Spiritualized
play Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space for Don't Look Back.
Every Christmas I tell myself I'm going to get to a Christmas Carol concert,
and every year I forget. This year I went, inadvertently, and it's made my
Christmas already.
Ladies and Gentlemen... is being re-released with the studio layers separated
out and sequenced for fans to dig into, and the Presley estate-approved version
of the title track (with interpolations of 'Can't Help Falling In Love With
You') restored. But live the layers are all present: a string section followed
out by a brass section, a choir, a percussionist replete with glistening brass
kettle drums, then by Spiritualized themselves, and finally Jason Spaceman
taking a seat, a guitar, and resting his foot on a pedal.
No intros. A hush descends, a clip of the processed voice that introduces the
record, and everything starts to unfold. The Don't Look Back concerts can hoover
up great bands and put them into an LP-shaped box to meet the demands for
familiarity that middle-aged indie fans require from their gigs, but here the
faithfulness to the album is tempered by the absolute power and grandeur of it.
The LP is clearly exactly as it's meant to be, and here it's reproduced with
such power, craft and collective intensity as to sound born anew and borne
aloft. Everything crackles and burns or pulses or hums, discordance piled on
harmony, a perfect midpoint between Phil Spector, Steve Reich, Brian Wilson and
Suicide. Lazy references to bands as midpoints of venns of other bands count
here, as Jason is in love with those bands, and has set out to evoke them
throughout his career - but by dint of his confidence and ability he's never
buried by them.
Come Together is utterly stunning and powerful, with not a single part of the
orchestra wasted, but it’s surpassed by I Think I'm In Love, which builds in
diaphanous, towering layers from hymn to prayer to sermon.It is a record about retreat from heartache
into love for opiates, but this doesn't sound like retreat; it sounds as
thrilling as escape. The switch from buckling, intense, jazz-psych freakouts (although
always deliberate and plotted) to blissed-out nursery rhymes carries on, and
the sheer intensity of it all doesn't let you disengage for a second. Later, a
battery of strobes join in to try and take the audience away through a total
sensual assault, and it cracks right through.
After Cop Shoot Cop's loping, jaw-grinding intensity ebbs away, Jason thanks
the crowd, claps the band and orchestra, and leaves, but is soon back out for a
non-album treat – finally Silent Night is given the full dope-bliss
Spiritualized treatment. Agog with happiness and Christmas cheer, I stumble out
of the Barbican, drunk on something better than mulled wine.
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