Deacon Blue Review - Scottish Hitmakers
Are More Poignant And Potent Than Ever
The Guardian 22nd September 2025
Brighton Centre
Still an arena-filling prospect long after their late-80s heyday, the veteran
band bring political bite and pop prowess to a crowd-pleasing set
Towards the end of their two-hour set, Deacon Blue play a song from their most
recent album, The Great Western Road, called Late ’88. A sweet slice of
disco-infused pop, it is about the moment that Deacon Blue’s career took off, in
the wake of their debut album Raintown, a point rammed home by the stageside
screens, which show the band in their youth: a veritable riot of white denim,
leather jackets and questionable millinery. “We seemed to do it all and it all
seemed so easy,” sings Ricky Ross, his voice echoed by that of co-vocalist
Lorraine McIntosh, as indeed it was then.
You can’t really blame Deacon Blue for re-asserting how successful they were.
They are the kind of band pop histories generally overlook – squeezed out of the
late 80s narrative by the rise of acid house and Madchester at one extreme and
Stock Aitken Waterman at the other – but they were, by any metric, both huge and
inescapable: when they play their 1989 hit Fergus Sings the Blues, you find
yourself automatically imagining it coming out of a radio, so omnipresent was it
on BBC Radio 1 at the time.
Nevertheless, you could hardly describe Deacon Blue as forgotten. The Great
Western Road made the Top 3 and Brighton Centre is packed, part of a tour that
exclusively inhabits the UK’s arenas. Their latter-day resurgence might rest on
the fact that Ross has minted a songwriting style that, while musically
indistinguishable from the band’s purple patch – and thus matching his and
McIntosh’s voices, pretty much as they were in the questionable millinery years
– lyrically seems intent on growing old with their audience. The Great Western
Road’s title track and Mid Century Modern affectingly ruminate on time’s
passing, their melancholy flecked with the-best-is-yet-to-come optimism.
There’s also some politics, which comes as a surprise, but probably shouldn’t:
beneath the glossy production, Raintown’s hard-bitten stories of Glasgow life
carried an implicit critique of Thatcherism’s impact on the city. Tonight, Ross
talks about the world being in “deep shit” and offers a glancing reference to
welcoming migrants to the UK, while the brooding Your Town, from 1993’s coolly
received attempt at post-Achtung Baby reinvention Whatever You Say, Say Nothing,
plays out with the faces of Trump, Farage and Putin glowering from the screens.
There’s something heartening about the audience cheering this stuff, but they’re
really here for the hits: Chocolate Girl, When Will You (Make My Telephone
Ring), Dignity. You can occasionally pick out the influence of Prefab Sprout on
Deacon Blue’s sound – and on Raintown’s title track, the Blue Nile’s drizzly
urban angst – but refitted for broader appeal, made brawnier and more
unashamedly poppy. It was too crowd-pleasing in approach to be critically
acclaimed, but nearly 40 years on, even a dedicated naysayer might be forced to
concede it worked: as Real Gone Kid hits the pop bullseye dead-on, those crowds
are very much still being pleased. Alex Petridis