| Rough Trade had hired what is
debatably London's most atmospheric and beautiful venue, the Union Chapel,
for five females of mixed musical tastes. Eileen Rose is a Rough Trade
Records signing but we couldn't work out why Beth Orton or Anjali (or the
other two acts) were there.
That said, they were there and the
audience was happy. The majority of whispering - and drunken yelling -
from the pews was about Beth Orton, by far the most famous of the acts
here this evening. Drunk sixth formers were everywhere, spilling all
manner of alcoholic fluids onto the chapel's woodwork, nattering through
sets and generally behaving like they were in The Garage down the road
rather than a religious venue. One presumes that the building is only
deemed a church when a priest and congregation is present; it was
difficult to feel religious when Anjali opened the evening's entertainment
for her first-ever gig.
Her eponymously titled debut album,
out now on Wiiija Records, is a luxurious and eclectic mix of middle
eastern and western influences which, combined, showcase her talents as a
singer, songwriter, DJ and producer. Live, with a backing band, she
created a very similar soundscape, with Arabian Queen sounding
particularly gorgeous with the added height of the chapel's vaulted
ceiling. Just as we were getting into the swing of things - as the
audience started to arrive - her extra-short set finished. She must have
been on for a mere twenty minutes - but for a debut performance this
sounded professional to the last note and suggested greater things to come
from Anjali.
Eileen Rose is much more an
American country singer and shares more musically with Tammy Wynette than
she does with the middle east, but her performance was electric, with an
excellent and well drilled band who seemed to respond to her every wish or
whim. I'd unfortunately never heard of her until then, so immediately
ventured to the CD stall at the back of the chapel and bought her album.
Much of her warm, positive vibe comes across on the album 'Shine Like
It Does' as well, but she was well worth the ticket price on her own.
Beth Orton, all gangly and boyish
with her Janet Street Porteresque accent in between songs, is no great
shakes when she starts nattering to her audience. Some performers are
great at audience interaction, but on the evidence of this and other gigs
of hers I've seen, Orton is not one of them. When she starts singing and
playing, however, her voice and guitar work famously well, her songs
dangling over the edge of melancholia and her stage presence, especially
in this venue, a force of its own. With several albums of material to
choose from, the set was a pleasing mix of old and new, but after four
support acts it suffered from the audience's exhaustion as well as its
nature. Eileen Rose, blowing out with a belter of a country tune, might
have kept the kiddies awake longer. |