Type and hit ENTER

Commonly used tags...

Brighton Festival Brighton Fringe Brighton Pride British Sea Power Cinecity Lewes Psychedelic Festival Locally Sourced Lost & Found Love Supreme Festival Mutations Festival Nick Cave Poets Vs MCs Politics Rag'n'Bone Man Record Store Day Save Our Venues Six Of The Best Source Virgins Streets Of Brighton Street Source Tattoos The Great Escape Tru Thoughts Unsung Heroes
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Advertise
Kimya Dawson | Brighton Source
Kimya Dawson | Brighton Source
Reviews

Kimya Dawson Review

Apr 26, 2016
-
Posted by Ben Bailey

It’s perhaps surprising to find Patterns at bursting point for an artist as unassuming and offbeat as Kimya Dawson. It’s been over a decade since her band The Moldy Peaches went into indefinite-hiatus mode and almost as long since the chart-topping Juno soundtrack gave her solo career a late lift-off. Nevertheless, the room is rammed with fans, probably because this Brighton date is one of only four UK shows on her current tour.

After taking the stage Kimya ushers the crowd to sit on the floor and everyone obliges, immediately creating a cosy living room vibe out of what could have been a tight wedge. It’s clear from her banter – and there’s plenty of it to go round – that she has a lot of time for Brighton people.

However, the circumstances surrounding her visits can hardly have given her fond memories of the place. Last time she played here, she left the stage reeling from the news that a friend of hers, Dennis Flemion of The Frogs, had been found dead. This time she starts the show with a commemoration for another musician close to her heart: Prince.

Despite the fact the news only hit the night before, the occasion is anything but sombre. She rigs up a projection of “that funny little man” posing provocatively in a thong and proceeds to play a selection of nonsense rhymes and comic ditties drawn largely from her neatly-named 2008 kids’ album ‘Alphabutt’. She even manages to elicit a crowd singalong about a “mare at the fair on the merry-go-round”, a song her daughter wrote at preschool age.

Given that much of Kimya’s songwriting, even the heavy stuff, has a charmingly childlike approach, it’s probably inevitable that parenthood would spur her on to go the whole hog. Whereas we’re used to her writing about the pitfalls of growing up, she’s now writing for those doing it – or about to. DIY kinder-folk, you might call it. Not a genre we thought we’d be listening to on a Friday night.

Though the fart and poop gags get the laughs they were destined to, Kimya moves on at exactly the right juncture to play some favourites like ‘Being Cool’ and ‘The Beer’, her sung/spoken rapid-fire lyrics reminding everyone why they caught on to her music in the first place. Seated throughout, Kimya accompanies the words with softly-thumbed acoustic guitar strums. We get one, maybe two, chords each verse and a third for the chorus, but all this passes beneath the radar. Often the guitar is dropped altogether, many of the songs working just as well as a cappella renditions. The audience is rapt and respectfully quiet.

‘Same Shit / Complicated’ and ‘At The Seams’ are the highlights of the set. The first is a call for mutual understanding and brilliantly paints a picture of hippies and yuppies eyeballing each other with derision before giving a characteristically frank account of the singer’s own contradictions and foibles. The second is a stripped-back protest song about institutional racism and police brutality which namechecks the Black Lives Matter movement in the chorusline. Originally posted online last year, this tune apparently took five years to write, and though there are certainly a lot of words, there’s a lot of anger too. “Prison’s a big business form of enslavement,” she sings sweetly in verse two. “Plantations that profit on black folks in cages. They’ll break our backs and keep the wages.”

Hearing a new song is enough to get us excited at the prospect of another album release (it’s been years), but it’s also a reminder of how much ground her music covers. She’s honest, funny and heartfelt, often in the same few bars. The punk roots are still there, alongside the nerd, the proud mom and the goofy storyteller. “Prince could play like 27 instruments. I can play none,” she laughs before wrapping up the night with a few lines from ‘When Doves Cry’. Her voice and words are enough.

Patterns, Friday 22nd April 2016

Apr 26, 2016
Email
Ben Bailey
Ben Bailey is the editor of Brighton Source and a freelance writer. He also plays in a few bands and can sometimes be found giving talks on a variety of niche topics. He lives in Brighton and rather likes it.
← PREVIOUS POST
Late Night Lingerie 50, Fri 27th May
NEXT POST →
10 Best Fringe Shows To See At The Warren
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • Great Escape 2026 Line Up Drop
    Nov 13, 2025

    In a beautiful city of music unlike any other, truly is there no greater place to escape and the 2026 edition promises to be a banger.

  • Lewes Psychedelic Festival 2026
    Nov 13, 2025

    What finer way is there to beat the January Blues than drink some Harveys and bath in the glory of the Lewes Psychedelic Festival!

  • Kill Local Review
    Nov 12, 2025

    A dark American comedy about a family of hit-women grappling with life’s direction, containing some graphic moments: enjoyable, with potential for even more.

  • Play On short play night returns to The Actors, Tuesday 11th November
    Nov 4, 2025

    If music be the food of love and all that... More short-form theatrical treats from Play On

  • Top Tips For The Mutations Line Up
    Nov 4, 2025

    Mutations 2025 is upon us and Team Source has your back, with these hand picked recommendations of who to see.

  • ABC Lexicon Of Love Orchestra Review
    Nov 4, 2025

    Martyn Fry and Anne Dudley brought ABC's iconic album to life with a dazzling orchestral show.

  • Ghost Stories Review
    Nov 3, 2025

    A wonderful concept of eerie and scary stories of creeping dread from a bygone era, told by incredible actors in a compelling and authentic way.

  • Band Of Holy Joy Review
    Oct 29, 2025

    The New Cross indie legends really delivered with an electrifying performance, ably supported by Brighton's own Asbo Derek.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
Kimya Dawson Review - Brighton Source