Orlando Weekly - January 12, 2022

Page 31

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PHOTO BY JEN CRAY

WE’LL BE TOGETHER AGAIN?

Veteran Brit-synth duo Erasure return to Orlando at the strangest possible time BY MATTHEW MOYER

“I

t is a bit odd touring now. It’s very strange,” mused tronic underground in 1985 — where Clarke had previously taciturn Erasure instrumentalist Vince Clarke in his done stints as a founding member of Depeche Mode and Yaz, usual taciturn way during a recent interview with and Andy Bell, a musical neophyte, blazed a trail as an outBeaver County Times about his band’s U.S. tour. and-proud frontperson with an unforgettable presence — to “Strange” is a bit of an understatement, as the Omicron become hitmakers, magazine cover-stars and arena sellouts variant of COVID-19 sweeps through the state of Florida, all around the world before that decade was through. Think with a positivity rate just in Orange County nearing 30 per- hits like “Oh L’amour” (1986), “Chains of Love” (1988) and “A cent as of this writing — meaning Little Respect” (1988). nearly one in three Orlandoans Now the duo of Bell (an honorERASURE are testing positive for COVID-19. ary Florida man who calls Miami with Bag Raiders Shows are being canceled by the home for several months each 8 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 15 handful this month. The live music year) and Clarke have a new album Walt Disney Theater, Dr. Phillips Center industry is being punched in the to finally tour behind, The Neon, 445 S. Magnolia Ave. stomach … again. and they’ve been doing just that drphillipscenter.org And yet, few bands in the British since last autumn in the U.K. alternative scene — or indeed the The Neon, released back in 2020, $39.50-$466 entire pop-music firmament — is something of a return to form for embody “The show must go on!” Erasure, as Clarke dug back into with more verve and flair than Erasure. And few bands would his hoard of analog synths to create the tracks, merging classic be as capable of making us forget the “2022 blues” than seeing gear with their collective evergreen pop savvy. Erasure go the full glitz-and-glamour live. The Neon tour — which, wildly, kicks off here in Florida This long-lived synth-pop duo rose out of the British elec- with dates in Orlando, St. Pete and Miami — has garnered rave

reviews as a riot of corsets, fake fur, a greatest-hits setlist, nonstop ecstatic dancing and plenty of (yes) neon mood lighting. In the game of lowered expectation that is seeing erstwhile legends a few decades into their career, Erasure never fails to bring the elusive “it” live. Their 2018 Orlando tour stop turned the Dr. Phillips Center’s ornate Walt Disney Theater into a dance club, the full house on their feet the entire time — and some hardy souls making a beeline stageward, assigned seats be damned. Bell strutted and posed out front and center, voice utterly undiminished by time, while a besuited Clarke surveyed it all coolly atop of a tower of colorful neon, only his synths for company. The set was a stunning parade of hit after hit, a soundtrack of 1980s and ’90s nightlife. The finish of the night saw Clarke descending from on high to pick up an acoustic guitar and strum an encore of “A Little Respect” side by side with Bell. The genuine warmth and camaraderie between the two extended out toward the crowd, and was more than reciprocated back at them. “When you have a job like I do, you kind of feel like you’re giving love to lots and lots of people,” Bell candidly told OW’s Jesse Feinman back in 2018. “It’s really such a privilege to feel loved by somebody.” And he was right. The lyrics to one song aired on that night, their late-’80s single “Stop!”, have been lodged in our heads on endless repeat while writing this piece. Verses ostensibly about romantic love have taken on a more haunting, teasing tone as Omicron causes a lot of folks to take a raincheck on going out to keep their loved ones healthy. “We’ll be together again / I’ve been waiting for a long time.” Is this a triumphant celebration, a delayed promise or even a plea circa 2022? Maybe a little bit of all three.

orlandoweekly.com

music@orlandoweekly.com ●

JAN. 12-18, 2022 ● ORLANDO WEEKLY

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