
The Levellers,Nick Harper Live Review @ Royal Albert Hall (London)

Live Review
The Royal Albert Hall is an awe-inspiring place. Not for the faint-hearted, to stand on its stage demands presence and the ability to prove to a 6000+ audience that you command the right to be there. Tonight the mighty Hall played host to the Levellers, supported by acoustic guitarist Nick Harper.
Harper is an old mate of the Levellers, but was an odd choice of support, rather like putting Gordon Brown on the same bill as Russell Brand: as different as chalk 'n' cheese as you could hope to get. And it didn't work.
Harper has been around on the circuit for a good 15 years or more and this was probably his most prestigious venue to date. But, the solo figure armed with just his Lowden guitar, sadly cut a lonely image. This was an arena just too large for his folkish tunes and at times it appeared as if he didn't know why he was there.
Tonight saw none of the usual satirical banter, nor the often mesmerising dexterity of his guitar playing to lift proceedings. A polite audience response followed little played songs The Wanderer And His Shadow, Evo and Sleeper Cell, although the morosely sombre Real Life and the title track from his 2005 album Treasure Island demonstrated Harper's knack of juggling the thought-provoking with the jaunty.
Introducing his young daughter to accompany him for the last number, CSN&Y's classic Our House, he was reprising his own debut on the same stage with his father Roy some 35 years before. A sweet end to the set, but overall a performance that will have done little to garner Harper any new fans, and may well have left a few of those who are, disappointed.
In contrast, the night's headliners may well have added a good few more of the unsure to their fanbase. They opened this two-part acoustic/electric set with just vocalist Mark Chadwick and Jon Sevink on fiddle to play No Change, showing a confidence and ease with their majestic surroundings. They are joined by Simon Friend (and later added to with a string quartet) and gradually build up numbers on stage as other band members join them, pushing the feelgood ambience higher as they embark on a run through Julie, The Boatman and Together All The Way. Before The End, from their 20th anniversary album Letters From The Underground, gave a nod to how well their new material works alongside classics such as Beautiful Day and Carry Me which came in the second electric half of the night.
By this time the seated audience had risen to their feet and danced happily along to the likes of Exodus, Burn America Burn and Dirty Davey. Al-in-all, a 23-number show, with plenty of crowd pleasers, and no doubt they could have gone through a third half with another dozen equally as popular songs from their vast repertoire of the last two decades.
Of course it wouldn't have been a Levs night with the emergence of the didgeridoo for the encore. And its eerily atmospheric strains echoed around the Albert Hall on This Garden, Men-An-Tol and One Way, bringing the end to a night that delivered on all counts.
View all dates:
Gigs
- Wed 03rd Dec 2008
- Thu 04th Dec 2008
- Fri 05th Dec 2008
- Sat 06th Dec 2008
- Sun 07th Dec 2008
- Tue 09th Dec 2008
- Wed 10th Dec 2008
- Thu 11th Dec 2008
- Fri 12th Dec 2008
- Sat 13th Dec 2008
- Sun 14th Dec 2008
- Tue 16th Dec 2008
- Wed 17th Dec 2008
- Thu 18th Dec 2008
- Fri 23rd Jan 2009
- Fri 13th Mar 2009
- Nick HarperThe Musician (Leicester)Under £10!
- Nick HarperThe Musician (Leicester)
- Sat 04th Apr 2009
- Sun 12th Apr 2009
- Mon 13th Apr 2009
- Wed 22nd Apr 2009
- Thu 23rd Apr 2009
View all dates:
Gigs for Royal Albert Hall
- Wed 03rd Dec 2008 to Sun 7th Dec 2008
- Tue 09th Dec 2008
- Thu 11th Dec 2008
- Mon 15th Dec 2008
- Thu 18th Dec 2008
- Mon 22nd Dec 2008
- Sun 04th Jan 2009 to Sun 1st Feb 2009
- Thu 26th Feb 2009 to Sun 8th Mar 2009
- Sat 28th Mar 2009 to Wed 8th Apr 2009
- Tue 31st Mar 2009
- Fri 03rd Apr 2009 to Thu 4th Jun 2009
- Thu 09th Apr 2009
- Sat 11th Apr 2009
- Sun 12th Apr 2009 and Thu 21st May 2009
- Tue 14th Apr 2009 and Wed 15th Apr 2009
- Mon 04th May 2009
- Tue 05th May 2009
- Sat 16th May 2009 to Sun 31st May 2009
- Mon 18th May 2009
- Wed 27th May 2009
- Mon 01st Jun 2009
- Tue 30th Jun 2009
- Sat 04th Jul 2009
- Sat 12th Sep 2009
- Tue 13th Oct 2009
- Mon 26th Oct 2009
