Sinead O'Connor,
Royal Festival Hall, london

Gospel truth from an unpredictable and inventive performer
By Elisa Bray / The Independent (UK)
Published: 13 November 2007
Sinead O'Connor was never afraid of making a statement. Since shaving
her hair in defiance of stereotypes, at the peak of her fame she
tore up a picture of Pope John Paul II on television. A decade later
in 2003 she announced her retirement, threatening to end a 20-year
career which had taken unexpected twists and turns from her early
days as an alternative solo artist to traditional Irish folk and
reggae. Her collaborations are wide reaching too from Sly & Robbie
to her recent duet with Ian Brown on his anti-war song "Illegal
Attacks".
On her last tour she bemused audiences by playing solely reggae
numbers from her covers album Throw Down Your Arms, having for a
long time eschewed the songs of her early career.
Tonight the ever unpredictable artist abandons the Hare Krishna-style
dress of recent performances, and instead wears a dark androgynous
suit more fitting of a pop star. But most surprisingly of all she
embraces her commercial successes, returning to the early hits which
first made her a star in the late '80s and early '90s.
Beginning with "The Emperor's New Clothes" from her chart-topping
second album I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got, she gets the excited
cheers that are just the beginning for her largely crowd-pleasing
set. Her band are lively, playing the Irish whistle and soaring fiddle
to effect in songs such as the Celtic reggae "Lamb's Book of
Life".
O'Connor is also inventive in her performance. In a particular highlight,
the a cappella "In This Heart", the crowd is silent and
captivated as she begins alone, joined by first the female bassist's
voice, then female violinist and finally the male guitarist, all
providing richly melodic harmonies. It is beautifully moving.
But elsewhere while she makes chat with the audience, getting the
odd laugh for her charming wit, for a singer known for her passion
she is oddly distant at times, keeping a downward gaze, or appearing
distracted as she looks to her band members or the sound technician.
Still, her voice keeps your attention. "Nothing Compares to
You" is an undoubtable treat though her voice prefers the lower
register and she altogether bypasses the highest notes. But the song
she wrote aged 17, "Never Get Old" which builds up to impressive
crescendo is swept off to another level by her voice so powerful
it causes echoes to ripple through the Royal Festival Hall. The juxtaposition
of the acoustic song that follows contrasts beautifully, fragile
vocals of truth and justice over her gentle guitar playing. It's
one of just a trio of songs from her latest offering Theology, based
on Biblical scriptures rich in classical strings. Explaining how
to promote her ecclesiastical album she had to speak to the Christian
media, she wittily recounts how a small percentage were annoyed at
her suggestion that maybe God doesn't want war. She dedicates "If
You Had a Vineyard", which quotes Isiah, "to the Christians
who think God likes war".
But for all the dissidents, the fans' cries of "I love you" in
between songs, proves O'Connor still has the power to captivate and
compel. |