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Since her debut solo album in 1999 Melanie Chisholm has grown her hair,
ditched her tracksuits, beefed up her sound and tried out various pop
genres. Never mind the millions in the bank, the Warrington-born singer
clearly craves a long-term career.
But old habits die hard, and most solo tours by former teen-pop androids are
painfully clinical and well-drilled affairs. Given the airless and drearily
mature tone of Chisholm’s newly released second album, Reason,
we might reasonably have expected a similar level of soulless
professionalism to characterise her London show on Thursday. But instead,
the artist formerly known as Sporty Spice kicked and snorted and screamed
herself hoarse. Wearing a plunging black T-shirt emblazoned with the legend
“Rock Rules”, the singer seemed hell-bent on erasing all memories of her
Spicy past by rebranding herself as some kind of born-again heavy metal
diva. Admittedly the effect was more Kelly Osbourne than Janis Joplin, but
the energy and enthusiasm felt genuine.
Four years ago, Chisholm seemed faintly ridiculous and wholly unconvincing
when she first unveiled her spiky-topped rock direction. But she has grown
into it over time, mustering a muscular and dynamic set on Thursday. The
shuddering guitar riffs and descending keyboard motifs of her former single, Goin’
Down, provided one mid-set highlight, as did a lascivious Home
from the new album, presented in a more meaty arrangement than its wan
studio blueprint. A frenetic cover of Stevie Wonder’s I Wish
and the disco-trance juggernaut I Turn to You also proved engaging.
But there remain many hurdles to clear if Chisholm hopes to generate a career
rebirth like Robbie or Kylie. There were still too many lifeless Celine Dion
moments in her London set, with deadweight plodders such as Positively
Somewhere and Melt — the latter co-written by the former Robbie
sideman Guy Chambers — simply filling in time. Even her bouncy new single On
the Horizon, a collaboration with Gregg Alexander, of the wretched
American corporate rockers the New Radicals, sounded like a contractual
obligation.
Melanie C has a moderately good voice and dedication in spades, but she badly
needs an Angels or a Can’t Get You Out of my Head to
propel her out of this MOR rut. A dash more sparky personality to her
self-penned sixth-form lyrics would be a good start. Chisholm has already
proved herself as a perfectly decent middle-rank pop star, but to achieve
true distinction as a solo artist she requires — dare I say it — a little
more spice.
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