Portishead @ Corn Exchange

The core style of the old Portishead now informs the 'filler' of the new

Live Review by Ally Brown | 03 May 2008

Such is the dinner-party aesthetic that Portishead unwittingly acquired after Dummy, it’s a minor surprise the Corn Exchange floor isn’t arranged with furnished tables for Beth Gibbons to lounge over. Instead the packed crowd is loud and excitable, and it’s no fun when a surplus of drunken lads are yelling “I just want to be a woman” to drown out Gibbons’ gentle plea.

When she can be heard, her dramatic mewl pierces the atmosphere like a scythe, and Geoff Barrow demonstrates the devastating percussive force of the new songs when he replaces his DJ headphones with drumsticks. The core style of the old Portishead now informs the ‘filler’ of the new, but Glory Box and Wandering Star sit easily alongside the apocalyptic tones of Machine Gun and Threads, if only because they’re united by Gibbons’ unique voice. Moments before the encore, she breaks her between-song silence to tell us we’ve been one of the best crowds they’ve ever had; be assured Beth, the feeling is mutual.

Read The Skinny's preview of Portishead's Edinburgh show here.

 

New Album Third is out now via Island

http://www.portishead.co.uk