The English Beat were, along with The Specials, Madness and others, part of the U.K. 2 Tone ska revival in the late 1970's. The had a slew of hits in the U.K. and a few in the U.S., namely "Mirror In The Bathroom", "Save It For Later" and "I Confess". They broke up in 1983 (spin-off groups included General Public and Fine Young Cannibals) and have recently reformed. The English Beat has always been something of a third-string favorite band of mine, yet I've always immensely enjoyed their small catalog of three albums. I've certainly never thought to see them live, until now.
The new band features Dave Wakeling and six new able-bodied members. The band confidently took the stage dressed in matching black Fred Perry polo shirts (reportedly shoulder checking various audience members on the way) and were sprightly, tight and well-rehearsed. The certainly exceeded my expectations as far as reproducing their danceably spare sound. They're touring ostensibly to celebrate the band's forthcoming Here We Go Love album, which is due this Summer. It will be the bands first studio album in thirty-four years. The band sampled two new tracks from the album ("The Love You Give Last Forever" and "Said We Would Never Die").
The band reminded the audience just how many classic tracks they had: "Twist & Crawl", "Doors Of Your Heart", "Too Nice To Talk To", "I Confess", "Hands Off She's Mine", "Save It For Later", their cover of "Tears Of A Clown" and "Mirror In The Bathroom". Wakeling and company even pulled out "Tenderness" (his later band, General Public's biggest hit). It was a great show by fine band.
Special thanks to Laurel.
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