Dave Simpson 

Mike D review – ex-Beastie Boy’s first UK gig in two decades, in a Tyneside bingo hall, is uproarious fun

Teeing up a forthcoming solo album, the rapper doesn’t reheat his old Beastie Boys sound, instead throwing down everything from ballads to Kraftwerk references
  
  

Mike D performing at King Street Social Club, North Shields.
Simultaneously low-key and an event … Mike D performing at King Street Social Club, North Shields. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Guardian

Adam Yauch AKA MCA’s death in 2012 from cancer aged 47 effectively ended the stellar recording and performing career of hip-hop trio Beastie Boys. Since then, bandmates Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz and Michael “Mike D” Diamond have made few public appearances but the latter is now back in the fray. His first appearance on a British stage in almost 20 years is in, of all places, a bingo hall in the north east, where he surely becomes the first legendary rapper to yell: “Wassup, North Shields?!”

With turntables on stage, hip-hop clobber in the audience, a six-piece band in matching outfits and bingo tables at the back, this unlikely show feels simultaneously low-key and an event. Mike D is backed by 5D – who include his sons and are more than half his 60 years – whose slamming grooves and crunching guitars aren’t Beastie Boys reheated, but certainly have the same inimitable joie de vivre.

Refreshingly and bravely, almost all the setlist is new material, from storming recent single What We Got to an array of tracks from a forthcoming album. Make It Stop doffs a cap to Kraftwerk. True Colours is a huge electronic-rock-rap mashup and the affecting I Don’t Care pairs the New Yorker’s distinctive reedy wordplay over a hypnotic, minimal groove. There’s a loud cheer when Mike D makes a knowing reference to nearby “Newcastle, where the Venom sample comes from,” meaning the time the Beasties sampled the geordie metal band on Check Your Head.

Every track sounds different. Crypto samples chinking coins, Switch Up soars over its killer bassline and there’s a particularly startling handbrake turn for Thank You, a brilliant ballad in which emotionally sung lines such as “We were just kids, freaking out” seem laden with significance. Late 70s post-punk band Delta 5’s Mind Your Own Business makes an unlikely encore before Mike D introduces “something from my own old band”, which turns out to be an uproarious So What’cha Want. There’s a chant of “one more song!” to no avail: indeed the only disappointment in this engaging, fun hour-long show is that there isn’t any more of it.

• At 26 Leake Street, London, on 5 and 6 June.

 

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