Ed Sheeran at Riverstage, Brisbane, 20.03.15 / Photo: Rebecca Reid

Ed Sheeran – Brisbane, Riverstage 20/03/15

It’s 6:30pm in Brisbane and something big is happening. Traffic is gridlocked across the CBD, there’s a queue at every ATM and a childlike optimism fills the streets; something definitely isn’t right. As a giggling swarm of teenage girls descends upon Brisbane’s Riverstage, absorbing a seemingly endless supply of hot chips and Dagwood dogs, Ed Sheeran fever takes hold, and it’s not yet clear whether tonight’s gig – the first of three in Brisbane – will be a triumph or a tragedy.

Brisbane boy Conrad Sewell is first to feel the force of the screams; the young singer and his pianist run through a short set of sickly sweet pop songs including singles Hold Me Up and Start Again, which sound fine, but could do without introductions like “this next song is about the world” or “this is for all the ladies in the building”.

Second support is Sheeran’s countryman Jamie Lawson, who is the most timid and melancholy performer on show tonight, although his guitar work is fairly classy. He loses the majority of the audience for the first half of his set, before reeling them back in by requesting the wall of baying girls at front-and-centre “be his horn section” on Ahead of Myself, and latest single Wasn’t Expecting That, which includes the classic lines “You spent the night in my bed/You woke up and said/’I wasn’t expecting that’”. Don’t worry mate; it’s happened to us all.

By now, the 9500-capacity venue is full to bursting and the screams welcoming Sheeran to the stage are approaching ultrasonic. Bouncing around with his flaming locks flapping in the breeze, the 24-year-old announces, “My name is Ed and my job for the next two hours is to entertain you. It’s your job to be entertained.” He starts with I’m A Mess and Lego House, with only an acoustic guitar and loop pedal in tow.

It only takes the Englishman to stand on his monitor and put his arms in the air to unleash another wave of screaming that threatens to shatter windows within a kilometre’s radius as he moves through Don’t and Drunk, which by now I seriously wish I was.

“I came down with a bad case of man flu this morning. I’ll lose my voice by the end of the show; I hope you do too,” he says, before yet another request to sing along in what, by now, is becoming part of an obvious formula for pretty much every song: (1) request singing, (2) strum a few jaunty chords, (3) throw in some “ooh, oohhs”, (4) break into a sort of pseudo-rap vocal nonsense for two to three minutes, and (5) stand on the monitor if the response isn’t satisfactory.

While Sheeran undoubtedly has talent, and puts everything into his live performance, after the first few songs the formula gets very tired, very quickly. It’s hard to see how anyone except naïve kids and their bored middle class parents could be taken in by what plays out as, essentially, a glorified busking set. But, as tonight’s gig shows, there’s major money to be pulled from the willing hands of those demographics, musical output be damned.

Ed Sheeran’s Australian tour continues tomorrow night in Sydney.

Gallery: Ed Sheeran – Brisbane, Riverstage 20/03/15 / Photos by Rebecca Reid

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