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Diamanda Galas @ Queen Elizabeth Hall, London

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  • Diamanda Galas @ Queen Elizabeth Hall, London

    DIAMANDA GALAS @ QUEEN ELIZABETH HALL, LONDON

    Playlouder news
    http://playlouder.com/content/16647/diamanda- gal-s-queen-elizabeth-hall-london
    April 3 2008
    UK

    It's a motley crew sipping Pinot Noir from plastic in the foyer of
    Queen Elizabeth Hall, and small wonder: from what little I've heard
    about (and by) tonight's performer, she's likely to be filed under
    'niche', if indeed she's likely to be filed, which I doubt.

    Personally, I've never dared slot 'Defixiones: Will and Testament'
    in between Free's 'Fire and Water' and the eponymous debut album
    by Garbage.

    The idea of Shirley singing "I'm only happy when it rains" on one side
    and Paul singing "Alright now" on the other, while betwixt Diamanda
    wails and screams in languages I don't know about the Armenian genocide
    does not sit well with me.

    Tonight's performance isn't about genocide though, or about AIDS,
    (another of Diamanda's favourite topics), it's about (as unlikely as
    it may seem) love.

    Ms. Galas' latest collection, 'Guilty, Guilty, Guilty', is billed as
    "a program of tragic and homicidal love songs and death songs", but
    I haven't heard it yet, so am earnestly hoping for a cover of Bobby
    Goldsborough's 'Honey'. She specialises in covers, although 'cover'
    doesn't really do her justice. Perhaps 'deconstruction' or simply
    'destruction' would be closer to the truth? (And we're not talking
    Emma Bunton's 'Downtown' here.)

    Diamanda emerges from a successfully foreboding cloud of solid carbon
    dioxide looking like she means business. If you can imagine Cruella
    de Vil as painted by Hieronymus Bosch in his little-known monochrome
    period, you're close. She seats herself gracefully at the lone piano
    on the large, empty stage, (careful not to sit on her hair), draws
    back her long black, black sleeves revealing slender white, white
    fingers, and without so much as a "Hello London!" begins tentatively
    exploring the length of the keyboard, feeling it, playing with it,
    and then attacking it quite savagely.

    She got very angry once when a journalist said she didn't improvise
    live. Now I'm no piano expert, but frankly I'd be pretty bloody
    surprised if the death jazz, doom blues, creepingly monstrous, and
    occasionally dainty technique we witness is anything but archaic
    deities being channelled.

    And her voice? Well, suffice to say I suggested to staff on my way
    out that they might want to consider fitting the seats with belts,
    and the audience with crash helmets. Not to say it's not a thing of
    beauty - it is - but Diamanda's voice is like a natural disaster of
    supernatural proportions. Insure your ears against acts of God. You
    have been warned.

    When 'Gloomy Sunday' was played in Hungary in the early 20th century
    it apparently encouraged a spate of deaths, so much so that it became
    known as 'The Hungarian Suicide Song'. The desperate lyrics coupled
    with the already crippling Curse of Turan were too much for the
    miserable Magyars, and they topped themselves by the dozen.

    Had they heard Diamanda's rendering, perhaps it'd have done the
    job for them. When Diamanda sings she is not a lone forsaken lover,
    she is all forsaken love.

    She sings in numerous languages too. French, being the only other one
    I vaguely understood, and that was quite a pleasant song: I may even
    have tapped my foot.

    The rapturous applause that greets the end of each song is especially
    fervent after one unrecognisable number. The chap next to me leaps up
    and shouts "Σ'αγα &am p;#960;ώ!" so I assume it was
    (or he is) Greek.

    Anyway, smashing stuff.
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