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Stretch, Napier NZ, 2022 » Stretch 220923 Urban Winery-3

Marking a return to stage in full band format, Stretch and his talented cohort brought the fizz to the Urban Winery, in the first of two exclusive gigs in hometown Hawkes Bay-perhaps the prelude to more, we can but hope! As mentioned previously, the last year or two has been a time of hiatus in the camp, but judging by the fire and passion in evidence from this performance, that time has been anything but wasted. These are songs that demand exposure, brought to life by a combo in complete harmony with each other, for our listening pleasure! The outing commenced with the duo of Stretch and Paula (or trio, if the redoubtable Cyril is to be acknowledged!) and the appropriately titled “Last Call For the Road”, and then proceeded to take us on a journey through the highways and byways of the 2 albums produced to date. In an unintended twist of ironic optimism, this song’s repeated motif of “keep your voice down” came to assume a certain significance as the night continued-more anon... In a small-scale version of Talking Heads’ “Stop Making Sense” routine, the band was augmented progressively, with drummer Arahi Whaanga taking the stool from “Here Come the Starlings” onwards, and guitarist Cam Burns sliding in at “House Full of Ghosts”. Each bringing their own contribution, notably Cam summoning the spirit of the blues for the intro of “Less Rock, More Roll”, and Arahi’s taking centre stage to sing his own “Purpose of This Man”, swapping positions with Stretch. As noted earlier, there was an element of the audience that, somewhat disrespectfully in my opinion, clearly felt that their own conversations were of more import than what the rest of us were there for, but rather than being cowed by such a passive-aggressive display, instead the band took energy from it and fed it back, the songs taking on increasing amounts of fire, exemplified fittingly by the one cover song, “I’m On Fire” with a delivery pitched somewhere between that of the original and the subsequent Head Like A Hole version. This got a number of those who had ears to hear on to the floor, and inspired the choice of continuing to play on rather than take a break at this point-feeding in to a passionately delivered (and crowd-inspired?) “I Know You’ve Been Bad”, the band playing their hearts out to an intense crescendo. The emotion (but never the passion!) then proceeded in a different direction, culminating in “Lonely Star” with its dedication to those lost along the way, providing its own intensity in a simple and subtle way-even if such subtlety was lost on a section of the crowd! All too soon, though, the final number was played, completed perfectly by a (we’re told unintentionally) glass-dropping by an audience member right after the final note. So perfectly timed was it that it deserves a regular appearance, Hinauri and venues permitting! Having left it all on stage, the band then retired, only to, in the fateful words of Bono “dream it all up again” for next week at Havelock North's Peak House , and who knows where after that? Songs that need to be heard, played by a band who’s home is the stage-get amongst it!

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2022-09-25

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