

As an aside, the evening wasn't all peachy. The doors to the venue which were scheduled to open at 7 pm didn't open until around 7:30 which meant waiting outside in the cold in the lineup to get into the venue. Then, once they started letting people in, the security check at the door was excrutiatingly slow. ...And I don't want to even mention the washrooms.

Damon took an interesting approach to the set; he introduced the set to be comprised of, first, the "One Plus One is One" album in its entirety, then a short intermission, and then the band coming back to play some old favourites. I haven't check out the recent album but from the show I liked what I heard. The album sounded a little more consistent than "Have You Fed The Fish?" which had its share of stinkers. Alternating between orch-pop standards, jazzy instrumentals and folky troubadour-ing, the live version of "One Plus One is One" was extremely satisfying. Damon was quite the storyteller, showing himself to be quite the sentimentalist. Damon told a story about meeting Bruce Springsteen about 5 years ago, how his song "Thunder Road" meant so much to him, how he gave his son Oscar the middle name 'Bruce', how he met up with Bruce several years later, how Bruce during one concert dedicated a song to Damon and his son Oscar, and how that moment was one of the most important points in his life. Great story, and Damon even apologized to the heckler[who Damon called a wanker or such] who had interrupted him during his story. If only, Damon had played "Thunder Road", that would have been perfect. Instead, I believe he played "Life Turned Upside Down".
When Damon and the band returned after the short intermission, they played a bunch of old favourites including "A Minor Incident", "Silent Sigh", "Have You Fed The Fish?", "The Shining", and "You Were Right", although no "All Possibilities" which I was deeply disappointed in not hearing. Towards the end of the show, Damon took on the persona of a soul singer, spewing out a series of non-sensical, stream-of-consciousness lyrics about everything and nothing, which lead into him introducing the band with the most creative(and funny) descriptions EVER. I could go on gushing about the show ad nauseum: how the lighting effects were spectacular and colourful, how wonderful the string section and flute arrangements sounded, how enjoyable Damon's stage banter and stories were, and how everyone on stage seemed to be genuinely enjoying themselves. It's a night I'll remember for a long time. I didn't think anything could beat the PJ Harvey show this year at the Phoenix Concert Theatre in Toronto, but the Badly Drawn Boy show at Palais Royale comes close. At one point in the night, Damon said that Toronto was one of the best stops on the tour so far; and yes it definitely felt like it.
[photos from the show]