Robyn Hitchcock and Emma Swift returned to Stageit on June
10th for week 12 of their at-home concert series, “Sweet Home
Quarantine.” The theme was the 1980’s. It was great fun to see and hear Robyn
and Emma singing some of their favorite songs from that decade.
Robyn wore a checked jacket that he bought in San Francisco
in 1984. It definitely fit the bill for an 80’s show. Robyn opened the show
solo with R.E.M.’s “You Are the Everything,” which he heard them play nearly
every night when he opened for them in the late 1980’s. That was followed by Don
Henley’s “The Boys of Summer,” which might strike you as an unlikely song for
Robyn to cover. But he did a great job, and his guitar playing was outstanding.
Hearing “The Boys of Summer” played with just the guitar obviously strips the
song down to the marrow, and you hear the song in a different way, isolated
from the 1980’s production of the hit record.
Emma Swift joined Robyn for “Charlotte Ann,” by Julian Cope,
and two excellent Psychedelic Furs songs, “Love My Way,” and “The Ghost in You.”
As always, Robyn and Emma’s voices blended superbly on these songs. Robyn previously
covered “The Ghost in You” on his 2014 album The Man Upstairs, which I reviewed here.
Emma then got a magnificent solo turn as she sang “I Drove
All Night,” made famous by Cyndi Lauper, and also sung by Roy Orbison and Celine
Dion. It was fantastic and makes me hope that Robyn and Emma record some of
these quarantine songs and put them on an album. Or two. Or three. The
Quarantine Sessions!
Robyn sang solo on Roxy Music’s “To Turn You On,” which he
also covered on The Man Upstairs. It was a beautiful version of a great
song. One of the things that makes Robyn’s version so interesting is that whereas
Bryan Ferry’s original sounds like the smooth pick-up line of a confident
lover-man, Robyn sounds like an earnest suitor, offering a sincere token of his
love.
Emma then absolutely killed it with a beautifully haunting
rendition of the Smiths’ “There is a Light That Never Goes Out.” I’ve never really
listened to much of the Smiths, and I had never heard this song before hearing
Emma sing it, and I was knocked out by it. Correction—the internet tells me I
heard the Smiths’ version in the movie (500) Days of Summer, with Zooey
Deschanel and Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Oops. Well, Emma’s version was the first
time the song stuck with me.
Robyn and Emma duetted on a great version of “Walking on
Sunshine,” which was written by Robyn’s Soft Boys bandmate Kimberley Rew. It
was odd to hear this song, one of the poppiest feel-good tunes of the 1980’s, sung
by Robyn Hitchcock, but it was a fun tribute to Robyn’s friend and former
bandmate. As Robyn said, “that song was brought to you with a cherry of
nihilism on top—that would be self.” Thinking of Robyn as a cherry of nihilism brought
a smile to my face.
The last tune of the evening was the Traveling Wilbury’s “Handle
with Care,” complete with Robyn donning a top hat, ala Tom Petty. Another
enjoyable evening of tunes from Nashville.
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