Since footage from Gabrielsā€™ debut London show in Oxford Circus went viral on Twitter in mid-October (ā€œtruly, Iā€™ve never seen a gig as extraordinary,ā€ commented one attendee) thereā€™s been no hotter ticket in town. The LA neo-gospel outfit looked positively spellbinding that night, with ethereal single ā€˜Love and Hate in a Different Timeā€™ commanding cheers, handclaps, and elation at an evidently packed venue The Social.

Since then, it seems that the band have barely left Londonā€™s epicentre, holing up in a brand new venue on the cusp of Chinatown and rehearsing hard. Below Stone Nest ā€” a run-down, chipped-wall cavern next to a fire station ā€“ provides the site of tonightā€™s surprise show, and thereā€™s a buzz about the place that anticipates the magic that’s to come.

The band file silently onto the stage dressed uniformly in black ā€“Ā aside from their commanding frontman Jacob Lusk, whose white embroidered suit basks in a cold, blue light. Gabriels cast a stillness over the crowd with opening numbers ā€˜Innocenceā€™ and ā€˜The Blindā€™; brooding like a death-march, as dark bassy throbs underscore the chiming pianos and handclaps. Itā€™s a sound not dissimilar from the chilling electronic blues of Gil Scott-Heron and Richard Russellā€™s masterful 2010 album ā€˜Iā€™m New Hereā€™. A three-part gospel choir continues to moodily coo as the sharp strings and tip-toeing melodies of new single ā€˜Blameā€™ threaten to go full Succession.

Then, all of a sudden, the moody facade is demolished. Luskā€™s fixed gaze turns to a beaming grin during ā€˜Love and Hate in a Different Timeā€™, and unbuttoning his double-breasted jacket, he unleashes the full power of his sensational, trilling vocals as the lights turn a bright, glowing orange. With soaring strings and a thumping pace, Gabriels ignite the room with a fever rush of elation. It is emphatic ā€“Ā weā€™re five songs in, and the band have already ascended through the roof. ā€œYā€™all good? Yā€™alright?ā€, Lusk jokes at the climax. Heā€™s met with an uproar.

Hereon, the band confirms whatā€™s evident: for Gabriels, the only way is up. ā€œWeā€™re gonna have a praise the Lord moment,ā€ Lusk bellows, leading the crowd into an ecstatic call-and-response chant: ā€œIf you love somebody, baby, you should tell them every dayā€. The pace turns spirited once again in the midst of a trio of triumphant new tracks that close the main set. Finally, with sweat and elation hanging in the air, the band take a request before making their exit: a dynamic rendition of ā€˜Professionalā€™, combining solemn piano and double-bass with an oozing, soulful refrain.

ā€œIf we had a chance to do it all again, tell me, would we?ā€ Lusk lures, with one of his final utterances into the mic, projected by that brilliant, warbling voice. The answer to the question is absolutely, yes.

Gabriels played:

‘Innocence’

‘The Blind’

‘Blame’

‘Bloodline’

‘Love and Hate in a Different Time’

‘Stranger’

‘To The Moon and Back’

‘Great Wind’

‘Professional’

The post Gabriels live in London: the buzzed-about outfit live up to the hype appeared first on NME.

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