St. Vincent makes a comment not very far into her Orlando performance that seems altogether too fitting. After warmly welcoming the gentlemen as well as the ladies, she wins her loudest applause when she welcomes âeverything and everybody in between.â Perhaps itâs because she identifies more with those occupying that gapâthe âfreaksâ as she calls themâthan being either male or female. Itâs an idea.
And itâs almost impossible to talk about her concert in Orlando without making mention of seeing her perform a short five years ago in Seattle. To say sheâs participated in some kind of steady image overhaul since then is putting it lightly. Then, she was the pretty diminutive indie girl with the smudged bright red lipstick, dark hair and mind-bending guitar solos. Now, her confidence has been given some kind of colossal boost forward, and for good reason, too. Now, sheâs the interpretive dancer/robot with metallic hair, talking in allegories and still, yes, absolutely owning that guitar. What a difference a few years make.
Recently, I read an interview about St. Vincent never wanting to compromise her sound, that, in the end, it was all she really had to cling to. And that was readily apparent. Switching out guitar after guitar, sometimes climbing to the top of a towered platform, syncing dance moves with her keyboardist, and even laying down while singing, there was so much happening on her stage, nobody knew when to escape to get a drink or head to the bathroom. We were all holding our breath. There wasnât a safe time to duck away, because, when you watch the St. Vincent movie, you realizeâand quicklyâthere are no lulls. You just want to see what sheâll do next, song after song.
St. Vincent was as comfortable singing her new songs (âI Prefer Your Love,â âBirth in Reverseâ) as she was the not so brand new (âActor Out of Work,â âCheerleaderâ). Who really cares if you canât sing or dance to it? Sheâs there to perform. And to hear people excited to scream out random outbursts of âI love you, Annie!â before sheâd answer by launching into another screamer of a guitar solo.
You get the sense, in watching St. Vincent, that sheâs totally enjoying this path, and why shouldnât she be? No wonder theyâre comparing her to Bowie. Singing behind a microphone and offering a cookie cutter concert experience isnât enough for her. She needs to spread her wings and fly around a while. She needs to lead her minions in directions theyâd not expected to go. And she does. And she did.
Could it have sounded a little better in there? Probably. Would it have been a little nicer to have the tiniest bit of elbow room? Most definitely. Still, if I were a betting man, Iâd bet a whole $20 that every single person attending left fully satisfied with all theyâd seen and heard.
If she doesnât come back this way soon, count this guy surprised: out of all the shows Iâve ever seen at The Beacham (and itâs a big number, promise), Iâve never seen more people packed into that space than I did for St. Vincent. Itâs fairly easy to understand why they came out in droves, too. Nobody in the music world is doing what she is doing right now. Nobody.
Sidenote: Just checked. Sheâll be back in December, opening for The Black Keys. Plan now and enjoy (not so much) later.
Check out the live concert photos of St. Vincent from Lindsay Tompkins Photography below!
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- The Commission Beer Chamber
- Kingfish Records (Clearwater)
- Nora's Sugar Shack!
- Park Ave CDs
- Montgomery Drive Presents
- RT-Art Printing
- The Mary Jane 'High-Quality' Art Gallery
- The Owl's Attic Vintage Shop
- Broken Strings Brewery
- American Combat Club
- Lazy Moon Pizza
- Ten10 Brewing
- Leguminati
- Mutiny Ocala
- The Tipsy Skipper
- Conrad's Beer Shanty
- AKT Shirt Printing
- Smartpunk Records & Shop
- No Clubs Presents
- DaddyKool Records
- Galactic G Skateshop
- Oscura Live + Oscura Coffee Shop