The Waterboys review – breathless, hair-prickling Big Music

Barrowland, Glasgow
Pan-Celtic post-punk returns with a dash of tambourines and a swirl of mysticism as Mike Scott leads his genre-hopping crew

Glasgow​’s​ Barrowland Ballroom is synonymous with “the Big Music”, as the Celtic alliance of rousing mid-80s breakout post-punk bands was known – from Big Country and Simple Minds to U2. So to witness the Irish Sea-straddling ensemble whose 1984 single gave the movement its name play at the hallowed spot again rates as no small pleasure.

“I had a misspent youth buying gallus clothes up the Barras,” says the Waterboys’ Edinburgh-born frontman and sole original member Mike Scott, employing the Scottish word for “daring” to describe the threads he picked up from the nearby flea market. Wearing an oversized black Stetson, black leather suit and polka-dot red scarf, his dress sense is no less adventurous today, at 60 years of age. Nor have his best songs lost any of their pluck and potency. Battering a brightly strung acoustic guitar while Dubliner sideman Steve Wickham scrapes a frayed riff up there among the most famous in folk-rock fuzz-fiddling – admittedly, this isn’t a crowded field – Scott leads his high-kicking way through a rendition of Fisherman’s Blues as energetic as any the band can ever have performed.

With sales figures nearer to In Tua Nua’s than U2’s, the Waterboys have never quite fulfilled their potential, but their first three albums remain classics of the genre. More recently Scott has worked as a soloist and the band have followed a more genre-fluid muse. Songs from their latest, 13th album, Where the Action Is, span everything from punk paean London Mick to Dusty Springfield soul-pop pastiche Out of All This Blue.

The Waterboys’ breathless live show has somewhere along the way taken up an almost Meatloaf-ian dedication to the hammy theatrics of rock’n’roll. The northern-soul-fired A Girl Called Johnny re-spawns in double-time after a fake ending, and sees perma-dancing backing singers Zeenie Summers and Jess Kav twirl madly around the stage whacking tambourines. A lengthy showcase for the talents of “Brother” Paul Brown, the Waterboys’ American pianist and organist who, as Scott says, has “his soul in Memphis, but his ass in Nashville”, sees the silver-haired surfer get three frantic, fist-bashing runs at an epic Hammond solo.

All entertaining enough, but much like the gospelly, bluesy cover of Rod Stewart’s Sailing, later received with mixed enthusiasm, perhaps not quite what everyone came for. A run of early-period songs that includes Old England – a bitter epitaph for the attitudes of empire that can’t help but take on a renewed resonance in today’s political climate – and the starkly handsome We Will Not Be Lovers captures the Waterboys’ music at its best: purposeful, sweeping, shrouded in a swirl of cosmic mysticism.

A top-five single on its reissue in 1991 and never far from a hits radio playlist since, The Whole of the Moon prickles hairs on the back of the neck, even if this particular version runs so long it feels as if the sun is probably up by the end. Joking that it’s now “school disco time”, Scott concludes with the gentle melodicism of How Long Will I Love You?, a song that, oddly enough, was covered with some success by Ellie Goulding in 2013. If perhaps not always for the most predictable of reasons, the Big Music stays big.

Contributor

Malcolm Jack

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Mike Scott of the Waterboys: how we made The Whole of the Moon
‘My girlfriend asked “Is it easy to write songs?” There was a moon, so I pulled out a pen and wrote “I saw the crescent, you saw the whole of the moon”’

Interviews by Dave Simpson

27, Jul, 2020 @1:31 PM

Article image
The Waterboys go back to Irish roots: 'We were high on music'
A box set at last releases some of the huge tranche of songs the Waterboys recorded making the Fisherman's Blues album. Mike Scott recalls the spontaneous magic of those epic sessions with Dave Simpson

Dave Simpson

05, Dec, 2013 @6:06 PM

Article image
Why Mike Scott is Richard Curtis's idol

For almost 30 years, screenwriter Richard Curtis has worshipped Mike Scott of the Waterboys. He has read out his lyrics at funerals, he plays This Is The Sea to feel restored – and he cries every time he hears The Whole of The Moon

Richard Curtis

06, Sep, 2011 @8:30 PM

The Waterboys, Royal Albert Hall, London

Royal Albert Hall, London

Ian Gittins

15, May, 2007 @9:01 AM

The Waterboys – review
Poetry-pop fusions are fast becoming fashionable, but the Waterboys' An Appointment With Mr Yeats feels like a true triumph, writes Dave Simpson

Dave Simpson

02, Feb, 2011 @6:34 PM

Time to rediscover the Waterboys

The Waterboys were the originators of 'the big music', a sound and vision shared by the likes of Arcade Fire

Alan McGee

27, Mar, 2008 @6:00 AM

Folk review: Waterboys, Room To Roam

(EMI)

Graeme Thomson

09, Aug, 2008 @11:07 PM

Article image
The Waterboys: Modern blues review – Mike Scott tries on some swagger
The folk rockers swirl soul and blues into their big music brew with some success, writes Paul Mardles

Paul Mardles

18, Jan, 2015 @12:05 AM

Article image
Discuss the new Waterboys album with Mike Scott

Listen to the Waterboys' An Appointment with Mr Yeats and read Mike Scott's track-by-track guide. Better still, the man himself will discuss it in the comments section from 3pm today ...

Mike Scott

16, Sep, 2011 @12:17 PM

Article image
Big noise: the essential pop, jazz and folk music of autumn 2018
Young talents and old hands hit the road, intriguing festivals mix things up, and there’s the first posthumous release from Prince

Alexis Petridis, Robin Denselow, John Fordham and Imogen Tilden

27, Aug, 2018 @5:00 AM