Joan As Police Woman returned to Auckland on Friday night, opening her three-date New Zealand solo tour with a spellbinding performance at the Raye Freedman Arts Centre.

So very nice to be here she said, dressed in white. Thank you for meeting me here. A pause, then a wry smile. I noticed you drank the bar dry already.
Her voice — gentle, smooth, utterly mesmerizing — drifted over the hushed crowd like a warm wave. From the first note of Honor Wishes, taken from 2008’s To Survive, the audience was in rapture.
The performance was divided into two 45-minute sets, no support act.
The venue, tucked inside Epsom Girls Grammar, was chosen, we’re told, for its excellent grand piano. A wise decision. The instrument looked and sounded magnificent, and the room itself was warm and inviting once the sold-out crowd had navigated the drinks queue (and dried out the bar).
Her falsettos, delicate and poised, hung in the air like perfume.
She introduced Feed the Light with a laugh. I wrote this while stuck in a van on tour with someone who was driving me crazy.
The song, from Real Life (2006), shimmered with tension and release, and offered a glimpse into her creative process. As she put it, her options were either murder or write a song.
It’s these kinds of details that made the show feel so personal. The crowd was so quiet you could hear the static of the speakers between songs.
There were new songs too, all well-received.
Where’s John Cale when you need him? she joked.
Throughout both sets, she alternated between piano and guitar, her presence effortless on both.
During I Was Everyone, the crowd joined in, becoming a gentle choir as they echoed Be heard while Joan sang you are the chosen one.
She’s also disarmingly funny. Just to let you know, she said at one point, there’s an intermission. So, you can hold it.
The encore brought The Magic and The Ride, perfectly wrapping up a night that was both musically rich and emotionally resonant.
As Joan As Police Woman took her bows and a couple of playful curtsies, she made a heartfelt plea. Please tell your friends about the shows in Wellington and Christchurch. I need your help.
Anyone lucky enough to have been in that room will surely spread the word. This was more than a concert. It was communion.
Azrie Azizi