Lvrpl Sound City@ Krazyhouse

  Sandy Denny Remembered

  Donna Summer The Last Dance

  Sophie B. Hawkins Is Back!

  Karl Jenkins: The Peacemakers

  Sophie B. Hawkins Interview

  Skunk Anansie ‘12 Tour & Album

  My Focus Wales 2012

  2012 Festivals News

  Dudley Moore ‘Dudley Down Under’

  Cambridge Folk Festival 2012

  Europe Back With More…!

  Albums: Some Of The Best in ‘12

  Serj Tankian New Album Coming

  Seen & Heard March 2012

  Patti Smith New Album & Tour

  Tracer & A Little Crazy Live

  Focus Wales: Wrexham 2012

  Tenacious D’s 2012 Album & Tour

  Springsteen’s New Album & Tour

  Seether’s Great Album + Tour

  Sounds Of The City: Lvrpl K!

  Justice Live in Manchester

  Lindi Ortega: Live in Lvrpl

  Tracer Back By Popular Demand!

  Hot Off The Press: #1

  Roxy Music: Complete 1972-1982

  Graceland: 25th Anniversary

  Chickenfoot Live 2012

  Lanterns on The Lake: Live/Lvrpl

  Stop the Rock? Nope!

  Best Albums of 2011

  Within Temptation Live

  Volbeat & Toploader Live!

  Rock Local! Wrexham Central

  Seasick Steve Live

  Black Country Communion - Live!

  The Suzukis Inspired Live Show

  Sarabeth Tucek Live

  My Chemical Romance Live

  The Pretty Reckless Live

  Goo Goo Dolls Live in Liverpool


Chris Cornell Live

Birmingham Academy. 4 September 2007



Photo By JoJo

Despite mixed reviews for the cross-genre solo album CARRY ON released this summer, legendary rock singer Chris Cornell has been gathering widespread critical acclaim for his current solo world tour. His old problems with drink and drugs now firmly behind him, he’s showcasing a voice which seems now to have regained most of its original power and range.

Cornell avoids the big cheesy rock and roll entrance by sauntering onstage already crooning the solemn, Scott Walker-ishSilence The Voices’. On the new record the song doesn’t quite work; its serpentine melody half-buried under a production that threatens to shade towards progrock. Live, its challenge to political evil hits harder, its stark atmosphere slowly seducing a crowd who aren’t quite sure what they’ve come to see. It’s a bold choice of opener, especially as the song’s subtle grandeur fades only gradually into the riotous stomp of Audioslave’s 2006 single ‘Original Fire.’

Material for the two-and-a-half hour set comes from right across Cornell’s twenty-year career. While he successfully nails grandstanding performances of grunge-metal anthems like ‘Black Hole Sun’ and ‘Outshined’, he also challenges audiences with newer, stranger songs and lends some neglected rarities a new lease of life.

Seasons’, from the SINGLES movie soundtrack, starts with Cornell cross-legged on the stage flanked by two acoustic guitars: later, it builds into a kind of polyrhythmic world music, trancelike and sinuous, and incorporates a jam on Zeppelin’sIn My Time Of Dying.’ Towards the end of the show, he pays tribute to his late friend Jeff Buckley with the ghostly elegy ‘Wave Goodbye.’

A couple of songs from early 90s side project Temple Of The Dog get a surprisingly warm reaction from the youngish crowd, and Cornell chooses to play his controversial cover of Michael Jackson’sBillie Jean’ solo acoustic. Done this way, it’s less a blues workout and more a country murder ballad, closer to Johnny Cash or Nick Cave than the King Of Pop.



Photo By Sue Linehan

The Audioslave songs are perhaps the least inspiring of the evening – not because they’re badly played or sung, but because there hasn’t yet been time for them to acquire the kind of distance that allows for reinterpretation. Only their ballad ‘Doesn’t Remind Me’ seems to have transformed itself into something new. It’s acquired swing, a skip in its step which develops into a joyously soulful crowd-pleaser of a finish with Cornell’s vocal ad-libs competing with some commanding bass improvisation from powerhouse Corey McCormick.

The most powerful moments of the night come courtesy of the Soundgarden material, in which Cornell seems to have discovered a new delight. ‘Jesus Christ Pose’ still rouses a perilous energy as he stalks the stage, eyes like welding torches, mic stand slung across his shoulders. The hefty ‘Slaves and Bulldozers’ plays host to a incendiary drum solo from Jason Sutter as Cornell weaves in snatches of vocal rhythm. Finally, the band slips into a full-on cover of Led Zeppelin’sWhole Lotta Love’ – great granddaddy of Audioslave’s anthem ‘Cochise’ - which probably stands up to anything you’re likely to hear at the O2 arena in November. Through it all, the contrasting styles of guitarists Peter Thorn and Yogi Lonich conjure a complex but gloriously heavy backdrop for Cornell’s reincarnated voice.

Judging by tonight, it’ll be a long time before this particular icon is ready to retire.

By Clare O’Brien


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