Blancmange and Heaven 17
Windsor Suite, King Georges Hall,
Blackburn
25 October 2014
The evening didn’t start well. After noting on the Heaven 17 website that
doors opened at 7:30pm, my mate arranged to pick me up from home at 7 to make
the 20 minute journey to Blackburn. He
arrived 20 minutes late, but given that the doors would only have been open ten
minutes when we got there, there was no issue.
After taking an extra 5 minutes to navigate the visitor
unfriendly one-way system, we arrived at King Georges Hall to find that the
doors had actually opened at 7pm and Blancmange had been on stage since 7:30. Such is life.
It was a sort of homecoming for Neil Arthur of Blancmange
(he comes from neighbouring Darwen) and buoyed by the fact that his beloved
Blackburn Rovers had secured a second win on the trot away at Nottingham
Forest, he was on his usual comical but entertaining form. In November of last year, Blancmange played
at Darwen Library Theatre in front of 180 people, tonight as part of the Tour
Of Synthetic Delights with Heaven 17 it was a capacity 750 crowd.
Still without the long suffering Stephen Luscombe, Arthur is
the consummate professional often cracking jokes with the audience his voice is
startlingly still as characteristic as it was thirty-something years ago. With the bulk of the show coming from the
first two (and most commercially popular) albums in Happy Families and Mange
Tout it was nothing but pleasure after pleasure for the hordes of bouncing bodies
in front of him.
The obvious hits were there and the Happy Families material
had the slight twists and turns that were incorporated into the recent Happy
Families Too remake, and Living On The Ceiling prompted a bizarre audience sing-along
of the instrumental hook line much to the delight of Neil.
There was a downside to the sound though. It was bass heavy and the characteristic bass
sounds of Blancmange didn’t help as there was bass feedback which detracted
from the often clinical sound of the group.
The sound desk really needed to sort it out much earlier than the last
three tracks of the Heaven 17 set.
Closing with Waves, Living On The Ceiling, Feel Me (containing
lyrics from Grace Jones’ Pull Up To The Bumper and M’s Pop Musik) and the
amazing Blind Vision you can’t help thinking that Blancmange are on somewhat of
a roll. Not only are they pleasing the
folks that were around the first time, but there were many attendees barely in
the 20s hopping and singing along to the classics.
It’s almost four years since they returned to the live
circuit with new material in Blanc Burn and on tonight’s showing they’ll be
around for quite some time yet.
Seeing Heaven 17 live was a first for me. Now down to just two members in Martyn Ware
and Glenn Gregory, the hybrid Sheffield sound of The Human League meets Cabaret
Voltaire was instantly recognisable in the 80s.
They too pulled most of their set from their first two
albums Penthouse And Pavement and The Luxury Gap, but it was with Circus Of
Death (the b-side of The Human League’s Being Boiled written when Ware was part
of the group) that their set began. An
interesting choice perhaps but a crowd-pleaser nonetheless.
Two new tracks, Illumination and Pray also featured in the
set. Gregory explained that they had
hoped to sell the cd containing them on tour but had been let down on supply
and would now sell via their website because “no fucker else will sell it. I’m pissed off with the music industry”.
For me Gregory always had a superb voice. His deep tones were instantly recognisable
and they really haven’t changed that much.
Through Crushed By The Wheels Of Industry and Geisha Boys And Temple
Girls it was superb and he, like Arthur was a crowd pleaser. Ware, tucked behind his synth in a suit and
tie also displayed a great sense of humour and often commented about the
stifling heat of the venue – “it’s getting cold in here, it’s dropped 2 degrees
below boiling point now” as he wiped sweat from his brow.
I often felt, and still do to this day that Heaven 17 missed
a trick with Let Me Go. After the enormous
success of Temptation (kept off the top spot by the likes of Bowie, Duran Duran
and Spandau Ballet) they should really have given it a re-release. It’s one of their finest and one which was
greeted with a huge cheer when it was announced. Temptation was, obviously a high-point too,
undoubtedly a classic pop song if ever there was one.
With a version of You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling (it
appeared on the Human League’s Reproduction album) Gregory almost missed his
cue to sing as he bolted down the side stairs and across the stage.
Ending over eighty minutes of music with the aptly included
Being Boiled, Heaven 17 departed to rapturous applause. Like Blancmange, Ware and Gregory are a
superbly entertaining live act.
The paring of these two groups as a live package is sheer
genius and anyone with an inkling of pop affection should make sure they attend
sharpish.
Links
Blancmange website
Blancmange on Twitter
Heaven 17 website
Heaven 17 on Twitter
Blancmange live review
Blancmange on hiapop
Links
Blancmange website
Blancmange on Twitter
Heaven 17 website
Heaven 17 on Twitter
Blancmange live review
Blancmange on hiapop
Published on Louder Than War - here
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