Itâs rare to come to a show of this size and not have a clue what to expect. Itâs a big room to fill for an artist with just the one single out, and as Chvrchesâ frontwoman turned solo star Lauren Mayberry tells the packed-out KOKO herself: âThis is very generous of you, because I know no one knows any of the songs at all.â
After a playlist packed with Madonna and the fittingly cinematic intro of âMaybe This Timeâ by Liza Minelli, the darkness lifts to show Mayberry dramatically poised centre stage under the spotlight. She begins with âBirdâ, a slow-burning earworm, much less sugary than Chvrches and with more of a sinister but electro-noir grit.
Each song is presented between clean scene changes. The set is framed by spoken word narrative from Mayberry telling of the horrors and pitfalls of body image in the âparanoid paradeâ of the social media age. Speaking to NME pre-show, she promised of a âmore theatricalâ concept, and one âborn out of things that I couldnât or wouldnât write in the bandâ with men. We enjoy the spoils of Mayberryâs new universe â from surefire future single of âChange Shapesâ (driven by the energy Sugababes at their most streetwise via some pop-pomp â80s glory days Depeche Mode) and the industrial glam-stomp of âShameâ.

She promises âUnder The Knifeâ will be a âdepressing bangerâ to appease the â99 per cent Chvrches fansâ in the room, and while a sombre and slow-revealing gem, the bangers are elsewhere: namely in the Billy Joel meets Tears For Fears âCrocodile Tearsâ (the kind of jam of that should come with a single fingerless leather glove) and the Nine Inch Nails ferocity of âshouty, screamy, angryâ closer âSorry Etcâ. While the tender piano ballad of launch single âAre You Awakeâ goes down a treat, Mayberry wasnât lying when she told us that it couldnât be less representative of what else she has in the bag.
She chucks in a mega and bombastic rendition of Madonna‘s âLike A Prayerâ to âpad outâ the setlist, and keeps up her tradition of a new cover for each city she visits with a gorgeous outing of Spice Girlsâ âViva Foreverâ, as well as teaching us that saying âspace ghettoâ with an American accent is the easiest route to the Scottish pronunciation of âSpice Girlsâ… ensue the KOKO crowd having a go at a mass elocution lesson.
It’s a thrilling reminder of her beginnings: âI did a Google and found a Chvrches show from 2012 where we only played seven songs,â she offers. The eight new originals on offer tonight pack one heck of a punch, and if this is just a test drive then weâre in for one hell of a ride.
Lauren Mayberry played:
‘Bird’
‘Change Shapes’
‘Mantra’
‘Under the Knife’
‘Shame’
‘Like a Prayer’ (Madonna cover)
‘Are You Awake?’
‘Crocodile Tears’
‘Viva Forever’ (Spice Girls cover)
‘Sorry, Etc.’
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