Neue Osnabruecker Zeitung - July 20, 2005


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by Carola Alge

De Burgh: I enjoyed it - you are fantastic

Lingen. Chris de Burgh is often joked about as a "softener from the green 
island" - no way!What the the 56 year old offered with his over two and a 
half hour show on the Marktplatz in Lingen, is anything but a soft 
package. The singer proves to be musically versatile and rocking and 
raises his audience towards enthusiasm over and over again. The over 2500 
listeners give standing ovations for an overwhelming concert.

A concert, that the singer performs solo - as during his beginnings (when 
he played in restaurants for two pounds a week and a hamburger daily). De 
Burgh only with guitar or on the piano. "Doesn't this become boring?" 
certainly some of the not so die-hard fans of the Irishman have probably 
asked themselves this before. No, it certainly doesn't become boring. De 
Burgh comes along dressed all in black. The man who was born in Argentina 
managed right from the start to raise a private intimate atmosphere when 
he greeted the audience in German with a "Guten Abend, Lingen", and made 
them all part of the happening.

Charming and funny de Burgh communicates with his audience for whom he 
has a big compliment in stock: "Tonight you sing very good here in Lingen."
In a good mood, yes sometimes even a bit like a comedian, he entertains 
his fans, welcomes also the onlookers from the windows of the market 
buildings and in the street restaurants ("Mmh, it smells good here"), 
chats with his audience during his songs all the time and when he looks 
from the stage into the crowd he makes everyone feel that he only looks 
at him or her at this moment.

The Irishman who was about to fly back to Ireland from Mnster the same 
night had packed a musically versatile program in which one could hear 
many songs from his new album "The Road To Freedom", especially during 
the first part. The constant change between breast voice and falsetto 
which is so typical for de Burgh and even became his trademark, is also 
present in the new tracks. He has just performed three songs, when a 
female fan gave him the first present on stage, a bottle of wine. A 
turning plastic sunflower, real flowers, a big stuffed toy dog follow 
during the evening - and a mug of beer that another woman gave him to the 
stage and from which Chrissie took a sip right away.

Rocky-poppy songs and ballads in a good mixture, that is the program that 
de Burgh serves his fans unplugged and with which they play along just as 
much as the song demands: For example thoughtfully listening during the 
anti war song "Up Here In Heaven" or joyfully clapping during "A Spaceman 
Came Travelling", a rocky song that spread a hint of Christmas to the 
place where there will be a Christmas market in five months.

After around one and a half hours follows the first of many world famous 
songs of the Irishman which now come one by one and which the audience 
sings along to loudly: Of course the "Lady In Red", to which the fans 
wave with lighters and sparklers. And who doesn't have any of that, just 
takes the arm of his neighbour and sways along to the beat of the music 
while the stage has been dived into an appropriate red. After that there 
is no stopping for many fans. When de Burgh encouraged them by a hand 
movement, they storm the front, clap, dance and sing with him ("Here in 
Lingen you sing like the angels") during "St. Peter's Gate", "Natasha 
Dance", they make a party.

The front part of the market place in Lingen, over which de Burgh had 
still walked along through the crowd a couple of songs earlier, is raging 
and clapping non-stop. The audience has turned into one singing and 
dancing arena and Chris de Burgh thanked them in his charming way. He 
plays "Snows Of New York", a song (coloured beautifully on stage by the 
well worth seeing light show in the 2nd part) that he had been writing 
for friends. And here he feels as if he sings with just those: "I enjoyed 
it. You are fantastic."

He wants to say goodbye from these friends with the groovy "Don't Pay The 
Ferryman", but the fan community doesn't want to let him go. Everyone is 
"high On Emotion", which is the third to last song of the night. 
Tumultously the visitors demand their star back, clap for three more 
encores as a final of a night that was a lot of fun and conjured up a 
smile into the face and heart of many.




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File last modified on August 26, 2006