Willis Earl Beal, Cosby Stage

Willis Earl Beal, Cosby Stage, Friday

Willis Earl Beal, Cosby Stage, Friday

As you approach the Cosby Stage, it sounds like a James Brown CD has been cranked up to full volume. Once your eyes have adjusted to the mid-evening gloom, it becomes apparent there is but one man on stage; and although he's wearing a T-shirt that declares himself as Nothing, he's certainly making enough noise to lure a hundred or so punters in.

Willis Earl Beal may be part-performance poet, part-soul man, part-preacher, part Wesley Snipes-lookalike - but the Chicagoan is an unbelievably compelling performer, throwing himself onto his knees and writhing around the stage like a man possessed.

He belts out tunes to an analogue backing track with an undoubtedly amazing voice, but his persona treads a dodgy line between prophet and parody. We'll give him the benefit of the doubt this time.

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Verdict: ***

Lauren Murphy

Lauren Murphy

Lauren Murphy is a freelance journalist and broadcaster. She writes about music and the arts for The Irish Times