Monday, July 19, 2010

The Coral

Live at the Lowry Salford, Saturday 17th July 2010

Set list: More Than a Lover, Roving Jewel, Walking in the Winter, Jacqueline, In the Rain, Simon Diamond, Two Faces, Green Is the Colour, 1000 Years, Spanish Main / Who's Gonna Find Me, Pass It On, Butterfly House, Falling All Around You, She's Coming Around, Wildfire, Calendars and Clocks, Goodbye, Dreaming of You, North Parade.

After a time out of the spotlight and with a well-received new album to promote the Coral return to the live arena in the plush surroundings of the Lowry, not necessarily the typical venue for the band but with a more sedate sound this may be a newfound natural habitat.
Added to the many plaudits that band have received for their new album, tonight they can add the testimonial of Mancunian royalty Mani to that ever expanding list, who introduced the band and heralded ‘Butterfly House’ as the best since the his old band the Stone Roses’ eponymous debut.

Tonight that new album formed the basis of the set ‘More Than a Lover’, ‘Roving Jewel’ and ‘Walking in the Winter’ three new songs that opened the set. These new songs were appreciated by the audience with some restraint in the comfortable seats, it was when songs form the band’s back catalogue were rolled out that the trouble started for the security guards tonight. A number of fans were ushered to sit down when ‘Jacqueline’ and ‘In the Rain’ were played, then the venue’s no standing, no moving to front policy was thrown asunder when ‘Spanish Main / Who's Gonna Find Me’ was rolled out amongst the equally-well received recent singles ‘1000 Years’ and ‘Butterfly House’.

A number of fans took to the stage and prompted lead-singer James Skelly to mouth an unambiguous message to a stage invader , which left him in no doubt as to what he wanted him to do. Skelly commented that he was possibly the politest invader he had ever encountered.

With the rockier numbers the band upped the volume a little louder when encoring ‘Dreaming of You’ and album closer ‘North Parade’ this saw the front of the stage almost submerged with diehards.

The thing that strikes you about tonight’s performance is that the new and older material sits well together and that the Greatest Hits collection that came out a couple of years ago can now be seen as a point in time, as opposed to a full stop in the career of the band.

Their live credentials have never been in question but the new album highlights with the omissions from the set list tonight that the band has an impressively expanding back catalogue. On tonight’s evidence, and that of the new album, the band goes from strength to strength.

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