thu 02/05/2024

The Irrepressibles, Gabby Young & Other Animals, Barbican | reviews, news & interviews

The Irrepressibles, Gabby Young & Other Animals, Barbican

The Irrepressibles, Gabby Young & Other Animals, Barbican

An enchanting night of cabaret and theatrical chamber-pop

A midwinter night’s dream at the Barbican. Those who like their pop music performed by chaps with jeans, preferably gazing at their shoes, and are attached to certain ideas of authenticity would have run screaming for the exit. The Irrepressibles were pop as icy spectacle, as dizzying melodrama, while Gabby Young & Other Animals were raiding the musical dressing-up box and emerging with bits of French chanson, German cabaret and slinky tangos, and having a ball doing it.

Gabby Young’s band created their own party atmosphere and invited the audience along. Their brand of recession chic included accordion, double bass and a nine-piece brass section, who were at times in the Balkans and at others in New Orleans. Their stand-out numbers had pop’s ability to entrance, in Noël Coward’s sense of, “Strange how potent cheap music is.”

There were numerous sing-along tunes that seemed to have existential depth, like “Whose House” – which house are we in, after all? The house of the Lord? A mad house, perhaps? And while we are on the subject, who the hell are we anyway? Another memorable tune, and the title track of the new album We’re All in This Together, seemed to be a splendid barb aimed at one of David Cameron’s more fatuous statements. Yes, of course we are, unless you happen to be the recipient of part of the £7 billion bank bonuses floating around. Even if the song wasn’t inspired by Cameron, it has now become a piece of satire, anyway.

gabby_youngThings were never going to get boring, but just in case, half a dozen ballet dancers emerged into the audience like wonderful butterflies at a picnic towards the end of the set. Gabby Young (pictured right in action at the Barbican by Gem Hall) isn’t someone who believes in minimalism. She calls it all circus-swing and I’d love to see her at a more relaxed venue having a real party.

Fellow maximalist Jamie McDermott and his Irrepressibles were a different stripe of chamber-pop theatrics. The first thing you saw in the darkness of the set was a disco ball just picking up the odd light, and this was a ghostly after-image of disco, an interstellar negative of the Scissor Sisters. Someone should really throw a lot of money at Jamie just to see what happens. If onlt there were prfligate companies like by MainMan, Bowie’s management in the Seventies.

My friend Dominik Scherrer, of my favourite Swiss band Taxi Val Mentek (admittedly, there’s not a lot of competition), also purveyors of theatrical rock, saw the show and decided that The Irrepressibles would be inevitably huge, and Jamie was the male version of Kate Bush. I have some doubts, despite moments of sheer beauty and undeniably thrilling aesthetics. The show is fabulously camp, and it did occur to me that maybe I just wasn’t gay enough to appreciate it totally. Then I recalled I had been one of the first to totally champion Anthony and the Johnsons. I think while Anthony, whose voice is not dissimilar to Jamie’s, draws people in because of his obvious vulnerability, there is something too inaccessible for me about Jamie.

Everything is choreographed minutely, and actually this is rather impressive to begin with. Each musician – and he has a wonderful array including a string section and a clarinettist who looks like Pan – has their moves worked out. Seeing these musos swaying like sea anemones is rather like stumbling into some underwater kingdom, ruled over by Jamie, with his suit and glittering crown.

The words, when you could make snatches of them out, were about nuclear skies, vanity and insecurity. “Silence is sexy” was one of the few comments he addressed to the crowd. He also compared the Barbican Hall to a spaceship.

The strings were sometimes Nymanesque, with their insistent arpeggios that occasionally spun skywards into some kind of transcendence. There was a playful and sharp intelligence about the whole thing. Only in the last couple of numbers could you really hear Jamie and his words: then I was his. But personally - and I was in a minority, as the audience adored it - I found it all a bit too rich. A musical equivalent of a night overdoing the absinthe with Algernon Swinburne: hallucinogenic, brilliant and probably debauched, but I had a throbbing headache afterwards.

Watch The Irrepressibles play at Queen Elizabeth Hall

Share this article

Comments

this is not the same gig that I saw. The Irrepressibles - self indulgent, tedious and irrelevant. The choreography if thats what you call it was repetitive and dull. Every song sounded exactly the same other than 'In the Shirt' which in any case sounds like an out take from an Anthony and The Johnsons album. Jamie McDermott - no extravagant gear sadly - dressed in a slightly snug washable Marks and Sparks suit. I know coause I bought one for a mates wedding a few years ago. Gabby Young on the other hand EXTRABULOUS. She wiped the floor with one hit wonders the Irreparables.

Not seen the Irrepressibles but I know that Gabby Young does a fabulous gig. The album is pretty dam good too, was listening to again last night as it happens.

The Irrepressibles were in every sense magnificent and inspired! A Roxy Music for now, they should be huge! Unique and truly originaly they stand head and shoulders above the dull retro jeans and tshirts rock and third rate pop of now! As for Gabby Young, well the word dreadfull and appaling would be kind, why audiences applaud such utter bland artless tripe is a mystery!

Both bands were awesome. I've seen Gabby Young and Other Animals perform many times- they are consistently brilliant and this was one of the best gigs they have ever done and it blew me away. I wasn't sure if The Irrepressibles would be my type of music after hearing them on You Tube but I'm glad I saw them live as I thought they were fantastic. The music mixed with the choreography was incredibly atmospheric and powerful. An amazing night all round.

If you think that Gabby's performance was "artless trite" and "dreadful and appalling" then you'd obviously left the hall when she was hitting all those high notes, then swinging down to hit all those low ones and then up again ... Her vocal range, vulnerability/prowess, dynamics and persona/stage presence are all great...GYAOA are fan-flippin'-tastic!

Add comment

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