Paul Weller – The Forum
November 1, 2010 by Andrew Watt
Filed under Live Reviews
Despite the fact he played songs from both The Jam and The Style Council, there was absolutely nothing nostalgic about Paul Weller’s show at The Forum.
His 2010 album Wake Up The Nation had made it blindingly obvious that the British post-punk icon was far from ready to make a living on the oldies circuit and in fact it had been revealed as a vital, urgent and challenging album.
He played a good slice of that album tonight as well as songs from 2008’s 22 Dreams, but it wasn’t what he played but how he played them that was important.
Weller exudes an effortless cool but at the same time he provides an energy in his performance that makes a mockery of many of his peers. It’s not an energy based around jumping around or high kicks, rather its an energy coming from the fact that you cant help but sense that the music still matters to him.
In fact the only song that felt like Weller was playing it out of obligation was Shout To The Top – it was a crowd pleaser but it was the only time it seemed like Weller was going through the motions. The same couldn’t be said for The Jam’s superb That’s Entertainment which was a spiky and urgent as the first time you heard it.
Of the Wake Up The Nation songs the title track and Fast Car/ Slow Traffic were highlights while the other great moment of the night was provided by The Changingman from 1995’s Stanley Road.
But I don’t think Weller actually distinguishes between old and new. I suspect, to him, each song is just a song and it has to battle for its place in the set, not due to its newness nor classic status, nor chart position or number of downloads or requests on fan forums.
In a way Weller has evolved into one of the most pure live artists you’ll see simply by playing the show that seems to fit together best to him. There were songs I wasn’t even all that familiar with and some that had a whole new approach taken to them and you can only get away with that if you have a band that is able to match its leader in its flexibility and dexterity. Weller currently has such a band.
This show was equally appealing to the hard-core Paul Weller acolytes and to those who knew nothing and were able to approach each song with completely fresh ears. The casual fan who wanted to hear the hits may have been the only ones who left feeling slightly short changed.
Wake Up The Nation – Paul Weller (Island)
June 20, 2010 by Andrew Watt
Filed under Music Reviews
The career of Paul Weller has been notable for its versatility and evolution and this album does nothing to change that view. It’s another set of sharp and incisive songs that cover a lot of stylistic ground encompassing all of his touch stones – soul, new wave, art-pop and rock n’ roll.
It’s his tenth solo album and unlike some of his contemporaries he seems to be gaining in momentum over the past few releases. While not every song will be to everybody’s taste that’s kind of the point with Weller.
The soul traditionalists will respond to No Tears To Cry (which is a superb showcase for one type of Weller vocal, the rough hewn soul singer). The title track is a socio-political call to arms that will receive favour with the “Weller for PM” crew while. The albums opener Moonshine is a British bar band rave-up that recalls his new wave beginnings, albeit coloured by enough ‘bleeps’ and ‘wizzes’ as to suggest a nod to electronica.
And that’s just the first three songs!
Throw in a couple of instrumentals (one in waltz time) and any number of other genre mash ups and you got an album from an artist who is still pushing the envelope. Perhaps the only song that could have found a logical home in one of his previous incarnations is Aim High, which devoted Style Councillors will find to their liking.
Wake Up The Nation is an album that travels and you need to be prepared to make the journey with it. It covers the small and strange and the big and momentous – an example of the latter is the anthemic Find The Torch, Burn The Plans which is perhaps the most bombastic piece Weller has offered in several years. It seems like a great candidate for a show closer in the live context.
Much has been made of Trees – a deep soul groove song that features the most raw vocal on the album and wanders in and out of Big Audio Dynamite type territory. It’s a short piece of work that is almost and album’s worth of genres in itself.
There’s a lot of like about this album, in its own right and as a pointer to Weller’s upcoming Australian tour which promises to be an intriguing event (on a number of levels)
Wake Up!!! Weller Is Coming Back
April 15, 2010 by Andrew Watt
Filed under International Tours
Paul Weller played a great 2008 Australian tour, and now it looks like we are a permanent part of his itinerary.
Weller will return in October as a part of his Wake Up The Nation tour.
Pre-sale tickets will be selling from noon on April 16 to 5pm April 22, and fans who book tickets during that time will receive a priority download of Weller’s tenth album Wake Up Nation included in the price.
Hailed by Q Magazine as ‘his solo masterpiece,’ in their 5-star review, Wake Up the Nation has been ubiquitously praised by the British press. Q goes on to proclaim, “With the exception of Bob Dylan there isn’t a single artist living or dead who has managed an album this audacious 30 years plus into a career. Wake Up the Nation is that good!”
Weller is on the cover of this month’s MOJO and it seems the glowing media awareness has now migrated to the side of the Atlantic in the way of a feature in the current issue of SPIN alongside Ted Leo who asked Paul to take part in the magazine’s April ‘Influencers’ series with him, showcasing Weller’s influence on a younger generation of musicians here in America.
Comments Leo in SPIN, “I was lucky enough to have had people like Paul already make the connections between punk and soul when I started getting into music. That was extremely important to me.”
Earlier this year, Weller received the Godlike Genius Award from NME, one of the UK’s most coveted musical accolades. On Wake Up, NME says Paul is, “Ballsy, rude and brash…,” and that the album, “…spits with fiery life.”
Of course Weller fronted The Jam in the late 70s and became one of the great post-punk new wave acts with songs like Going Underground, In The City, Beat Surrender, That’s Entertainment, The Eton Rifles Town Called Malice and Down In The Tube Station At Midnight.
Later in 1983 Weller formed The Style Council and played a uber-cool soul-pop brand of music with songs like Shout To The Top where he proved the brain and the feet could be connected after all.
OCTOBER
15 – Fremantle Arts Centre, Fremantle, WA
17 – Entertainment Centre Theatre, Adelaide, SA
19 – The Tivoli, Brisbane, QLD
22 – Enmore Theatre, Sydney, NSW
26 – The Forum, Melbourne, VIC

