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The scene is set. It's the fifth installment
of the Carling Homecoming gigs. Northern pop legends - The
Beautiful South - return to their hometown of Hull for an
exclusive show at the Wellington club "Known as - The
Welly - to the locals".
Previous Carling Homecoming shows have seen
massive artists such as the Manic Street Preachers, Primal
Scream, The Charlatans and Jamiroquai returning to the venues
where they first got bookings to play an intimate show in
front of a handful of lucky fans.
For many years now these well grounded northern
soul stars have been climbing charismatically, up the British
charts. Their though poetry about lonely lives and tortured
relationships, set to deceptively sweet melody, has consistently
struck a chord with the nation and given them a plethora of
No 1 albums and a string of hit singles, including a No 1,
A Little Time, in 1990. Although the Beautiful South are major
chart-toppers and have sold millions of records and "as
far as I know" are The British music Industries most
lucrative export, they can still easily escape recognition
- even in their home town of Hull.
The band takes the stage in the shape of
Paul Heaton & Dave Hemmingway original members of previous
incarnation the Housemartins on vocals, Drums, Bass, Keyboards,
Percussion, three piece brass section and new arrival Alison
Wheeler also on vocals.
With a new album just around the corner
(Gaze released 27th Oct) and a single release even more imminent
(A few things that I ain't (released 13th Oct)) there is more
to this gig than just a dusting off of the old classics for
"the hardcore fans". A fresh verve oozes from the
band and with new member Alison (who replaces Jacqueline Abbott)
getting a run out, songs - old and new - are attacked with
great lust. Baring in mind that a full UK tour starts in October
this gig is the beginning of something - where most of these
kinds of events feel more like a conclusion.
"It was Nineteen Eighty Five the last time we played
this venue" chirps Paul Heaton.
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