Deacon Blue @ Corner Hotel
The Music 24thNovember 2019
Deacon Blue, Simon Shapiro @ Corner Hotel
24 November 2019 | Andy Hazel
"The venue feels like it’s full of competition winners."
Standing in the winding queue that snakes away from the venue’s door, an
Australian accent is rare. Scottish brogues dominate tonight, as a band barely
known in Australia but who have sold over six million albums back in the UK play
the first of two Melbourne shows. “Australians don’t know Deacon Blue,” laughs
one man as we make our way in. That’s not entirely true, but we certainly don’t
know them like a middle-aged Glaswegian.
Singer-songwriter, and until recently bassist with 1927, Simon Shapiro makes the
most of his support slot. Donning a harmonica and an acoustic guitar, his set is
a mix of self-penned material and covers of 1980s hits delivered in a way that
would be far more appropriate were he trying to be heard over a full-throttle
rock band. If you ever thought Under The Milky Way, That’s When I Think Of You
or Who’s That Girl? would be improved by being sung aggressively by a busker
desperate for your attention or an X Factor contestant fearing elimination,
Shapiro is your guy. Though a small but vocal fanbase will disagree, his
forceful vocal style and barely contained passion seems out of place for those
songs, though it does work well for his own. Scream and the closing Someday Son,
which seem suited to his one-man set-up and make the most of his dynamic range,
are standouts.
“To come all this way and play such a small venue, they’re not doing it for the
money,” says one fan wearing a Deacon Blue T-shirt he proudly tells me was
purchased in 1989. “I can not believe they’re playing in a tiny place like
this,” he continues as we wait for the band to arrive. “Last time I saw them was
at the fucking Hammersmith Apollo.”
As the band arrives, the venue feels like it’s full of competition winners –
people who can’t believe they’re seeing the band at all, let alone in Melbourne
in 2019. Opening with Circus Lights the six-piece instantly gel with a
proficiency that can only be won from a cumulative century of performing.
Keyboardist James Prime and drummer Douglas Vipond fill the back of the stage,
while at the front stands guitarist Gregor Philip, bassist Lewis Gordon and the
couple who form the nucleus of the band, vocalist Lorraine McIntosh and singer
and writer of most of the songs we’ll hear tonight, Ricky Ross.
As the band ease into the set, it becomes clear it’s hard for them to fail. The
passion for the music and the band’s faultless renditions of the songs we want
to hear combine to give the entire evening the quality of a well-aged Scotch.
The crowd recognise each song, the lesser known but much loved (Raintown, This
Is A Love Song) as much as the euphoric UK hits (Wages Day, Chocolate Girl)
which see the crowd erupt into a forest of arms and phones. Chocolate Girl gets
a deviation into Carole King’s You’ve Got A Friend which lets Ross give us the
story of what happened to the song’s protagonist.
Ross strides over the foldback speakers with increasing regularity, to touch the
outstretched hands of the crowd. References to the venue and Australia are woven
into the set with consummate professionalism. For a show so polished and a crowd
so keen to hear the familiar, it seems like there may be little chance for
surprise, but then there is the voice of Lorraine McIntosh. Ross’ wife and
co-founder of the band twists and vamps against the side of the stage for much
of the night, until she takes its metaphorical centre. Love And Regret, becomes
a showstopper with the band quieting and her voice taking on a keening richness
similar to that of Mary Margaret O’Hara – a perfect counterpoint to Ross’s reedy
lilt. New single, the anthemic Waterboys-esque City Of Love doesn’t sound out of
place amid the set. Nor does Your Town, the band’s foray into early '90s dance,
which makes the most of a sound mix that favours Ross’ voice at the expense of
drums and keyboards.
As the band play the opening of Real Gone Kid, a hit in Australia, the thrill of
recognition is so cacophonous that it almost drowns out the band. Throughout the
room, fans are jumping, dancing, singing and filming, often simultaneously.
Subsequent songs Dignity and Fergus Sings The Blues also get huge responses. As
we haul Deacon Blue back for an encore, they elect to close with a country-ish
cover of Always On My Mind in which each member takes a turn singing the song’s
title, a sweet and low-key end to a barnstorming night of Celtic rock.