Ian Gittins 

Noel Gallagher’s High-Flying Birds review – a prodigious songwriting talent stuck in his comfort zone

Dogged sweat and elbow grease can’t hide the fact that Gallagher’s new material is more of the plodding same, writes Ian Gittins
  
  

Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds in concert, The Dome, London, Britain - 02 Feb 2015
Workmanlike melodies … Noel Gallagher. Photograph: Lawrence Watson Photograph: Lawrence Watson/Sour Mash/REX/Rex Features

As a man who is frequently accused of recycling riffs and being overly in thrall to rock history, Noel Gallagher may be offering a hostage to fortune in naming his imminent album Chasing Yesterday. The penny appears to have dropped vis-à-vis that particular own goal: “As soon as it [the title] went out, I hated it,” he has admitted.

Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, the post-Oasis project that he freely confesses is ‘basically me and whoever else is around’, are tonight previewing their second album in front of a select audience of invitees and ballot-winners. Going by this likable but essentially unremarkable show, it is profoundly unlikely to mark a radical musical left-turn from their eponymous debut.

More than 20 years into his career, Gallagher remains a frustrating conundrum. Seemingly able to pluck mercurial melodies from the air, he tethers them to workmanlike, pedestrian arrangements; a sharp and witty quote machine in interviews, he nevertheless dispenses lyrics that rarely rise above the cliched and prosaic.

It’s a huge shame, because he patently remains a prodigious songwriting talent. In the Heat of the Moment, the lead single from Chasing Yesterday, a bombastic anthem meticulously calibrated by this master craftsman to resound around the world’s arenas, can’t help but sound formidable when experienced at close quarters in a room over a pub. Yet his new songs are blatantly missives from his comfort zone. Gallagher’s bluff, no-bullshit persona seems to render him allergic to musical innovation or lyrical flights of fancy. Riverman is a mid-tempo bluesy plod; Lock All the Doors revisits a song he wrote for Oasis 23 years ago, and demonstrates that Gallagher’s muse tends not to be prone to quantum leaps. Far better is AKA … What a Life!, a euphoric number from the High Flying Birds’ debut whose quasi-rave beats and freewheeling urgency recall Let Forever Be, his 1999 collaboration with the Chemical Brothers. Recent single Ballad of the Mighty I is not, as he has claimed, one of the best songs he has ever written, but its chorus soars and its plaintive yearning rings true.

Gallagher’s mind is on the night’s other low-profile celebrity gig: “I’m not doing an encore because I’m going to see Prince, and he’s on in 10 minutes,” he grins before closing with Don’t Look Back in Anger, a nugget from an era when he defined the musical zeitgeist. For all of tonight’s dogged sweat and elbow grease, that feels a long, long time ago.

• At the Odyssey Arena, Belfast on 3 March. Tickets: 028-9073 9074. Venue website. Then touring.

 

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