John
Fri, 29 May 1998 09:29:48 -0400
Hey all, this was on the on-line version of nme.com-
Wigan Haigh Hall
"We've been saving it all up for this moment right now," shouts
Richard Ashcroft, his voice splintering with emotion. "Eight
fucking years and here we are." Oh yes. Here they are. No-one could deny that
tonight,
The Verve are making their presence felt, all eight years crammed into one
significant
show. The Mayor Of Wigan has come out in support of them, announcing even he - and
he's 61 years old, you know - likes 'Urban Hymns'.
The boys in the button-down shirts and punch-up boots, the kind of kids Richard
Ashcroft probably spent a Wigan lifetime ducking blows from, they love The Verve,
too.
The few die-hard indie kids who remember a time when it was just them and a copy
of 'A
Storm In Heaven', they aren't so proud that they're going to miss their band's
day of
glory. From the BBC cameras filming the show with the urgency usually befitting
royal
weddings, to Nick McCabe's little daughter, sitting on her beaming grandad's
shoulders,
validation has been granted to The Verve. This is how it is now - they have
nothing to
prove, and accordingly, everything to lose.
No-one believes that they're hapless star-sailors floating peacefully through some
warped inner galaxy any more - you don't sell six million albums and remain
languishing on
the shelf marked 'Bloody Impossible Dreamers', that's for certain. Yet the
cautionary
tale of Oasis - disintegrating in a splurge of self-belief and half-digested fame
- must
cast a shadow over The Verve. Organising such an enormous gig is dangerous
enough, as
subtle an attempt at epoch-defining as tattooing 'Zeitgeist' on your head - but
the
danger multiplies when it's a hometown show. It just demands accusations of
hubris, an
open invitation for thunderbolts to streak down from the sky. There's a very thin
line
between triumphalist crowing and sharing the moment. This is undoubtedly an
audience
packed with personal associations - kids whose brothers were the year above
Richard at
school, who know someone who was Nick McCabe's dinner lady.
From a local paper perspective, it seems like a tribute, a thank you, handily
forgetting
that for all the good times, there have to be bad. That this is a time for
vindication as
much as generosity, for the success stories to rewrite the unhappy endings of the
past,
laying waste to all those who failed to believe as hard or fast enough. Most of 'A
Northern Soul' seemed bitter, disappointed: "I was walking to the train /This boy
won't
come back again" sang Ashcroft on 'Stormy Clouds', hardly a sentiment sending fond
glances to his hometown. These might be Northern Souls finding their way home,
but now
they're here, pumped full of fame, home might not be enough to hold them.
Despite largely ignoring or harassing JOHN MARTYN, The Verve's attempt at musical
instruction for the young, the audience here would do anything to share in this
moment of
victory. Bizarrely, that means watching BECK from the other side of a Sahara-sized
aesthetic gulf. The only dainty foot he puts wrong here is supporting The Verve -
it's not
quite right that this glossy US hipster should be in a field, for a start, and
every old
cultural stereotype is undermined when you realise it's the American on speaking
terms
with irony and the British contingent who are utterly serious. Yet from the
second he
appears in his tight leather trousers and hyacinth bob, he flips Wigan's wig,
informing the
crowd, "Y'all look like you're ready to be sexed-up," and generally being such a
showman, Barnum & Bailey would be dismantled their big top in shame.
It's all too easy to see Mr Hansen as some disposable art cherub; after all, he's
ever so
pretty, sending the audience cooing with delight like girlfriends with baby
pictures, and
he's been overexposed to the point you'd be forgiven for thinking he's been
churning out
band-clones off the coast of California. For all his ubiquity, the cultural
antibody he sent
flooding through pop's bloodstream, he still seems very far out tonight. It's not
just the
way he subverts those decrepit old festival codes - charming the sun out of an
overcast
sky, asking the crowd to move back because people are getting crushed, but more
importantly because, "This is the kinda jam y'all need some elbow space for."
Maybe it's because of the almost operatic trill of 'Loser', a song that sounds
vacuum-packed fresh despite being four years old, or the bleak and bruised
harmonica
blues of 'One Foot In the Grave', an autopsy performed on a still-living Dylan.
Maybe
it's the new song he insists is called (a tribute to quaint British idiom, this)
'Diamond
Bollocks', a diseased cha-cha-cha. Or maybe it's just the way his falsetto and
feather
fan dance send out signals that have even the butchest Gallagheralikes blushing
and
shivering. Tonight, everyone is Beck's special lady. And the strange thing is,
no-one even
thought he was their date.
The headliners offer a different kind of togetherness, an empathy that stretches
beyond a glance across a crowded room. What Beck doesn't realise is that as he
highkicks his way through 'Devil's Haircut', a huge gang of people are kicking
down the
perimeter fence. Bottles are thrown. One offender is pinioned to the ground by six
policemen. Security paranoia breaks out. No-one would do this for Beck. This is
The
Verve's constituency, and as Richard materialises on stage like a fury, arms
flapping,
mouth contorting in his magic incantation 'Come on!', it's easy to see why.
From the opening 'This Is Music', raw and raging, to Richard's gleeful trouncing
of TV's
swearing and smoking rules, this is a show of fierce defiance. It's soon clear
that any
bloated hubris has been quickly deflated - there's no tedious indulgence, no 37
minute
versions of 'Slide Away', nothing to make you feel that this is a vicious e
ndurance test as
punishment for all those copies of 'Gravity Grave' left languishing in chart
return shops
all those years ago. Richard might look as if he's ready for a fight, but this
audience
aren't the enemy - he's just checking they're onside, that they love this music
enough.
Unlike, oh, Oasis, say, there's still a gentleness at the heart of these songs, a
sense that
to belong you don't have to be like the band, just unlike the people that harm
them.
'Space And Time' admits as much, the words, "I just can't make it on my own"
hovering
over 33,000 people all too happy to offer a shoulder to cry on. There's no
mistaking
Richard for Everyman, though; rapt, one hand in the air like he's missing a
bible, he's
testifying up there, pulling the prophet trick of seeing something no-one else
can see,
yet encouraging belief. For all the undeniable anthems - the translucent purity
of 'The
Drugs Don't Work', the incipient hysteria of 'History' - the songs also take a
step
beyond. It's unsurprising that tonight focuses on 'Urban Hymns' - not only
because of
the Manics' like old-fans-new-fans divide, but because those songs need more
space to
unfold. Less specifically personal, they fit a vast audience - the oilslick surge
of
'Catching The Butterfly', the small epiphanies of 'Velvet Morning', the venomous
tang of
'The Rolling People'.
By now, 'Bittersweet Symphony' should be as pallidly commonplace as an Athena
postcard, chewed up by the world of radio and advertising, yet the moment those
iconic
strings pitch in, it's given a whole new charge. "This song has been stolen,"
says Richard
gravely beforehand. "This is a song for the people. This is a modern day blues
song." It's
this communication that saves The Verve - no longer lost on their own mysterious
planet,
nor yet beached on some exclusive desert island, they give fresh credibility to
the
messy idea of unity through music. Forget all the inevitable bleating about Spike
Island
and Maine Road, all those precedents creakingly wheeled out as validation, as
'classic'
perspective.
Thankfully, tonight never deliberately set out to grab at history - instead
concentrating
on taking another little piece of the hearts and memories of those singing along
with
'Bittersweet Symphony'. Before 'History', Richard declares: "It's about love. It's
about you lot making this one of the greatest days of my life. Come on!" As long
as The
Verve reach out like this, the people will keep on coming. No stormy clouds here.
Just
new horizons.
Victoria Segal
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