Live Review: Whitley, Esther Holt, Post Paint

22 July 2013 | 2:14 pm | Jessie Hunt

He also managed to reverse the balance of power, by heckling the fuck out of his audience – his onstage banter was pretty centred around making fun of people talking loudly during songs.

After several years of (apparently) living underground, Whitley has returned to stages across the country, touring his new record, Even The Stars Are A Mess.

Post Paint kicked off the show with beautiful, complex folk rock. Their tracks are artful and intricate, but there is also a kind of heaviness here; there seems to be much going on beneath the surface. The delicate violin lines are carefully arranged to offset the gothic strains of Bligh Twyford-Moore's deep vocals. Cultural Capital, a track written about the band's formative years in the small-city music scene of Newcastle, does this perfectly – fusing the light and heat of Ailsa Fulcher's violin with the poignancy of Twyford-Moore's vocals. The band's sound seems mature beyond their years; there is little clumsiness, little angst. Instead, there is a focus on making music that is art: it seeks out light within darkness.

There's a kind of really vibrant roots/blues mood present in Esther Holt's tracks. With strong percussive elements and careful touches of banjo, Holt's music is gorgeous; it is furnished with her impossibly delicate, deep vocals. Her track Rock Me Through The Night was particularly remarkable; intricate, delicate, with dark, gothic elements.

Whitley took to the stage under dim lighting; without fanfare, without ado, he launched into one of the distinctive, delicate tracks off his latest album, Even The Stars Are A Mess. This album is Whitley's first offering since he went underground several years ago, but there seems to be a consistent thread running from his newest and oldest work. Whitley tenses out the space between each musical line; each track seems eloquent, intricate, painstaking. He also managed to reverse the balance of power, by heckling the fuck out of his audience – his onstage banter was pretty centred around making fun of people talking loudly during songs. Tracks like My Heart is Not A Machine and More Than Life earned rapturous responses from the crowd; in classic Whitley tradition, these songs make an art out of misery. They have a kind of thriving, melancholic emotionality; it is this distinctive trait that links Whitley's pre-underground days with his latest work.

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