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
Anna Calvi | Brighton Source
Anna Calvi | Brighton Source
Reviews

Anna Calvi Review

Feb 17, 2014
-
Posted by Paul Ord

Anna Calvi has a lot to live up to. Heralded as ‘the biggest thing since Patti Smith’ on her arrival in 2011, the musician’s cavernous and romantic debut album earned her a Mercury Music Prize nomination, a reputation as a guitar virtuoso, and comparisons with PJ Harvey.

Calvi herself has since invoked a different lineage: Edith Piaf and Jimi Hendrix were formative influences; while last year’s follow up ‘One Breath’ found inspiration in composers John Adams and Steve Reich. This second full-length release brought intimate vocal lines and processed percussion to bear on already prodigious songwriting skills. The result was a less theatrical, more internalised sound, inviting parallels with latter day Scott Walker, and contemporaries such as St Vincent.

As such, tonight’s venue is an interesting choice. With its sculpted recessions and hard reflective stone, All Saints Church is a study in Gothic Revival. Many will find this in keeping with Calvi’s established aesthetic, though how any newfound subtleties will withstand such an unforgiving, if beautiful, interior is uncertain.

All doubts are soon put to rest. Opener ‘Suzanne & I’ swoons and wails with impressive clarity, drifting into sweetly harmonic vocals less typical of the Calvi of record. Instrumental ‘Rider To The Sea’ is no mere showcase of touch and technique, more a reflective lull before the frenetic offerings that follow. ‘Love Of My Life’ is aggressive but witty, its many false stops teasing, but never gratuitous.

A dark rendition of Springsteen’s ‘Fire’ finds Calvi alone on stage, steady of gaze and demonic of whisper. Her more than proficient backing return for a rousing ‘Desire’, but although a clear favourite, it’s with ‘Love Won’t Be Leaving’ that the show finds its peak. Beguiling enough in its existing structure, Calvi wrenches from the song arguably the most violent and hypnotic improvisations of the evening.

Calvi’s music thrives on dichotomies: feral yet sophisticated, intimate but expansive. The adoration she inspires seems borne of these very extremes. Drawn in, pushed back, drawn in once again, not only the crowd but the walls of the church appear to shrink and swell in sympathy with her movements.

For all this rapport, Calvi speaks little. When she does it’s with a restraint seemingly at odds with the force of her delivery. But such modesty merely suggests that, though cataclysmic in its energy, there lies beneath her performance a persistent generosity; one that lingers long after we’ve left the church for streets that are cold and still. The hail and gales of recent weeks may not be with us tonight, but the storm raised by Calvi will be far harder to shake off.

All Saints Church, Tuesday 11th February 2014
Words by Paul Ord

Feb 17, 2014
Email
← PREVIOUS POST
Prince Albert's Banksy sells for $575,000
NEXT POST →
The Wytches sign to Heavenly
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • Death Comes to Pemberley Review
    Sep 3, 2025

    Set six years after the marriage of Elizabeth to Mr Darcy, a murder on their estate takes this story into thriller territory.

  • Betty Boo, Sunday 23rd November
    Sep 1, 2025

    The legendary Betty Boo is going on her first ever solo UK tour and you can catch her at The Green Door Store in November.

  • Mutations Festival 2025 Line Up Announcement
    Aug 28, 2025

    FORM are treating us to a Bonfire Weekend full of warm goodness, bangers and fireworks!

  • Pride And Prejudice Review
    Aug 27, 2025

    A beautifully realised adaptation of one of Jane Austen’s best loved books: giving us a grounded, real and hilarious retelling in perfect balance.

  • Suddenly Last Summer Preview
    Aug 26, 2025

    A stunning version of a lesser known Tennessee Williams play, by the brilliant Conor Baum Company. Don’t miss it.

  • Band Of Holy Joy, Sunday 26th October
    Aug 14, 2025

    The mighty Band Of Holy Joy return to Brighton for a rare matinee show. With support from Asbo Derek.

  • Short Plays 2025 at New Venture Theatre Review
    Aug 1, 2025

    An intriguing evening of short plays as different from each other as apples, text books, motorways, a haircut and moonrock.

  • Matthew Bourne’s The Midnight Bell Review
    Jul 30, 2025

    A stunning, must see show, where the most talented dancers convey the most fascinating and gripping stories of love, connections and betrayals in and around London in the 1930s.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
Anna Calvi Review - Brighton Source