Review: the power and the fury of Run the Jewels live

El-P and Killer Mike have an awful lot to live up to in concert, and the Run the Jewels pair don’t disappoint

Taking to the stage against the fanfare blare of Queen's We Are the Champions, are Run the Jewels swaggeringly self-assured, full of quirky wit, or – given the hip-hop duo's invigorating year – simply issuing a sober statement of fact? Maybe it's an admission that MCs El-P and Killer Mike have a lot to live up to: namely, two staggeringly good albums that have reignited the rage, politics and surprises of "alternative" hip hop. As producer, El-P excels at twisting the grammar of electronic music into the pneumatic snap of hip hop, finding room for fizzing synths, dark decayed beats and – when the mood requires it – a smuggled sample from Pacman or Flipper. In concert, you lose that meticulous construction to a backing DJ, but you gain in the propulsive force of their rhymes. Atlanta rapper Killer Mike exerts a muscular control, his deep and wide baritone sounding laid back, even as he threatens the listener with specific physical harm. Allied to El-P's spikier, over-caffeinated rapping style, they find a rare kind of balance.

Authority figures never do well here – the government, the military, poor old Kanye West – so it’s especially pleasing when El-P halts the sold-out show to tell an officious security guard to knock it off. “You might want to get out of the way,” adds Killer, “because this sh*t is going the f**k down.” The crowd is advised to a) go crazy and b) look after each other. And, somehow, that’s exactly what they do.

This is the Run the Jewels credo: when you can't trust power, you have to work things out yourselves. Songs like the slow and pummelling 36" Chain or a surging Sea Legs know that stories of sex, drugs and general bad-assery are generic fantasies – so you better find sharp new ways to tell them. Prowling the stage, through laser curls and shadows, El-P and Killer Mike are precise on the exhilarating verses of Close Your Eyes (And Count to F**k), the fantastically spiralling Early and the blunt agit-prop of Lie, Cheat, Steal, but still loose enough to enjoy themselves.

Okay, it's not always well considered: there's barely any personal misgiving or geopolitical quandary here that won't be resolved with a direct request for fellatio. And without the commanding guest verse of Gangsta Boo, the one-track-mind of Love Again comes off as a dumb frat-house anthem. Elsewhere, though, the endless adversities of the world are traced in vivid new terms and met with jaw-jutting defiance. Against so much innovation and agitation, even that hoary hip-hop cliché – "Make some motherf***ing noise!" – begins to sound refreshed.

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In these skilled hands, in these insurgent times, it could be a manifesto.

Peter Crawley

Peter Crawley

Peter Crawley, a contributor to The Irish Times, writes about theatre, television and other aspects of culture