Mid-way through PJâs Harveyâs intimate gig in the grandiose gothic surroundings of Manchesterâs Albert Hall, a new pedal board suddenly appears on stage. Moments later, for the first time in the evening, Harvey addresses the audience: âIâd like to bring to the stage a very special guest,â she says in her rich Dorset tones. It’s The Smiths legend and local hero Johnny Marr, and the two duet on an emotive, stripped-back version of âThe Desperate Kingdom Of Loveâ. The capacity audience watch on in an awed silence: it’s just one of many such pinch-yourself moments in a gig that reminds us just why Harvey is such a beloved and adored cultural titan.
Harvey hasnât toured since 2017. In the intervening years between then and now, she left behind the often incessant, creatively-crushing album-touring cycle and turned instead to scores, soundtracks and poetry after she suffered a crippling period of writerâs block initiated by last album, ‘The Hope Six Demolition Project’ â a draining work that saw her writing about war zones and areas of abject poverty. Her poetry collection Orlam arrived in 2022 and unlocked her creative zeal once more, paving the way for her latest studio album ‘I Inside The Old Year Dying’ â a group of poems adapted from Orlam and set to music.
The gigâs first half is dedicated to playing this new album in full and live. The record follows a young protagonist (Ira-Abel Rawles) navigating adolescence and impending adulthood. She lives in a wild landscape not dissimilar to the Dorset of Harveyâs youth and the parallels between the two-feel strong, even though Harvey has long resisted any autobiographical readings of her work. Live, however, that link feels more palpable: Harvey seems to inhabit the character completely.

Take the stunning âLwonesome Tonightâ, a song about a young girl who âyearns yet to ungirlâ â someone who is uncomfortable in her own skin and with those gazing upon it. On stage, Harvey cuts a lone figure stood underneath a piercing spotlight in a long white dress, sometimes deliberately hiding her face behind her hands and in the process, hauntingly capturing Rawlesâ â and likely her own â feelings of otherness as a woman in a world of male-gazes. Itâs a feminist-punk theme that dates back to Harveyâs very earliest work â and one that still feels especially relevant.
Her performance is frequently theatrical. She paces up and down the stage, restless and aloof on songs about anxiety (âAutumn Termâ) and death (âPrayer At The Gateâ), while elsewhere she navigates the sparse, rustic stage set of Ian Rickman to perch on a chair, sit next to a school-like desk or kneel down by the banks of an imaginary river where she mimics touching the flowing water (âLwonesome Tonightâ). Field recordings from Dorset echo out around the venue too â a bird song here, a flowing river there â and makes it feel as though you were walking around Dorset with Harvey.
After a brief interlude following the first half, Harvey returns for a second full of carefully curated material that linked the songs of her past with those of her present, complementing ‘I Inside⊒ seamlessly. Harvey has never been one to pander to playing her hits, but here, the curation feels like a treasure trove for fans: full of easter eggs and special rarities.
Standouts include the gothy âThe Words That Maketh Murderâ and the haunting âMan-Sizeâ, which are like fitting companions to âLwonesome Tonightâ as the characters of both interrogate performative identities. Rarity âDressâ from her debut album proves a much-loved hit, as does âDown By The Waterâ, a song that marked a seismic shift in Harveyâs earlier career (and of course, also featured heavily in Peaky Blinders).
The encore sees the return of the pedal pad and Marr, who joins Harvey for âCâmon Billyâ and âWhite Chalkâ â two moments that again silenced the audience. Harveyâs stunning falsetto awes on these songs, after being a frequent scene-stealer all evening. The encore feels like another of those special, pinch-yourself moments. Itâs good to have her back.
PJ Harvey played:
âPrayer at the Gateâ
âAutumn Termâ
âLwonesome Tonightâ
âSeem an Iâ
âThe Netherâedgeâ
âI Inside the Old Year Dyingâ
âAll Soulsâ
âA Childâs Question, Augustâ
âAugustâ
âA Childâs Question, Julyâ
âA Noiseless Noiseâ
âThe Colour of the Earthâ
âThe Glorious Landâ
âThe Words That Maketh Murderâ
âAngeleneâ
âSend His Love to Meâ
âThe Gardenâ
âThe Desperate Kingdom of Loveâ (with Johnny Marr)
âMan-Sizeâ
âDressâ
âDown by the Water’
âTo Bring You My Loveâ
âC’mon Billyâ (with Johnny Marr)
âWhite Chalkâ (with Johnny Marr)
The post PJ Harvey live in Manchester: a show full of pinch-yourself moments appeared first on NME.