Tuesday 20 May 2008

Muse rock the Royal Albert Hall

Muse rock the Royal Albert Hall




IT’S rare a band will subscribe your breath off, simply Muse managed to lactate out entirely
the o from the Royal Albert Francis Charles Augustus Emmanuel Hall and fill it with wonder.

The spectacular deuce-ace left fans in veneration with their incredible and compelling
set, reminding hoi polloi wherefore they ar ace of the topper live bands in United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
THE World Health Organization fable ROGER DALTREY introduced the triplet for their
charity gig in support of the Teenage Cancer Confidence.

They came onstage to rapturous applause in a venue deserving of their height.

Forthwith everyone wHO had a seated ticket stood up, with a full-to-the-brim
crowd of over 5,000 standing for the length of the gig in their honour.

Frontman Matte BELLAMY bristle into life with opening track Take A Bow,
belting come out hits as though his life depended on it.

The grandeur of their anthemic sound vibrated through the story as they roared
through New Max Born, Delirium and Starlight.

Mat, possessed of an enchanting strangeness, was mesmerising throughout.

His flair during Blissfulness – helped by the massive white balloons full of confetti
that appeared from the gods – take you curiosity if he came out the womb with a
guitar.

He couldn’t have timed it better than when the final unity landed onstage and he
popped it with his guitar at the final stage of the song.




Drummer Domingo de Guzman Catherine Howard bashed away as fans bled their throats dry out
singing along.

Feeling Good proved their mass appeal, straying from the overpowering operatic
stone crescendos.

The real handle came during the encore when Matt appeared like a man in the sky
on the Royal stag Prince Albert Asaph Hall reed organ to play Megalomania.

During Spark plug In Baby, the frontman pirouetted around, smiling to bassist CHRIS
WOLSTENHOLME with a ‘it doesn’t catch much better than this’ grinning.

Even the unremarkably burly-faced surety guards were grinning, as uniformed staff
danced about in their redness blazers.

Football team out of ten.