Making you feel like there's going to be a war...
Starsailor @ Rock City, Tuesday 15th November 2005
I'm not quite sure what it is, but there is something fundamentally dislikeable about Starsailor. Let's for a moment compare them with their near contemporaries, Coldplay. Whatever you think of their music, most people will not have a bad word to say about the band. Chris Martin sounds like a nice chap. He seems to be a bit of a worrier, and you get the impression although he's got an Oscar winning actress as his wife, that he has sold millions of records and has millions of pounds in the bank, you could probably go up to him in the pub and chat to him. I don't get that impression with James Walsh. He has a fantastic voice, sure, but he seems like a bit of a knob. He seems to have an inflated sense of his own importance.
The last time I saw Starsailor was at Glastonbury in 2003. The band were plugging their second album, and they had a slot in the late afternoon. They were terrible. They seemed to completely misjudge what the crowd wanted, and at one point they wheeled Donovan onto the stage as a "Glastonbury Legend" and wasted 15 minutes of their set with some terribly misguided duet with the hoary old folkie. I imagined that would probably be that, and that I would not see or hear from them again.
Starsailor emerged as one of the bands that people had heard about before they had actually released a single thing; they were one of those bands that the music magazines thought were going to be massive. I saw them at Rock City a little after their debut album had come out, and the place was absolutely rammed (mainly with students, as I recall) and the band themselves were fantastic. They had the songs (especially the majestic "Good Souls"), and in Walsh's voice, they seemed to have something a little bit different from the rest of the pack. They had a few hit singles around this time ('Lullaby', 'Alcoholic', 'Poor Misguided Fool'), and everything seemed to be going pretty well. And then the second album came out, along with word that Walsh's head had disappeared up his own arse. "A Rush of Blood to the Head" it clearly was not.
I thought it was quite revealing that they only played two songs from this album in their set tonight... showing what the band themselves think of the material. "Silence is Easy" is a great song, and closed the set... but the rest? Hmmm.
Since that Glastonbury appearance, Starsailor have acquired an additional guitarist to beef up their sound and have released a new album. As I hadn't exactly rushed out to the shops to buy it, Lord B was good enough to lend me his copy of "On the Outside" a few weeks ago. It's fantastic - it really is. I have to admit that I was really very pleasantly surprised. They played quite a bit of it tonight, of course, and it sounded good. Actually, I think "In The Crossfire" was the best song that they played all evening, and one of the best released this year.
So are Starsailor on the way back then? Perhaps. Rock City wasn't sold out, so they clearly have some way still to go, and James Walsh still behaved like a bit of a tit, albeit a bit less of a tit than he was on the Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury... but they still have the material, and he does have a really excellent voice. Bob Dylan was playing in Nottingham tonight, so we were treated to a snippet of "Like A Rolling Stone" -- I can guarantee you that the old charlatan himself has never sung that song more sweetly than Walsh did this evening.
The verdict? Worth seeing. They'll never be Coldplay, but I don't think the world really needs another Coldplay, does it?
6.5 / 10.
8 Comments:
At 12:31 am, Erika said…
Quote: "...I don't think the world really needs another Coldplay, does it?"
Um.
Er.
The world didn't need ONE...
No, that's too easy.
Sigh.
(hee hee)
At 12:43 am, HistoryGeek said…
Glad to hear it was at least a pleasant evening.
And, yes, Ka, indeed...
At 1:59 am, Anonymous said…
So, what do you think of the what another of your favourites, a certain Justin Hawkins thinks abt Chris Martin?
..i love this bit
In the Kerrang! interview, he ranted on: “Writing ‘Fair Trade’ on his hand. If you’re concerned about Fair Trade, tattoo it on your skin, don’t just fucking write it on your hand in felt tip
incidentally, you heard the new single yet?
Des
At 12:00 pm, Teresa Bowman said…
I have to say that Starsailor irritate me. Matey-bloke has a stupid whiney voice* and their tunes never go anywhere.
Oh ... and:
we were treated to a snippet of "Like A Rolling Stone" -- I can guarantee you that the old charlatan himself has never sung that song more sweetly than Walsh did this evening
... really isn't saying much.
*Mind you, I seem to recall that you also like James Blunt, so I guess you must like whiney voices. Still, there's no accounting for taste.
At 12:03 pm, swisslet said…
I must have told you my "going to see Bob Dylan" story? One of the worst concerts I have ever been to - I actually fell asleep. Awful.
As for whiny voices.... hmm. I do consider Morrissey to be one of the greatest vocalists ever, so perhaps you have a point.
ST
At 12:03 pm, Teresa Bowman said…
I've just realised how stroppy my last comment must sound. I'm sorry - it wasn't intended to be!
It's our turn for the Bluetones tonight, by the way (Bristol C*rl*ng Academy). Looking forward to that.
At 12:05 pm, Teresa Bowman said…
I wouldn't say Morrissey had a whiney voice. Moany, yes. Whiney, no. But there's nothing wrong with the odd moan occasionally. ;)
We appear to be typing and posting our comments at exactly the same time, so I'll stop now before this turns into an AIM-style conversation about the differences between "whiney" and "moany" ...
At 6:46 pm, Erika said…
Michael Stipe is whiney in the very best way possible! Oh! Oh!
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