Macclesfield’s finest export, The Virginmarys, follow up their 2024 album ‘The House Beyond The Fires’ with a companion album ‘Beyond The House Of Fires’, a piano-led re-working where the songs have been stripped back and reimagined. Chords and structures have been changed, words have been rewritten, and it’s very much a different album sonically. To promote it, singer/songwriter Ally Dickaty and drummer Danny Dolan now take the show on the road for some intimate MTV unplugged-style shows. 

First up are Bristol band iDestroy. Bec on guitar and Nic on bass haven’t done acoustic shows before, but they embrace the format. Bec gets a bit of a rapport going, some crowd participation, and they have some great tunes. “All My Friends Are Plastic” and “Headphones” are particularly memorable. There’s a bit of Brit Pop and a smattering of Grunge going on, Elastica meets Hole could be a good starting point. They go down well and warm things up nicely.

The stage is set, iridescent candles shimmer, and pink LEDs draped across the amps glow as The Virginmarys take to the stage of an already hot n’ sweaty room. With guitarist and songwriter Ally taking on keyboards for this tour, The Virginmarys are joined by guitarist Gareth Price to boost the band to a 3-piece for this tour.

The thing I like most about this new album is that some songs that maybe didn’t stand out on the original album now come into their own. One such song opens the show tonight. Stripped of the jagged riffs and regimental beats, ‘My Nettle’ takes on a new lease of life, emotive and cinematic, it just hits in the feels. We watch in silence as Ally fingers a lush piano melody. Danny does not take his eyes off his musical partner’s fingers either, as he matches the raw and emotional vocal with a rousing beat. You could hear a pin drop for the entirety, and that’s not the only time that happens tonight.

‘Dance to the City’ follows, with its rousing chorus screaming the album title. It’s over in a flash. The songs flow by quickly, too quickly, they seem shorter somehow. ‘There Ain’t No Future’ still sounds as powerful without the killer power chords,  and ‘When The Lights Go Down’ is simply stunning, Gareth’s effect-ridden guitars adding a touch of Pink Floyd to proceedings. 

‘Urban Seagull’ is another that benefits from the reworking. Ally plays a lush arpeggio while Danny plays a regimental but subtle beat. A song that was made to be played in this setting. 

The set is mainly these new songs, none of the usual hits is to be heard in this format, but they fill it out with a few obscurities, just Ally solo. A cover of Leonard Cohen’s  ‘Everybody Knows’ fits the bill, ‘Sleep’ and ‘Cast The First Stone’ are heartfelt and beautiful and will make you want to revisit those early EPs. 

They capture that magical unplugged, laid-back vibe well, the intimate dark room helps magnify the cinematic, ethereal feel of these new reworked songs.

The only time the pace picks up is on the penultimate song, ‘Veteran Soldier’, an older song that was originally recorded acoustically and has been given the opposite treatment. The atmospheric intro leads into an almost Tarantino-esque spaghetti western vibe. A song of gratitude and undying friendship, it’s an album highlight and a gig highlight as well. But the best has been kept for last. ‘White Knuckle Riding’ for me is the kingpin of the whole album. Ally’s unfaltering vocals are sublime over the tinkling of the ivories, it builds with Danny’s gentle, regimented beats, just enough to accentuate things. Unsurprisingly, the emotive lyrics with the Northern references hit home in this intimate Leeds venue, and it’s a stunning end to a masterful set. No encores, no returns…job done.

The idea with this project was to recapture that 90’s MTV Unplugged vibe, and with both album and tour, The Virginmarys have succeeded. While this is more of a between-album project and not a new direction for the band, it was one of the most magical gigs I have seen them do. 

Author: Ben Hughes