Unitarian Church Set List Reviews


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Details

Date
May 18, 2018
Venue
Unitarian Church Cambridge, England
Billed As
Robyn Hitchcock
Gig Type
Concert
Guests
Kimberly Rew

Set List

  1. Tonight
  2. My Wife and My Dead Wife
  3. The Speed of Things
  4. Sinister but She Was Happy
  5. Reynardine Fairport Convention
  6. Beautiful Girl
  7. I'm Only You
  8. The Devil's Coachman
  9. Alright, Yeah
  10. Octopus Syd Barrett
  11. Harry's Song Robyn on piano
  12. Flavour of Night Robyn on piano
  13. I Used to Love You Robyn on piano
Encore
  1. Sally Was a Legend with Kimberley Rew
  2. Kingdom of Love with Kimberley Rew
  3. I Wanna Destroy You with Kimberley Rew
  4. Waterloo Sunset The Kinks with Kimberley Rew

Reviews

Online review by cambridgemusicreviews
The small Unitarian Church is an ideal venue for the close bond that Robyn Hitchcock has with his devoted followers, he was playing the second of two long ago sold-out shows, with the promise of a completely different setlist for each evening.

Robyn Hitchcock draws on his substantial back catalogue and his attachment to Cambridge for his set (most recent album not featuring at all?), opening with his original band Soft Boys song ‘Tonight’, probably written he says across the road on Midsummer Common in 1979.
The songs work with just his acoustic guitar accompanying; often using quite a complex instrumentation. With a warning that a throat infection may render his voice a bit more “Leonard Cohen” than usual he launched into the excellent ‘My Wife And My Dead Wife’ with its multitude of twisting lyrical rhymes (‘..my dead wife’s upstairs, she’s still wearing flares…’) and a macabre but irresistible chorus.
The surreal words stay in dark territory for ‘Sinister But She’s Happy’ but how can you not raise a wry smile to the line ‘…like a chandelier festooned with leeches…’ and so many others.

With its pop laced with psychedelia ‘Beautiful Girl’ would have sat nicely at the top of the charts in the late 60s, while ‘I’m Only You’ is another tour de force of lyrical imagery (…I’m a liquid you’re dissolving in…’) and then a cover of Syd Barrett’s ‘Octopus’ fits in well.
Being a church venue, you could expect to find a piano, so Robyn moved across to the Steinway upright for a trio of ballads ending with ‘I Used To Love You’ with local references galore ‘…the police station is still on Parkers Piece, it hasn’t drifted and nor have the police…’.

Local guitarist and original musical collaborator Kimberley Rew stepped up to add some spiky electric guitar colours to four more songs, including the timeless political frustrations of ‘I Wanna Destroy You’ and a moving cover of alternative national anthem ‘Waterloo Sunset’ bringing this brilliant show to an end.