After Orlando Weeks and his new three-piece band have performed their first song at Hackney venue EartH ā€“ an atmospheric, somewhat mystifying opener of calming but complex neo-jazz ā€“ a man in the audience quietly asks his neighbour, ā€œWhich one is he?ā€

Itā€™s a reasonable question. The former Maccabees frontman retreated from the spotlight when the indie band split in 2016, and now returns with original solo material ā€“ but thereā€™s no fanfare, no forced celebration.

Thereā€™s also no nostalgia for the Maccabees era ā€“ no throwbacks or fan favourites to speak of. Instead the new music boasts shades of the ambient post-rock of 1980s band Talk Talk, at once intimate and urgent. This gig feels special, offering new material from Weeksā€™ forthcoming solo album (due for release later this year), from which just one track, ā€˜Safe in Soundā€™, has been released so far.

The Maccabeesā€™ dissolution shook the indie world ā€“ 14 years of shaping and bolstering the landscape of immense British guitar bangers is no mean feat. But the news came with the promise of closure, with a farewell tour giving fans one last goodbye in 2017 NME called their final gig, in north Londonā€™s Alexandra Palace, ā€œthe very pinnacle of heartbreakingā€. Tonight though, itā€™s a new era with an entirely different atmosphere. Weā€™ve had ample time to mourn, and now Weeks gently eases us into a wholly new sound to fall in love with.

The stage is flooded with diffused light, blurring each performer, welding vision and sound into one. A disco ball forms the centrepiece of the stage, placed at the musiciansā€™ feet like a campfire. It slowly bursts with life, refracting every other light source and performing its own spellbinding dance across several rip-raw moments.

Weeks is joined onstage by three musicians; they form a semi-circle, levelling the playing field and enabling a fluid microcosm of ethereal jazz-type arrangements that melt into each other. Clockwise: keyboard player Sami El-Enany, Weeks, trumpeter Wilf Petherbridge and drummer Luca Caruso, all microscopically in sync, nodding meditatively. What ensues is a hypnotic display.

Musically, Weeks has captured lightning in a bottle. His music is stripped-back yet rich, eschewing guitars entirely in favour of luminous brass solos and muscular percussion. His vocals are pure as crystal, featuring a perfectly calibrated echo, somewhere between James Blake and Bon Iver. In fact, this gig shares traits with the latterā€™s stunning residency at the Hammersmith Apollo in 2018.

The songs in this hour-long set seamlessly connect into each other and ā€˜Safe in Soundā€™, the penultimate track, teems with ambitious instrumentation. Itā€™s a certified showstopper.

Weeks has always been a convincing showman, but here he’s humble, mostly glued to the mic, his frame vertical throughout. This is a beguiling show of restrained energy, a deeply felt performance of a major album to come. The singer has made music to hold someone close to, a live experience urging you to reach out and squeeze their hand.

The post Orlando Weeks live in London: former Maccabees frontman wows with meditative new material appeared first on NME Music News, Reviews, Videos, Galleries, Tickets and Blogs | NME.COM.

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