âMy name is Noah Kahan and I canât believe Iâm here.â The Grammy-nominated chart-topping folk-pop superstar has just bounded onstage at a packed Wembley Arena but, judging by the 12,000-strong Valentine’s Day audienceâs rapturous reaction, no introduction is needed.
Itâs easy to see why Kahan is surprised, however â the humble singer-songwriterâs crowning moment has been a long time in the making. The now-27-year-old might have broken through in 2023 with the help of TikTok and a viral Olivia Rodrigo cover, but his first release was in 2017 and his 2018 London debut saw him perform for just 77 people at The Social. Since, heâs graduated from theatres (Kahan sold out two nights at the 2,300-capacity Kentish Town Forum last November) for arenas. Many of his diehard British stans â lads in flannel shirts, denim jackets and their newly-bought Noah Kahan trucker caps; girls sporting sparkly cowgirl hats â make up the audience for his first of two nights at Wembley Arena.
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They know every lyric of his 19-track setlist. During opener âAll My Loveâ, the arena transforms into a choir for songs old and new: from recently released love song âForeverâ â which is dedicated to everyone who was made to come here and âsweat for two hoursâ â to 2019 throwback âFalse Confidenceâ, which was written when he âfelt insecure and didnât know where he fit into the industryâ.
Yes, some of Kahanâs songs are certainly unorthodox in their narratives, but that’s what makes his music so uniquely compelling. Take âEverywhere, Everythingâ which, despite being a song about decomposing fingers, results in Wembley being illuminated with phone torches. This is Kahanâs singular strength, however. He turns bleak subject matters â much of breakthrough third album âStick Seasonâ was created during the pandemic â into an easy-listening yet impactful fusion of folk, pop and indie. His recollection of those isolated times has struck a very real chord around the world.
Kahan is not only a compelling songwriter and powerful vocalist, but a versatile guitarist. Regularly swapping from acoustic (âNew Perspectiveâ) to electric, his show never lacks pace. For every softer moment (âCall Your Mumâ has loved-up couples swaying), thereâs textbook country (âDial Drunkâ and Paul Revereâ, the latter resulting in âyee-hawâsâ) and foot-stomping folk (âShe Calls Me Backâ and âNorthern Attitudeâ) and rock.
Expectedly, ‘Stick Seasonâ receives the nightâs most rapturous reaction. This sleeper hit for the ages â Kahan teased it for two years on TikTok before its official release â is now inescapable, sitting atop the UK Singles Chart for a seventh week.
Having made folk-pop cool again â it was once, perhaps fairly, derided as âstomp clap heyâ music â thereâs no denying the torch-bearing troubadour was made to play massive stages. Augustâs headline show at London’s The O2, a venue even bigger than this, looks like itâll be a walk in the park.
Noah Kahan played:
‘All My Love’
‘New Perspective’
‘She Calls Me Back’
‘Everywhere, Everything’
‘Your Needs, My Needs’
‘Pain Is Like Cold Water’
‘Maine’
‘Growing Sideways’
‘Paul Revere’
‘Northern Attitude’
‘Forever’
‘False Confidence’
‘Call Your Mom’
‘You’re Gonna Go Far’
‘Orange Juice’
‘Dial Drunk’
‘The View Between Villages’
‘Stick Season’
‘Homesick”
The post Noah Kahan in London: rising folk-pop superstar graduates to arenas appeared first on NME.