Home All posts Ladyhawke Live Review – The Art School Glasgow 9 February 2017

Ladyhawke Live Review – The Art School Glasgow 9 February 2017

by Rhiannon Law
Ladyhawke on stage at the Art School Glasgow on 9 February 2017

Ladyhawke gives Glasgow a huge dose of her addictive electro-pop and leaves it hooked on her hooks.

Ladyhawke – aka New Zealand songstress Pip Brown – danced confidently into synth-pop territory with third album Wild Things, which was released last year. The music was exhilarating, uplifting and reflected her mood as she confessed at the time of release, saying “I feel good for the first time in 10 years. I have a clear mind! I have a wife. I feel stable. That is what I’m celebrating.” Her next task would be to take the overlapping layers of synths and vocals in the new material and adapt them to a live show.

The summer pop of opener The River, from Wild Things, is in complete contrast to the freezing night outside but succeeds in getting the crowd warmed up nicely before Brown picks up her guitar for the rockier Back Of The Van and Dusk Till Dawn from 2008’s eponymous debut album. They are all equally dance-inducing, but you can clearly hear the evolution of her sound into poppier territory. I find it a relief that she obviously isn’t trying to make her pop songs more indie or vice versa – she’s faithful to both albums.

The whirling Professional Suicide is followed by the delicious bubblegum pop of Golden Girl. At this point, my only complaint is that the sound of some of the samples is drowning out her impressive live vocals.

Blue Eyes from 2012’s brooding Anxiety – the only track from her second album that gets played here – is suitably rocked up, but still has electro sparkle. The darker synth layers and icy vocals of the recording of Sweet Fascination are perfectly replicated for a live show, as is the attitude-filled- and Gwen Stefani reminiscent – Money To Burn and the soaring Wild Things.

Brown may not be the most talkative – she does just let it roll – but the energy is buzzing, the crowd are moving and each song announced is cheered. For the record, my favourites are the pounding Magic and feisty Manipulating Woman – both from her debut album, which I’m now keen to revisit. However, this performance has cemented my opinion that Wild Things is a pop album that also demands to be enjoyed again and again.

The gig finishes with mass dancing to the joyful A Love Song and a loud sing-along to the thunderous My Delirium. In the end, it is her ability to write these ridiculously catchy songs that ensure the talons of Ladyhawke dig into your brain and stay there long after you’ve left one of her gigs.

This article was written for Backseat Mafia.

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