Dexys Midnight Runners

ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL, LONDON

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Monday November 10, 2003

Hearts in mouths as the lights dim; shouts of, โ€œCโ€™mon Kev! Testify!โ€relieve the tangible tension. Dexys supporters are passionately loyal: we are rooting for him. After the well-documented wilderness years, riddled with regret and ridicule in an unjust world, can he prove to be the comeback king? Can he kick it? Yes, he can.

By nightโ€™s end, Kevin Rowland is punching the air like a man whoโ€™s scored a last-minute World Cup winner. Family and friends are emotional, as is anyone with a pulse. How glorious that Dexys should rise again, still burning, a Lazarus with the lights turned green. And how accurately Rowland and his astonishing band have gauged this, bearing in mind some previous, catastrophic, instinctive decisions. The new calm, mature Kevin knows the songs say it all, yet moments of stagecraft and theatre, even comedy, raise this above a mere reunion show. And if heโ€™s reasonable off stage, on it heโ€™s ablaze, feeling it, dropping to his knees and wailing with soul, like the white-punk Al Green who made Dexys the most legendary of legends. You shouldโ€™ve crawled on broken glass to witness this; a benchmark.

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The choice of songs and pacing, the drama, is perfect. If the opening โ€œWaltzโ€is tentative, weโ€™re entranced by Rowlandโ€™s entrance, in shades, suit and a brown fur coat. Crooning alongside him, and shouldering much responsibility with fine voice, is Pete Williams, one-time bassist, now superb foil, jolly pixie-redcoat and eager cheerleader. Kevin has updated some lyrics; for โ€œhere is a protestโ€, read โ€œthis was my protestโ€. The Dexys band?some old, some new, Mick Talbot on keyboards?is a dream, from horns to violin. โ€œThe worldโ€™s changed, so why shouldnโ€™t we?โ€asks Kevin. There are the expected goodies?a slower, sexy โ€œGenoโ€, โ€œEileenโ€ as a rabble-rousing finale (โ€œ21 years since I sang this song/Wanna right that wrongโ€), a soaring โ€œPreciousโ€?and some cult choices, like โ€œOldโ€, โ€œLiars A To Eโ€ (the line โ€œyouโ€™re the voice of experienceโ€carrying extra pathos), and a tear-jerking โ€œCouldnโ€™t Help It If I Triedโ€. The new songs, โ€œMy Life In Englandโ€and โ€œManhoodโ€, are instant classics, and one encore, The Commodores'โ€Nightshiftโ€, is a baited-breath moment only Dexys could pull off.

I could write books about the medley of โ€œUntil I Believe In My Soulโ€and โ€œTell Me When My Light Turns Greenโ€, wherein the spoken โ€˜confessionโ€™ scene is re-enacted. Rowland tells Williamsโ€™police officer heโ€™s been โ€œburningโ€. When did this incident take place? โ€œโ€™71 to โ€™93.โ€ What were you thinking? โ€œI dunno.โ€Long pause. โ€œI dunno.โ€And, as the believers around the hall holler, โ€œWhatโ€™s she like?โ€, it begins. โ€œThis Is What Sheโ€™s Likeโ€, in all its upward-spiralling holiness, performed with skill and sweat. Kevin interrupts with, โ€œThese days I wouldnโ€™t get so worked up about people with creases in their old Levisโ€; the a cappella section and worldโ€™s greatest โ€œ1-2-3-4!โ€moment are so right they scar your skin. Youโ€™re exultant that Rowland made it back over the bridge, and honoured that you saw the rebirth.

Thereโ€™s only one ending happy enough, and of course as appropriated by one godfather (Rowland) from another (the film), itโ€™s: the Italian word for thunderbolt, or something like that.