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Siouxsie & The Banshees Live Glasgow Barrowlands 5th July 2002 |
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From: The Scotsman UK newspaper 8th July 2002 REVIEW ROCK
& POP SIOUXSIE & THE BANSHEES by Fiona Shepherd THERE are not many occasions
outside of fancy dress parties and truth or dare games which merit the
crimping of hair and consumption of cider and blackcurrant, but the live
return of the imperious Siouxsie & The Banshees provided a safe
environment for old goths to wear their New Model Army T -shirts without
fear of reprisals. It could have been a trick
of the crepuscular light show but the original gothic punks did not look
any older than they did 15 years ago.
Not many 45 -year-olds could
carry off a bogbrush hairdo, but Siouxsie remains an iconic presence even
in middle age. The sound was dense and
unyielding with the band's trademark urgent, ominous guitars, Siouxsie's
blaring foghorn, not much in the way of tunes and a set list heavily
skewed towards those uncompromising pitch-dark dirges from the early 1980s
that made Joy Division sound cheery. There was to be no sniff of Hong Kong
Garden or Israel. The message from the Banshees was mixed. They have reformed ostensibly to promote a forthcoming compilation album, yet they refused to push the easy nostalgia buttons. At GBP 20 a ticket, can they afford to be so single-minded? |