Princess Superstar, King Tut's Wah Wah Hut, Glasgow

Thursday 03 November 2005 20:00 EST
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At once, this is Concetta Kirschner's main selling point, as well as the millstone around her neck. The same applies to her image - a bottle blonde with a Philadelphian accent honed by and submerged beneath many years living in New York City. She plays an unashamedly fashionable mixture of hip-hop rhymes over thick, seedy electro beats, augmented by a live drummer and guitarist.

PS resembles a lad-mag fantasy figure such as Britney or Christina, while sounding like an altogether more respectable hybrid of Peaches and Goldfrapp. The combination should by rights be box-office gold, although it's possibly the resulting perception of her as a glamour-puss bandwagon-jumper that means she's playing only to a modest crowd in the few-hundred capacity venue.

It's an impression partly founded upon her biggest hit in the UK, the superficially teasing "Bad Babysitter" ("I'm a bad babysitter/ Got my boyfriend in the shower/ Making six bucks an hour"). When she played it at this gig, pulling on the miniskirt and picking up the pom-poms which are part of the act, she seemed at once to be gratified that the crowd knew it, but also somewhat abashed at its childish pantomime.

It was an anachronism in comparison to the rest of the set, but fitted in well on a surface level. That's because Princess Superstar is still all about such showmanship and role-playing, yet there's nothing childlike in her newer material. The song "10,000 Hits" deploys scathing, world-weary sarcasm in the thought that 10,000 more "Bad Babysitter"s will make her rich, and it's aimed at both herself and the grasping nature of the industry she's in.

Elsewhere, the songs are similarly mature, in that they present complicated and expertly rhymed thoughts amid a backdrop of sexual innuendo. "Push, Make It Work" is like the X-rated version of Madonna's "Erotica", while "Sex, Drugs and Drugs" is a tongue-in-cheek lambasting of voracious, cannibalistic metropolitan party scenes.

Displaying an obvious disregard for the trappings of fame, Princess Superstar probably doesn't care about being a pop star anyway. Yet that's also precisely why she deserves attention, and from there the adulation is surely just a short step away.

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