Morcheeba lead singer/pop idol/ businesswoman Skye Edwards describes her music as ‘down-tempo ambient chill out vibes’ on Twitter and this is certainly what we got at Concorde 2 despite a long insistence for many to call the band a trip-hop outfit.

Skye’s trademark velvet voice - an incredible ethereal entity which was so smooth it would be impossible to describe in a way that did it justice – showed no signs of losing its power, and her stage presence, a broad smile complimenting every song, was every bit as powerful as when the band properly hit the scene in 1998 with the seminal album Big Calm.

Trigger Hippy set the scene for a set where couples swayed blissfully, everyone looked happy just to be there and the audience sang along devotedly.

Unlike the bands who refuse to play the songs which made them famous, Morcheeba willingly obliged with many songs from Big Calm mixed with more recent recordings as well as the song Col from way back.

The icing on the cake was Skye’s teenage son playing drums on his first gig with his mum, having previously appeared in Brighton inside Skye’s tummy 18 years ago at the original Concorde.

A rousing encore of favourites ensured everyone left with a warm feeling inside. A triumphant return.