The setlist was carefully constructed to cover her career to date but it's what she did with the songs and how she mixed and matched them that really enhanced the show. She went down the reggae route on a few songs that I'd never thought of in the context of a reggae treatment. And how did she squeeze in a couple of verses of 'Do Ya Think I'm Sexy' (yes, the Rod Stewart classic), 'Groove Is In The Heart', and the best version I've ever heard of 'Creep', a heavy funk dup version (yes, even better than Amanda Palmer's version, but Amanda does it with ukelele and tutu and that gets additional presentational points).
Macy has her own collection of classics, of course, and these were well represented. My personal favourites were a massive, extended version of 'Demons', the marvellous 'Sexual Revolution' which is designed to get everyone's freak on, the madness of 'Oblivion' when the roadies came on with extra cymbals and lyrics on paper, and she closed with an extended 'I Try' (of course).
Macy is a very charming lady and gives good show. She only swore a few times (a mild disappointment), is witty and, of course, has *that* marvellous voice. I liked her glitter mic stand, I liked the two singers who gave it some serious welly and shimmied and shook all over the stage and I liked the band who filled that space with sound. If you haven't seen Macy live yet then you really ought to - she's a force of nature.
Oh, and apologies for the pics taken with my phone ...
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