| |
| April 18th | Cardiff International Arena |
| April 19th | Brighton Centre |
| April 20th | Birmingham NEC |
| April 24th | Newcastle Telewest Arena |
| April 25th | London Wembley Arena |
| April 26th | Sheffield Arena |
| April 27th | Manchester Evening News Arena |
| April 28th | Glasgow SECC |








Image 1 / Image 2 / Image 3 / Image 4
Brighton Centre, Brighton
Caroline Sullivan
Monday April 22, 2002
The Guardian
The four women who had gone
to the trouble of dressing in pirate costumes must have been distraught
to find that Adam Ant, originally scheduled to headline this 1980s nostalgia-fest,
had pulled out. Hadley, Norman and Keeble - aka the non-Kemp members of
Spandau Ballet - were bumped up the bill to take his place, but where
do you find a kilt at such short notice in Brighton? So the Antpeople
stood solitarily in their knee breeches and Captain Hook hats, lending
a certain ludicrous majesty to the proceedings. The odd pair of fingerless
lace gloves apart, few others in the house went to such lengths to dress
up. In fact, there was little of the office-party hysteria you normally
associate with nostalgia tours, and certainly none of the inebriated writhing
that reportedly accompanied Here and Now's 2001 debut. But then,
how excited would you be by a reunited China Crisis, a matronly
Toyah or the return of the only solo star in history named Howard?
Having said that, the seven acts are a social historian's goldmine, providing
an authentic taste of the clashing genres that comprised pop during the
Tory decade. For an extra point, as each churned through their biggest
hits, you could link them to their 21st century descendants. For
instance, you could argue that China Crisis's acoustic feyness made Belle
& Sebastian possible, the screeching, semi-dressed Toyah
was the blueprint for a certain G Halliwell, and mumsy, misty Belinda
Carlisle, meet Celine Dion.
It was arguable too that Howard Jones didn't deserve the opprobrium that was heaped on him at the time. Years of conditioning make this hard to credit, but tonight he was an entertaining lesson in early electronica. Hadley, Norman and Keeble were okay, too, even without the eye-candy allure of Martin Kemp, but ABC have been dragging their reunited selves around the circuit for five years now, and it showed in the rushed delivery. You'll be unsurprised to hear that tickets for the Here and Now Christmas Party are already on sale.