PJ HARVEY
London
Brixton Academy 30th September 2001
PJ HARVEY/ GIANT SAND
London
Shepherds Bush Empire 12th February 2001
With
tickets for these three shows changing hands outside the venue for up
to £70, clearly PJ Harvey's latest album ' Stories from the City,
Stories from the Sea', has increased her popularity to such an extent
that three relatively large gigs in London don't even come close to
meeting the demand for tickets.
On all three nights the semi-legendary Giant Sand have the unenviable
task of opening the show and playing to Harvey devotees. They may be
her favourite band (allegedly) but the audience is polite rather than
reverential. It's ironic that after nearly 20 years on the go, Giant
Sand are probably better known for the alterego of its rhythm section -
in case you didn't realise, Joey Burns and John Convertino are better
known as Calexico. (though there is a rumour that they can't play the
gig and they've got in two guys from Grandaddy instead- unfortunately
I'm too far away to confirm this!) Having said that, Giant Sand was
always dominated by its main songwriter Howe Gelb and he's quite the
showman tonight- flicking between guitar and piano with wild abandon.
Some gems from their back catalogue - a lot of them collected on the
sublime 'Selections circa 1990-2000' album- show why they are the
godfathers of alt.country, but ultimately they some of us impressed but
most of us puzzled. Still these shows have one some way to raising
their profile in this country.
The night belongs to Polly and her band though, and she makes a grand
entrance. It looks to us from our distant vantage point that she's
wearing nothing but knee-high boots! Closer inspection reveals that she
has actually got herself a very figure-hugging pale sequined dress. The
band launch into 'Big Exit' (the first song on the recent album) and
there's no stopping them. Quite simply this was one of the most PJ
Harvey performances I've seen. Quite a lot of material from 'Stories..'
gets an airing - the rockier ones like 'The Whores Hustle' and 'This is
Love' give the band a chance to shine - although 'You Said Something',
'This Mess We're In' (without Thom Yorke this time) and 'Good Fortune'
probably show her Polly's voice at it's best.
With a strong back catalogue it's cool to see that she hasn't neglected
her old material. Surprisingly the singles from the electronica
influenced 'Is This Desire' aren't played, but the countryish
'Angeline' and the psychotic 'The Sky Lit Up' are. 'Cmon Billy' and
'Dry' also make an appearance and the mighty encores include a
fantastic solo version 'Rid of Me' (like the demo vesion all those
years ago) and the classic 'Sheela-na-Gig'.
Even this early in the year, I doubt I'll see a better show this year.