âIs anybody out there? Hello? Can you hear us?â
In a cavernous secret warehouse, thereâs a party underway that would bring Matt Hancock to actual tears. Surrounded by motorbikes, horse-headed dummies, mysterious monoliths, shelves of bizarre bric-a-brac and amps and curtains scrawled with slogans â âSTAY NEGATIVEâ, âINNATE RASHESâ, âITâS BETTER TO SLEEP WITH A SOBER CANNIBAL THAN A DRUNK CHRISTIANâ â a motley crew of soul kings, bovver boys, rappers, indie heroes, druids and holograms are caught up in some wild midday revelry. Itâs a miracle that, in almost 90 minutes, thereâs absolutely no appearance whatsoever from Rita Ora.
READ MORE: Gorillaz: âI could feel in my bones that we were due this current troubleâ
And through the visual madness and sonic splatterfest grooves Damon Albarn, more rambunctious ringmaster than centrepiece. He raps into a megaphone, hammers keytars and parps toy trumpets in a bomber jacket, docker cap and glittery Elton pineapple shades, like someone sacked from Dexyâs Midnight Runners in 1980 for looking far too pleased with himself.
The cartoon wrapping of Gorillaz has always been there to give some form of coherence to a wildly disparate and dislocated sort of project, not least on their recent compilation of monthly lockdown tracks âSong Machine, Season One: Strange Timezâ. So, up close and exposed in the livestream format, and playing the new album largely in order (plus some bonus track swap-ins), they rightly embrace the anything-goes jumble behind the âtoons. Once Robert Smith has laced âStrange Timezâ with his aura of melodic anguish and holographic Beck has slippedânâslid his way through the psych-pop âValley Of The Pagansâ, London singer Leee John twirls onto the cabaret stage in person, spinning falsetto soul harmonies over âThe Lost Chordâ. Itâs like looking behind the Wizard Of Ozâs curtain to find thereâs a wild-ass psychedelic punch party going on back there.
These are tracks that often feel like classic funk, pop, rap and soul music intermingled, encoded, beamed out into the cosmos and deciphered by some far advanced civilisation. Itâs a futurist, universal melting pot approach that allows Damon to get away with crooning a desolate melody amid the orchestral rhumba party of âDĂ©solĂ©â; merging JPEGMafiaâs sunny rap with CHAIâs J-Pop on âMLSâ; and creating a raging miasma of future soul at the start of EarthGangâs psychedelic disco groover âOpiumâ.
Itâs a methodology that also needs focus, though and, without any old hits for us to synchronise with every now and then, this falls to Damonâs more crystalline moments in the spotlight. On âPink Phantomâ he duets with a cartoon Elton John, who sits at a grand piano festooned with a hairy hand candelabra. For âDead Butterfliesâ, he teases emotive boudoir soul refrains from his keyboard, while Kano sits on a nearby riser paying tribute to the D-boss. When Peter Hook arrives to play cumulonimbus bass on the superb âAriesâ, Damon beams and shrugs through his euphoric twist on a New Order tune as if he knocks out such glacial indie-pop brilliance in his sleep.

Slaves and Slowthai burst that blissful bubble, bawling into Damonâs face and flouting social distancing rules like a 2020 fresherâs week, for the gloriously exuberant punk of âMomentary Blissâ. From there, Gorillaz return to 2005 album âDemon Daysâ. Matt Berry emerges in a druidâs cape, lowers his hood and intones Dennis Hopperâs chilling parable of greed, exploitation and environmental destruction âFire Coming Out Of The Monkeyâs Headâ at an eagle lectern.
The band then retire to a side-lounge featuring a Christmas tree topped with an upside-down cross and a framed photo of old-timey comedian Ken Dodd, there to relax into an interlude of drowsy funk and tranquillised reggae on âDraculaâ, âDemon Daysâ and a âLast Living Soulsâ with an optimistic coda. âAre we the last living souls?â Damon asks the camera, then whispers, ânoâ, with a smile that suggests heâs already off his face on top-grade Pfizer.
If Gorillaz live shows can sometimes feel like insider celebrity parties youâve been permitted to press your nose to the window of, Live From Kong is the first time weâve felt invited inside, amid the chaos.

Gorillaz played
‘Strange Timez’
‘The Valley of the Pagans’
‘The Lost Chord’
‘Pac-Man’
‘MLS’
‘The Pink Phantom’
‘Opium’
‘Aries’
‘Dead Butterflies’
‘DĂ©solĂ©’
‘Momentary Bliss’
‘Fire Coming Out of the Monkey’s Head’
‘Last Living Souls’
‘Dracula’
‘Don’t Get Lost in Heaven’
‘Demon Days’
‘Clint Eastwood’
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