by Elisa Linley
On 18 December 1983 an excited 11-year old headed off to
Wembley Arena in the Dad-taxi with her friends to see Duran Duran in
concert. Recollections of the Dad-taxi driver are of standing outside the
arena with many other slightly concerned-looking fathers as they listened to
the sound of screaming girls inside and wondering what on earth they would be
taking home. The 11-year old just thought it was awesome, then cried.
Duran Duran were many things in the eighties – New
Romantics, the wearers of pastel-coloured suits on boats, everything that was
wrong with Thatcher’s Britain, a teen-band sensation and writers of catchy pop
songs that are still strongly identified with the era. It was these
classics that Duran Duran brought with them to Common People 2016 on the
Bank Holiday weekend when they headlined the final day of the two-day
Southampton festival.
After a risky start playing the title track of their latest
album, Paper Gods, which not many of the gathered crowd were familiar
with, they launched in to tracks that anyone who recalls lying in front of the
stereo on a Sunday afternoon, finger poised over the pause button, will
remember. Hungry Like The Wolf, Girls on Film, Wild Boys were all
there along with a sprinkling of new tracks. It is probably Duran Duran’s
continuing work ethic since their ‘heyday’, particularly collaborating with new
producers, that has kept them from resorting to the 80’s retro circuit; over
recent years they have worked with producers including Timbaland, Mark Ronson
and Nile Rodgers.
The few new tracks they played worked well with
the back-catalogue and the momentum of the headline act didn’t falter once they got going. They played touching tributes both to David Bowie (through a segue
from Planet Earth to Space Oddity) and to Prince, speaking of his
musical influence and dedicating Save A Prayer, bathing the stage in
purple light. By the time they closed their set with one of the most
iconic eighties songs, Rio, the audience were all with them and singing
along heartily.
For many in the audience, including the once-tearful 11-year
old, it was a trip down memory lane to see Duran Duran – this time there wasn’t
any screaming, there were no tears, no Dad-taxi drivers, but an awful lot of
Dad-dancing.
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