|
Robbie launched
his new album Intensive Care last night with a spectacular
performance at the Velodrom in Berlin. Despite suffering
from a broken arm which occurred while playing football
on Friday, Robbie had the 8000 crowd in a frenzy from the
moment he was lifted on stage amid huge jets of smoke. The
injury never looked like holding him back as he jumped and
bounced and filled the stage throughout the 90 minute show.
He performed eight tracks from the new album and each one
was received with huge excitement. Robbie admitted to being
nervous about trying out the new material for the first
time, and thanked the audience for making it easy for him.
The evening was made extra special with the addition of
an orchestra and 10-piece choir which sounded incredible
especially during Angels and Advertising Space. Thousands
of fans around Europe were also able to watch the show live
in cinemas and venues via a high definition cinecast. As
with the recent warm-up shows in Amsterdam, London and Paris,
there was no encore at the end of the night, instead Robbie
sat on the stage and casually chatted to fans before closing
the show with the epic Make Me Pure.
|
|
A
show to mark the release of his new album, the event was
nearly scuppered by a football accident. His fractured arm
having been injected with cortisone, he at first claimed
not to be feeling any pain. Later, after playing the maracas,
he complained of discomfort. "But I'll be OK," he said,
milking the sympathy vote.
Williams fans also heard yesterday that the boy band Take
That is to reunite this Christmas for a concert and television
show chronicling the rise and fall of the band, which Williams
left in 1995. Last night, with the album, Intensive Care,
to unveil, he loaded the set with new songs - eight in all.
The show began with an arrangement of themes from the album,
played by an orchestra conducted by David Campbell.
The players were ranged at the back of the stage, with a
choir at either side and the six-piece band in front. But
all eyes in the 8,000- capacity venue were pinned on the
secondary stage in the middle of the hall linked by a walkway
to the main stage. As pillars of lights and geysers of smoke
erupted, Williams rose through a trapdoor. In a dark suit
with pink piping and a pink tie, he started with Ghosts,
a big, orchestral pop song with an 1980s feel that didn't
immediately gel. As the band struck up the more familiar
chords of Feel, the audience rose as one, and with
Williams dancing along the walkway, the feelgood factor
rose sharply.
The German audience showered the stage with a variety of
personal effects - underwear, tarot cards, even what looked
like a slipper. Williams rewarded them with matey chat,
schoolboy German and references to the wonderful city of
Berlin. The new songs, by Williams and his new songwriting
partner the guitarist Stephen Duffy, bore the Williams stamp
of anthemic appeal and instant accessibility. A Place
To Crash sounded like one of those old Elton John, Saturday
night pop-rockers, while Advertising Space was a
grandiose ballad about the posthumous exploitation of Elvis
Presley. But Duffy, who was one of three guitarists featured
in the band, has brought a pleasing indie-rock dimension
to some of the other songs. The Trouble With Me was
a lovely tune with a classic, jangly-guitar backdrop, while
Spread Your Wings had a similar easygoing charm.
Naturally, the old stalwarts had the most rousing effect.
But Williams is certainly not stuck in the past. Tripping,
which he was keen to tell us has reached No 1 in
Germany, was a brilliant performance of an unusually rootsy
song, while the finale of Make Me Pure was Williams
at his best, a big, almost-gospel chorale with the sign-off
line (apparently paraphrasing St Augustine): "Oh Lord, make
me pure . . . but not yet."
|