Review: The Jesus and Mary Chain, Riverside, Newcastle
It was one of five songs from the East Kilbride's shoegazers' new album Damage and Joy to be given an airing at this sold-out first night of their UK tour.
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Hide AdThe others were Amputation, Song For A Secret, War On Peace and All Things Pass, a revised and slightly-retitled version of their 2008 single All Things Must Pass.
All five fitted nicely into their 19-song set, being much of a piece with the Scots’ back catalogue despite the 19-year gap between the new LP and its predecessor, 1998’s Munki.
The loudest cheers of the night, however, were reserved for classics such as April Skies, their biggest hit, which reached No 8 in 1987, and 1992’s Reverence, their only other top 10 single.
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Hide AdThe four tracks they played from Psychocandy – Just Like Honey, Taste of Cindy, The Living End and You Trip Me Up – during their five-song encore were given an especially warm welcome.
It wasn’t until then that their 1985 debut album got a look-in, although 1986 EP title track Some Candy Talking, included on later versions of the LP, did feature earlier on.
This was the first night of a 12-date British tour to plug Damage and Joy, so that might explain some teething troubles they appeared to be experiencing with their sound early on.
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Hide AdThey left Jim Reid’s vocals sounding muffled and the guitar-playing of his brother William - sporting the best Sideshow Bob hairstyle seen in the city since the departure of Newcastle United defender Fabricio Coloccini last year - overshadowed by Brian Young’s drums.
But they were largely ironed out within the first half-hour of a fine hour-and-a-half set, their first here since a 2015 show at the O2 Academy for the 30th anniversary of Psychocandy.