Gig review: Stereophonics, Usher Hall, Edinburgh
The Stereophonics
Usher Hall, Edinburgh
Rating: ***
It’s an occurrence which hasn’t necessarily had any effect on Welsh rockers the Stereophonics, given that their albums have sold in great numbers ever since they broke through in 1997, but they’ve still enjoyed a healthy dose of revitalising lately.
Earlier this year their ninth album Keep the Village Alive became their first to hit number one in the UK since 2007, and this latest tour date showcased a live act in rude health.
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Hide AdAs ever they proved to be one of those groups who know how to give their public what they want, and it’s a very narrow-ranging experience. Kelly Jones’ lyricism has never progressed far beyond the post-Oasis vogue for saying nothing but saying it like you mean it, and the dreamily absent-minded Have a Nice Day, the sulky Mr Writer and the earthy nonsense of The Bartender and the Thief (complete with an atypically limp burst of Motorhead’s Ace of Spades) demonstrated a trend which continues into amiable new tracks like Sunny and Mr and Mrs Smith.
In a heaving, strobe-flared concert hall, though, the easy trick of turning the volume up on a fistful of infectious pop choruses is always an open goal, and the quartet’s finest moments – A Thousand Trees, Local Boy in the Photograph, Dakota – were deservedly received in feverish style.
There was a diversion into gruff blues with Been Caught Stealing and solo acoustica from Jones (who filmed the audience wishing “happy birthday” to his friend, the Fife actor Dougray Scott) with Liberty and Traffic, but they served largely as breath-catchers before the onslaught continued.
Seen 28.11.15