Music review: Liam Gallagher, Glasgow Hydro
Liam Gallagher, Hydro, Glasgow ***
Gallagher doesn’t do restrained. Everything was turned up to eleven, from his salmon pink parka to his forced vocals to his driving rivalry with elder brother Noel. A rough and ready Rock’n’Roll Star was met with a shower of pints and some coloured flares, and the energy escalated on Morning Glory, enough to sustain the crowd through the segments of the show which concentrated on the strictly sub-Oasis solo material.
A horn section were completely wasted on Greedy Soul, conducted at such thudding volume that any arrangement subtleties were lost in the mix. Paper Crown, passing for a fragile ballad, exposed the vulnerabilities in Gallagher’s voice after 23 years of having it, while the lovely Slide Away suffered for his pitbull delivery.
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Hide AdNone of this mattered a jot to the jubilant audience who voted vociferously with their loudest terrace holler to hear Live Forever over Wonderwall, unaware that the plan, in Gallagher’s new regime of generosity, was always to perform both.