Thereâs usually plenty of theatrics to St. Vincent gigs. The âMasseductionâ tour explored power, control and lust via PVC suits, a never-ending supply of guitars while the run of shows to celebrate the sugary; â70âs-inspired âDaddyâs Homeâ were driven by a warm spontaneity as St Vincent and her extensive band worked through past trauma amidst (somewhat unfair) social media backlash.
She wanted something more direct and confrontational for seventh album âAll Born Screamingâ though. âIâm gonna fuck âem up,â Annie Clark promised NME earlier this year. True to her word, tonightâs gig at Londonâs Royal Albert Hall is vicious, destructive, and pure electric.
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Throughout the pulverising 90-minute set, Clark wields her guitar like a weapon and attacks the microphone with a restless urgency. Big, cathartic breakdowns teeter on the edge of chaos, but Clark and her four-piece band never let things fall apart completely. Itâs gorgeous to watch, but it demands participation as well. With music this charged, thereâs simply no standing on the sidelines.
In the years since St. Vincent last played London, co-writes with Taylor Swift (âCruel Summerâ) and Olivia Rodrigo (âObsessedâ) have taken over the airwaves, but instead of chasing an arena-sized glamour, âAll Born Screamingâ is a visceral exploration of death, flecked with hope. Thatâs very much the mood of tonightâs gig as well.
From the crushing purge of opener âRecklessâ through the unsettling horror-infused âBig Time Nothingâ to the snotty âFleaâ, St Vincent indulges in bleakness. It gives the glitching dystopia of âLos Agelessâ, the soaring anxiety of âFear The Futureâ and the pleading âMarrowâ an added sense of despair, but thereâs more to this show than rage in the dying light.
âShow of hands, who has a Prince Albert,â Clark asks with a smirk, immediately after praising the beauty of the grandiose venue while thereâs a playful, choreographed turn from her and her guitarists during âFleaâ.
âThis song is for all the people who have loved immensely, stared at the moon, and taken that leap,â Clark says before a gorgeous âSweetest Fruitâ, a stripped back âCandy Darlingâ is lush and delicate while even the unruly attack of âBroken Manâ is sprinkled with tenderness. As St. Vincent describes it, itâs âdeep epic beauty and chaotic violence, all at the same timeâ.
After she dives into the crowd once more and embraces them for the soaring romance of âNew Yorkâ, the night ends with âAll Born Screamingâ. On record, the twisting, furious track feels lethal but performed in front of a crowd, the song encourages a shared experience through collective pain and fear.
âWeâre all here for one reason, and that reason is love,â Clark explains. âAs far as I can tell, thereâs no other fucking reason to do anything,â she adds, offering a vital protest against a world that feels increasingly dark.
St Vincent played:
‘Reckless’
‘Fear the Future’
‘Los Ageless’
‘Big Time Nothing’
‘Marrow’
‘Dilettante’
‘Pay Your Way in Pain’
‘Digital Witness’
‘Sweetest Fruit’
‘Flea’
‘Cheerleader’
‘Broken Man’
‘Krokodil’
‘Surgeon’
‘Hell Is Near’
‘Candy Darling’
‘New York’
‘Sugarboy’
‘All Born Screaming’
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