Gig Watch: Kate Miller-Heidke

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Kate Miller-Heidke
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It is two days later and I just can't shake it.
No I don't get the feeling that I look absurd, I just can't shake that buzzing feeling I get after a good live show.
It was a Friday night, the energy was right, another week down in history. It was warm enough to wear a dress, another tick.
I was at the Prince of Wales Hotel in St Kilda, a magic music venue, tick number three.
Meagan Washington, The Boat People and Kate Miller-Heidke, tick tick tick!
Meagan
Washington was already on stage when I arrived, thankfully it appeared
as if she had just begun, purchasing a drink to occupy my hands and
shake the working week away from my dancing feet.
I found
myself slightly impatiently waiting at the bar, because the vibe from
the stage was irresistibly attractive. Her stage presence could
honestly be felt before it was seen.
She had her entourage of
merry men with her onstage, who treated the small crowd to an
assortment of instrumental treats, including one harmonica solo that
caused an eruption of applause mid-song from the astounded audience
members.
Her sound is Disney meets Indie Rock, really accessible yet peppered with an alternative flavour.
The delicious Indie group best known for their tongue twister song Awkward Orchid Orchard are The Boat People, a Brisbane four piece who are gathering quite the cult following.
Growing
in popularity means the guys are in tune with the eb and flow of a live
show. Pushing the audience when they needed it and backing off in
acknowledgement of a group of people waiting for the main act - The
Boat People were the right choice for warming up the, now, near
capacity band room.
Announcing they were about to play their hit Awkward Orchid Orchard
gave the crowd a ticket to sing and move along with the funky little
number. Rounding off their set with a few other tracks from their new
album Chandeliers the boys gracefully left the stage in order for the
instrument and scenery changeover.
With a few false alarms of
rising screams and applause the real Kate Miller-Heidke eventually took
residency behind her keyboard on stage, and the screams and applause
were still just as consistent.
The demand for artists to be
entertainers, as well as good musicians, has seen some performers fall
by the wayside - yet Kate Miller steps up to the plate as though it was
never a challenge, appearing comfortable in her own skin and on stage
she is intriguingly natural.
She was at total ease,
interjecting her set list with anecdotes from tours and shows, she also
proves her worth as a story teller.
With three EPs and two
albums as credits to her name, it must become increasingly harder to
choose appropriate songs for a set list.
Kate's set list on
the night of launching her new album was hard to fault, including a
delectable array of songs from Little Eve and Curiouser . She also
found time to slip in a cover of the Johnny Farnham rock classic You’re
The Voice.
The audience was also fortunate enough to have Kate
perform on guitar a rare delight she claims to have not tried since she
was 16, either that was a ‘stage story’ or she is just naturally multi
talented, she carried voice just as well as she strummed out the little
number including audience participation and all.
Finishing her set on latest single Shake It
, I willed the crowd to shut-up and not coax her back on stage, because
it would be hard to top a moment like that . Unfortunately my ESP must
not be in good working order because they did not settle down at all
until she returned to the stage.
Also unfortunately I think I
was right, though she did come back with a couple of favourites
including finishing on one of my personal favourites Don’t Even Know My Name, it still didn’t match the energy that Shake It produced.
Thankfully the ‘Shake It-Energy’ was enough to continue pulsating through the crowd creating a buzz that lasted.
Sharing
the night with a couple of Kate Miller Heidke fans and a Californian
friend who had barely heard of her before he knew me, the unanimous
consensus was ‘mesmerising from top to tail’.
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