Sounds miserable. I wonder if the set-up theory is true.
http://magazine.brighton.co.uk/Home/Edi ... 105_1481#a
The idea of an evening with Ian McCulloch sounds appealing, very appealing - but Mac is drunk, very drunk. Very few people past the front row can hear a thing he says, not that it makes very much sense, just a jumble of jokes and a strangely likeable self aggrandisement.
But the songs are beautiful, always beautiful. Zimbo, Rescue, a short slice of Villier's Terrace, Killing Moon (of course) and a rendition of Lou Reed's a Walk on the Wild Side all sound as great as acoustic numbers as they ever did with the full band.
The real problem was that all the false starts and stops, which started out funny, became predictable and then manifested in the crowd as frustration and even anger as people walked out and even shouted abuse. I just relaxed, sipped my drink and let it all flow over me.
The evening finished with an aborted attempt to do Ocean Rain and some kind of set-up row between Mac and an audience member. He then stormed off.
Set up? Well yes, this journalist overheard the boyfriend of the support act in the toilets telling a friend that the man in the audience was Mac's mate, and that very same thing had happened in Tunbridge Wells on the previous night. It was Mac's way of getting off the stage.
He could have just said 'bye'.