Live Review: Ben Harper

12 November 2012 | 1:53 pm | Samuel Fell

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At this point in his career, Ben Harper can afford to be a little indulgent. It's a touch over 20 years since he released the seminal Pleasure And Pain album and in the ensuing time he's become an icon in modern roots music – an interpreter, innovator and an inspiration to many musicians and fans.

And so he tours this time around in solo mode, a guise he's not before undertaken to such an extent, with his live solo output to date limited to the odd song during Innocent Criminal sets, or Relentless7. And this brings us back to Harper being indulgent, for that's what a solo tour is, particularly at this point in an artist's career – three hours of you. Nothing else, no one else, just you. And that's how it goes down at the Convention Centre, in front of a near-capacity audience.

Now, Harper can pull this off. The man tonight is in ebullient form, his repartee with the audience is genuine and affectionate (perhaps a little too genuine in places), his passion for what he does is truly real and so he cruises, shuffles and bumps through a set that finally comes to an end some three hours after it began, a deep and meaningful look at a great many of the songs that have made him great, recreated in the form they doubtlessly began as – solo acoustic.

However, the appeal of Harper's music lies in his sonic interactions with his band, whether that be the all-conquering Innocent Criminals or the more stoner rock influenced Relentless7 and so, to be brutally honest, tonight loses focus on many occasions. And during these moments, one can't help but slip into their own head, where things are more interesting.

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He begins with Diamonds On The Inside, which has people in raptures. He gives us Burn One Down, which at that point (around two and a half hours in), most really wish they could. He plays a few new, unheard songs, which are solid. He plays With My Own Two Hands and gives us a freaked out slide version of Leonard Cohen's seminal but extremely overplayed Hallelujah. He plays a Pearl Jam cover on the marimba, which is great and, in the set highlight, he belts and buckles and bullies the lone piano into a crescendo of thundering, booming vocal-infused sonic sludge that raises hairs and quickens the heart.

But despite the fact the show is fine – great in parts – its impact is lessened because it's a three-hour set that was an hour and a half too long; an at times rambling over-indulgent monster, which really could have benefitted from the interactions with a band Harper does so well.