
Offerings Album Launch Show
Fibbers, York
Friday 24th
August 2007
by David Meadows
There were two support acts, Sarah
Dean and Aimie J Ryan who played about half an hour each.
Sarah sings and plays the harp. If
you like the sound of that,
you'll like Sarah Dean, if you don’t... what's wrong with you???
Anyway, she has a nice collection of songs, most of which I remembered
from her last set in the same place but the only one I really knew was Bonny At Morn
(traditional Northumbrian folk song). She has a huge contingent of
appreciative fans in the room and you could hear a pin drop when she
was singing, not the sort of thing I expect from a rock audience in a
bar and quite an interesting phenomenon.
Aimie sings and plays the guitar.
Her voice is surprisingly
powerful and her guitar playing very aggressive. Her songs didn't do a
lot for me on first listen but she's a good performer.
And now the moan of the evening: the
same audience who were
respectfully silent through Sarah's set yakked quite noticeably and
intrusively all through Aimie's. I found it really annoying,
inconsiderate to those of us who want to listen, and shockingly
disrespectful to the performer. Honestly, I sometimes think gigs would
be better without an audience.
Ok, on to the main act, who were
scheduled to play for about an hour.
I'm not going to go blow-by-blow
(that's not a flute pun, honest) through the songs. Basically they
played all of Offerings
from beginning to end (missing only Caught in a Fold). I was sure I
would know the whole set from previous gigs but they surprised me with
a new song at the end, Forsaken
Love, written but not recorded
by Stevie Nicks. (Heather says Stevie Nicks should record it, but she's
wrong; Heather's the better singer and anybody else would be a pale
imitation.)
I don’t think I can pick a highlight
from the set. I love Waiting
for the Snow. I love the melody in This Game. I love the hypnotic
quality of Round and Round. They're all perfect... Performance-wise, I
might have to pick Witches Promise. My friend (who was Jethro Tull fan
when the song was knew) thinks Angela plays it better than Ian
Anderson. I love how Angela takes the high harmony to Heather's low
melody line. Then they swap over! They have such amazing versatility,
and their voices are perfect complements, no matter who is singing the
lead. The best vocal partnership since... Coverdale/Hughes? No, the
best vocal partnership ever. Yes.
Every song in the set is beautiful,
and though I think I've heard
tighter performances from the girls, any slight imperfections were lost
in the warm atmosphere pouring off the stage. Odin Dragonfly gigs are
unique in their friendly and relaxed atmosphere. You feel more like
you've been invited to Heather and Angela's party than to a gig. You
get general chat about life, the universe and everything, moments of
genuine humour, and just general... friendliness. How much do they
natter between songs? Well, consider that the whole album is only 50
minutes and after an hour on stage Angela pointed out that they had
four songs left and zero minutes left to play them in. (I'm not point
the finger at any particular culprit in the nattering stakes, but
here's a clue: she was blonde.) Hence the cutting of Caught in a Fold,
and to be honest that was probably the best choice to cut (good though
the OD arrangement is, it's still a song I've heard dozens of times
before). And overall they played for probably an hour and a quarter.
And at the end they were so busy
talking to all their friends and
relations that I felt guilty imposing on their time to ask for
autographs. (But I'm glad I did. Thank you.)
Huh. Well now I'm incredibly late so
this won't go on my Web site
till after the bank holiday and you'll have to make do with this
version, typos and all.
Oh, forgot:
Best concert I've ever been to.
And I only say that when it's true.
Honestly.
I can tell it's true by how much I
wish I was there again tonight...