Rag’n’Bone Man, tour review: A surely unstoppable star in waiting

Rory “Rag’n’Bone Man” Graham borrows from many, yet he’s his own man and at times, his talent left the audience in awed silence
Backwoodsman’s growl: Rag'n'Bone Man
John Aizlewood
25 November 2016

Graham padded around the stage like a malevolent teddy bear, his backwoodsman’s growl soaring over a genre-blending melange of hip-hop beats, sweeping keyboards, tightly drilled soul, big drums and a gospel heart.

Whether throwing himself into Bitter End’s heart of darkness or the new, lovelorn As You Are (“It’s hard to write miserable songs when you’re as happy as I am,” he admitted), Graham borrows from many, yet he’s his own man and when he sang the traditional In My Time of Dying alone and a cappella, the awed silence was deafening.

In the epic, Biblical-imagery-swamped juggernaut that was Hell Yeah, Graham transformed himself into an Old Testament fire and brimstone prophet, but when the crowd hollered the chorus of Human (Germany’s No 1 single, right now) louder than Graham himself, an already airborne evening turned appropriately celestial for a star in waiting.

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