Elkie Brooks to play York Barbican and Leeds City Varieties on Long Farewell Tour

Elkie Brooks: Heading out on her Long Farewell Tour. Picture: Neil Kirk

AFTER 64 years of performing live, the “British queen of blues”, Elkie Brooks, is to undertake her Long Farewell Tour, visiting York Barbican on April 11 2025.

In celebration of her six decades on the concert platform, the Salford singer will perform such hits as Pearl’s A Singer, Lilac Wine, Fool (If You Think It’s Over), Sunshine After The Rain, No More The Fool and Don’t Cry Out Loud in a career-spanning show of blues, rock and jazz numbers that will showcase material from  her forthcoming 21st studio album for the first time.

“I love performing live,” says Elkie, 79. “The audiences are always so appreciative, so full of energy, and after 40-plus long years of performing a well-worn repertoire, both myself and my band really feed off the vibrancy of the crowd.  And believe me – the British people know how to have a good time!  When an audience brings their A-game, I’ll certainly bring mine.”

Promoted by Bookbinder & Joyce, the Long Farewell Tour will span September 7 2024 to May 2 2025, its 24 dates taking in a second Yorkshire gig at Leeds City Varieties Music Hall on September 12.

Box office: https://www.elkiebrooks.com/elkie-brooks-tour-dates-2024; yorkbarbican.co.uk and leedsheritagetheatres.com.

Elkie Brooks: the back story

ELKIE began singing professionally in 1960. Born Elaine Bookbinder to a Jewish baker in Manchester, at 15 she won a talent contest at the Palace Theatre, Manchester, judged by Don Arden, manager of Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard and The Small Faces and father of Sharon Osbourne.

The next few years were an education. Elkie sang in cabaret clubs up and down the country and found herself supporting The Beatles at their 1964 Christmas shows at Hammersmith Odeon.

Her first hit, in 1964, was a version of Etta James’s Something’s Got A Hold On Me, featuring a pre-Led Zeppelin Jimmy Page on guitar. She toured with The Small Faces and The Animals, and by the end of the 1960s, she was singing jazz with Humphrey Lyttelton’s band. A few short years later, she was co-fronting Vinegar Joe with Robert Palmer.

After Vinegar Joe’s dissolution, she found herself joining southern American boogie band Wet Willie: only a temporary diversion before was back on home turf, now a newly minted, grown-up solo singer.

Her solo debut album, 1975’s Rich Man’s Woman, was banned in some quarters, on account of its raunchy sleeve, but 1977’s Two Days Away album soon ignited the blue touch, thanks to its signature song, Pearl’s A Singer, co-written and produced by Elvis stalwarts Leiber & Stoller.

The hits flowed: Fool (If You Think It’s Over), Lilac Wine, Sunshine After The Rain, Warm And Tender Love, Don’t Cry Out Loud and her highest-charting single, No More The Fool. Her million-selling 1981 album, Pearl, stayed on the charts for 79 continuous weeks.

Over the course of the next 25 years, she has released 20 albums. By 2012, she had more chart albums under her belt than any other British female artist. On the concert stage, she has played the London Palladium, Royal Albert Hall, Wembley Arena and Ronnie Scott’s, shared the bill with The Beach Boys and Santana at Knebworth in 1980 and toured regularly.

She last played York Barbican in September 2018.