Drowned in Sound

Search


Home > Reviews > Live


Antony Johnsons 3
Date: 24/06/2005
no votes
?
by John Brainlove
Antony shuffles out onto the stage, head down, face obscured by his long hair. He's wringing his hands (nervous, self-conscious) and tugging at the lacy cuffs of his white shirt, which has been altered and customised with little rips and holes on the sleeves. He takes little steps towards the piano, with his feet pointed slightly inward. He seems uncomfortable in his body, or with his physicality as a whole - inside, Antony clearly (and publicly) feels profoundly different.

I initially had doubts about Antony & The Johnsons' I Am a Bird Now - I listened through the album, and enjoyed it, but I found it hard work. I had problems with the emotionally charged vibrato of his voice - I found myself thinking of warbling pop divas like Mariah and Aguilera and their affectedly histrionic vocal grandstanding, and I wondered if this was perhaps a case of style over content. Only one or two of the songs really leapt out at me - something just wasn't clicking into place. But live, watching Antony perform, watching him wriggle on his stool and lean into the mic, his eyes closed and shoulders swaying, that angelic voice, dipping and soaring and carefully pronouncing every word, the intensity of feeling that he throws behind every note makes much more sense.

There's a visceral honesty to his performance, revealed in those mannerisms and movements, and in the committed delivery of his voice. A desperation to communicate his interior world that somehow completely avoids any mawkishness or sentimentality. The strings never feel over-dramatic when they arrive, and without percussion to keep rhythm the band expertly stay together, ebbing and flowing flawlessly with the piano and Antony's vocal. Covers of Nico's 'Afraid', Leonard Cohen's 'The Guests' and (as the encore) The Velvet Underground's 'Candy Says' receive sudden and deafening applause, and 'Hope There's Someone' sounds even more like a classic in the making played live. I realise my earlier doubts were based only on superficial similarities to other singers, and Antony is giving us much, much more. Singing for him seems like a transformative act; wrapped up in his music, Antony's heavy feet leave the ground as his voice rises, and so do ours, and for a while we are all birds too.

Post a new comment on this review

Antony And The Johnsons

Your reviews always make me cry - bastard.

I still haven't got into the album quite yet so I wouldn't feel compelled to go and see him at this moment in time.

Antony And The Johnsons

Nice review. I don't want to say I told you so( see Anthony and Johnsons thread) but I told you so

Antony And The Johnsons

His music sounds like what aliens probably sing like, and he makes Rufus Wainwright look like John Wayne. Still, talented guy.

Antony And The Johnsons

The first time I heard antony sing in Animal Factory I was blown away. For anyone who's just got the new album, you need to get the first which is on secretly canadian. It's better. Up at the lake e.p is alsoogreat, but you'll probably need to look to ebay for that.

Antony And The Johnsons

I'd heard about the guy, and thought...hmm, art rock. But seeing him play 'Hope There's Someone' on Jools Holland was totally phenomenal. It's a long time since i've gotten giddy about someone just singing; but this was truly something different, and i liked it.

Antony And The Johnsons

My reaction to hearing a promo of the album some time back was exactly the same as yours John. I felt wriggly inside and discomforted. But the same as Hanthepirate, seeing him on Jools was a real moment for me. I will probably sidle back to the album at some point but at the moment, I'm happy to let just one track at a time get me by the throat and shake me into submission.

I would probably have caught him at Bristol last Monday, but the siren of Rufus in Cardiff on the same night was far too strong to resist!