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Richard Ashcroft Mixes Verve Favorites With New Material
In Solo Tour
Jan 22, 2001, 10:30 am PT
As Richard Ashcroft's lyrics "I just can't make it alone"
resonated through the sold-out St. Andrew's Hall in Detroit on Sunday
(Jan. 21), it was clear that he was doing just fine without his former
band, the Verve.
More than 900 fans, some of whom shouted song titles or "I love
you Richard," packed the smoke-filled club on the third night of
his first U.S. solo tour. Ashcroft's vocals were impeccable, leaving
most of the audience hushed during the 90-minute show. For the set opener,
"Brave New World" from his debut solo album, Alone with Everybody,
he tackled a gutsy vocal solo -- not an easy task for someone recovering
from cracked ribs. He sustained the injury after falling from the stage
at Birmingham Academy in England in December. (allstar, Dec. 14, 2000
The set list was equal parts the Verve and Ashcroft's solo material,
speckled with hits ("Bitter Sweet Symphony," "Lucky Man")
and B-sides ("So Sister," "[Could Be] A Country Thing").
Surprisingly, the closing number, a Napster-ready, acoustic rendition
of "Bitter Sweet Symphony," earned little response from the
audience. "The Drugs Don't Work" and "Lucky Man"
were the apparent crowd favorites.
Dubbed an acoustic tour, Ashcroft was joined by a saxophonist-flautist,
a drummer, and a keyboardist (his wife, Kate Radley) for "Space
and Time" and the remainder of the show. The saxophonist-flautist
offered an intimacy to songs like "On a Beach." Three triangle-shaped
curtains, on which a slide show was played, provided the stage setting.
Ashcroft's comments to the audience were few, but despite his stoic
reputation, his sense of humor came through. Inserting the word "booger"
into "On Your Own," he wrapped up the song by singing "I'm
gonna have to wipe my big red nose," before taking care of the
problem.
The English singer, who looked relaxed onstage and closed his eyes as
he sang, is playing makeup dates for the original tour that was postponed
in early November due to illness (Allstar, Nov. 2, 2000)
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