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Arthur Hill at Wembley Arena

Arthur Hill at Wembley Arena performing live
Arthur Hill at Wembley Arena | Live review
Shot by Virginie Viche

Watching Arthur Hill fill Wembley Arena on a Saturday night, you’d never guess he hasn’t even released his debut album yet. He’s actually the first artist to ever headline the venue without one, but you wouldn’t know it – he made the whole history-making feat look like a walk in the park.

And the excitement from that milestone hit home straight away. Hill opened with a playful Hey Arthur! and his stage presence – energetic, loose, and a little theatrical – carried the show as he danced and pranced across the floor, completely at ease with owning the space. Backing vocalists added rich harmonies throughout the set, while live instruments, specifically the saxophone, lifted several songs beyond a standard pop arrangement.

If Hill’s energy set the tone, the production design ran with it. It traded typical arena flash for a dreamlike, storybook aesthetic. Screens displayed soft pastel skies and rolling hills, while the band played from a platform decked out in bright green flora. The centrepiece, a lone red door hanging in the air, gave the whole performance this surreal edge that felt both grand and way more intimate than the venue actually is. It was a visual win that successfully shrunk the massive space into something that felt personal and surprisingly cosy.

Against this dreamy backdrop, the setlist highlights were plenty. Iced Coffee is one of the more recognisable tracks, but hearing it in an arena gave its breezy charm some real weight.

The crowd was particularly buzzing for the mash-up medley of fan favourites, and a mid-gig cover of Careless Whisper, proving that nothing unites a 12,000-strong audience like a bit of 80s nostalgia. There were calmer moments, too – You’re Not a God saw thousands of phone flashlights turn the arena, creating a genuinely soothing atmosphere. But it wouldn’t be an Arthur Hill gig without a party, and Dead at the Disco delivered exactly that, switching up the venue into a giant, rainbow-lit dancefloor.

By the time Lily and Right Now came around, the place felt more like a weekend night house party than a landmark concert. The history books will note the record, but the crowd was there for the charisma. Hill is a natural entertainer, and Wembley was just the beginning.

Dionysia Afolabi
Photos: Virginie Viche

For further information and future events, visit Arthur Hill’s website here.

Watch the video for Right Now here:

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