âThereâs magic in everything, with chaos to even things out,â a gravelly male voice says over a montage of Jackson Wangâs live performances and highly-stylised videos. Although the footage features several lines of magic-themed narration, as the Hong Kong-born singer and member of K-pop group GOT7 prepares to take to the stage, this one feels the most fitting tone-setter for whatâs about to happen.
Wangâs ‘Magic Man’ show is spellbinding and artful from the second he appears high above the stage in a lift filled with dry ice that he regularly takes to the floor and back up again. Pyrotechnics blaze across the front of his platform, while a troupe of backing dancers flank him through addictive and sensual choreographies to the likes of âGo Ghostâ and âDrive You Homeâ. The production value here is so high that the show often feels outsized for the 5,000-capacity Hammersmith Apollo, demanding the sprawling reaches of an arena or stadium instead.
Tonightâs gig might be grand, but it also packs plenty of heart. Each song, from the slinky âChampagne Coolâ to an emotional rendition of âBullet To The Heartâ, is buoyed by the performerâs visceral passion. Wang tells the crowd that the show is designed to tell a story of his struggles and show the real him, as he did on the ‘Magic Man’ album. He does so over four acts, and the second â marked by the word âabandonâ on the screens â sees his dancers don hooded cloaks and clamour, arms outstretched, at the back of the stage, ready to greet him as he returns in his lift. There could be a double meaning to the gesture: the ominous figures either seeing him as prey to be captured and toyed with, or showing complete reverence for him.

Wang gives impassioned speeches to the audience throughout, encouraging them to âfind your magicâ. He scorns at the idea that entertainers and artists should be put on a pedestal (âThatâs just wrongâ) and derides âmedia bullshitâ about China. âIf you travel to China one time, youâll feel like, âDamn, this is a dope placeâ,â he asserts to big cheers.
Chaos slowly seeps into proceedings as the show progresses, be that the crowdâs reaction when Wang picks two women from the crowd to serenade and dance with during the swooning âI Love You 3000â and the soft â80s pop of âDeadâ, or as he glugs from a bottle before screaming âLondon, letâs go!â, liquor spilling from his lips as he does so. An emphatic âBlowâ feels like the natural end of the concert, only for Wang to return to stage in an orange hoodie moments later, Galantis collaboration âPretty Pleaseâ and remixes of âMagic Manâ tracks booming from the PA, turning the Apollo into an after-hours club.
Itâs a sweet ending â creating the kind of party that Wang often says he wants to find after a show â but diffuses the explosive impact of whatâs come before. Much like some of the show’s production elements â the repetitive use of the lift gets a bit same-y at some points â it feels like it would benefit from taking place in a much larger venue. If the ‘Magic Man’ tour shows anything, though, itâs that despite his insistence tonight heâll disappear in âfive or 10 yearsâ, the only way for Jackson Wang right now is up.
Jackson Wang played:Â
â100 Waysâ
âGo Ghostâ
âBlackoutâ
âI Donât Have Itâ
âJust Like Magicâ
âAll The Wayâ
âBullet To The Heartâ
âDrive You Homeâ
âBlueâ
âDopamineâ
âLMLY’
âVibesâ
âI Love You 3000â
âPoisonâ
âCome Aliveâ
âChampagne Coolâ
âThe Momentâ
âDeadâ
âDrive It Like You Stole Itâ
âCruelâ
âBlowâ
âPretty Pleaseâ
â100 Ways (Remix)â
âCruel (Remix)â
âBlow (Remix)â
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