Before singing Blondieâs imperious 2010 single âMotherâ, frontwoman Debbie Harry â whose band took home the NME Godlike Genius gong in 2014 â surveys the baying Manchester AO Arena crowd. âWell, itâs a holiday weekend â you can really destroy yourself tonight if you like!,â she jokes, before wistfully adding: âWe were just saying, ‘Wow… itâs really been two years since Iâve done any singing.’ Thatâs really weird.’â
The deity’s latest tour is, with characteristic wry humour, called Against The Odds â and itâs increasingly lived up to its name. Announced during COVID, dates were rescheduled due to pandemic restrictions, with original support act Garbage replaced by hometown hero Johnny Marr. Then co-founder and guitarist Chris Stein announced he couldnât tour because of health reasons, with Andee Blacksugar filling in for him. With the pleasing addition of former Sex Pistol Glen Matlock on bass, the group more than make up for lost time.
Given that they share their name with a comic book character and are fronted by someone Iggy Pop once described as âBarbarella on speedâ, it’s perhaps fitting the night begins with arresting graphic novel visuals of the band, as Harry delivers the impassive spoken-word opening of their 1976 bubblegum-punk debut single âX Offenderâ. At 76, she still looks (and sounds) every inch the exemplar of New York cool, like a living cartoon in a green leather outfit, shades and a halo of peroxide.
Marr expertly warms up the crowd with slam-dunk Smiths classics âPanicâ, âThis Charming Manâ and âThere Is A Light That Never Goes Outâ. And then Blondie arrive to pack in the future-nostalgic hits tighter than carbon molecules in a diamond: a hyper-aggressive âHanging on the Telephoneâ, the irresistibly sweet âSunday Girlâ, the wistful âPicture Thisâ and a transcendent âHeart of Glassâ (the latter mixed in with a coda of Donna Summerâs disco touchstone âI Feel Loveâ). Having reformed in 1997, Blondie 2.0 have lasted longer than they did the first time around. Their more recent material duly shines: take 2017’s evocative âLong Timeâ and the muscular âMy Monsterâ, which featured on their last album ‘Pollinator’ and â fittingly â was written by Marr.
Clem Burkeâs powerhouse drumming is always a thing of wonder, while guitarist Tommy Kessler is brought to the fore for showboating solos during âAtomicâ. If the songs havenât dated, neither has the bandâs forward-thinking attitude. Introducing their 1999 comeback chart-topper âMariaâ, Harry gives a subtle shout-out to trans rights: âI usually say that this is for the girls, but weâre living in a different world now, so anybody who feels like they want to be a girl â go right ahead.â
As the ominous organ music of Bachâs Toccata in D Minor kicks in, Blondie start the encore with the fan service curio âNo Exitâ, a one-woman version of their 1999 gangster-rap team-up with Coolio, Mobb Deep and Wu-Tang Clan. Then comes sprawling ‘Pollinator’ cut âFragmentsâ, before the classics âCall Meâ and âOne Way Or Anotherâ elicit a predictably rowdy reaction. In 1979, Blondieâs first ever NME cover proclaimed âThe revolution will be peroxideâ â and tonightâs stellar performance showed a storied band unwilling to rest on their victory.
Blondie played:
‘X Offender’
‘Hanging on the Telephone’
‘Sunday Girl’
‘Picture This’
‘Mother’
‘Fade Away and Radiate’
‘The Tide Is High’
‘What I Heard’
‘Atomic’
‘(I’m Always Touched by Your) Presence, Dear’
‘Shayla’
‘Union City Blue’
‘Long Time’
‘My Monster’
‘Rapture’
‘Maria’
‘Dreaming’
‘Heart of Glass’
‘No Exit’
‘Fragments’
‘Call Me’
‘One Way or Another’
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