By Julie Lawrence Special to OnMilwaukee.com Published Oct 08, 2005 at 12:11 PM

{image1} Lou Reed said that the first time he heard Antony Hegarty sing he knew he was in the presence of an angel.

And really, no matter what your degree of spiritual conviction, once Antony’s unmistakable vibrato pierces the silence of a beautifully still theater, it’s hard not to find him a mystical, if not celestial, being.

He smiles shyly, accentuating his soft facial features, and avoids prolonged eye contact with the crowd. Within seconds, he’s lost himself in the soulful vacuum of “My Lady Story.”

All things become still. If Adlous Huxley queried back in 1944 that time must have a stop, he might have been pleased to discover that the continuum nearly ceases as Antony crones –- and also that the singer bares a similar description to Huxley’s angel-faced poetic protagonist Sebastian Barnack.

Appearing pale and pretty, Antony’s no stranger to the word androgyny, especially as he lyrically dances through odes to gender-bending wish-fulfillment like “For Today I am a Boy” and “You Are My Sister” -– homage to his hero and friend, Boy George.

He exhibits the delicateness of a child -– complete with dimples and a vocal octave range that feels both incredibly fierce and gentle at the same time. Yet unlike a child, he harnesses a life’s worth of wisdom and a mature reverence for beauty in his songs.

After a moving rendition of Leonard Cohen’s “The Guests,” in which his entire body begs, “I need you, I need you, I need you,” he finally feels comfortable enough to address his gracious audience.

His dialogue with us is brief but buoyant and completely self-deprecating for someone who marked 2004 -- before his acclaimed “I Am A Bird Now” even surfaced -- by performing at the Whitney Biennial, and 2005 with the release of one of the year’s most talked about albums prior to receiving the esteemed Mercury Prize for the best British or Irish album of the year (Antony was born in Chichester, England, moved to California as a young boy, and finally found himself as an artist in the downtown New York art scene.)

In a wise decision to momentarily break the trance he’s created, he bursts into his new album’s strong opener, “Hope There’s Someone,” with the haunting plea, “I hope there is someone who’ll take care of me when I die.”

The bulk of his songs revisit this loneliness, overtly reflecting a longing for companionship and love. Although Antony admits that making “I Am A Bird Now” with his friends –- Boy George, Lou Reed, Rufus Wainwright and Devendra Banhart -- has made feel less alone, watching him perform in their absence demonstrates their contributions to be merely extraneous bonuses, as far as his audience is concerned. In the sense that these are the people who have helped complete the image of Antony as an artist, the guest appearances are a welcome addition. But when he is seated alone at his piano, no matter how desperately his words cling to a fear of solitude, he becomes the purveyor of his own strength and beauty.

Nearing the end of his set, Antony, with his initial coyness set aside, exclaims that he’s been working on a special cover song. It takes a line or two to put the pieces together, but by the time he gasps, “when the night falls,” it’s clear that he is giving Whitney Houston’s “I Wanna Dance with Somebody” something it’s never had: a soul.

{image2} Opening for Antony and the Johnsons were his friends, the sisters Casady, who are better known as the neo-folk duo CocoRosie. As if an angelic presence were a prerequisite for the entire evening, one of the sisters (not sure which is which at this point) emerges in a white hood with a harp.

The next 45 musical minutes play out like teenage bible camp revisited, each song a hymnal as defiant as it is devout.

Last year’s “La Maison de Mon Reve” highlight “Good Friday” examines the gross commercialization of Christmas with the chorus, “I believe in Saint Nicholas/ It’s a different type of Santa Claus." But then 2005’s “Noah’s Ark” rebuttal in “K-Hole,” “What’s God’s name/ I can’t remember?” flips the mode of transcendence from spiritual to chemical.

Whether they’ve intended to or not, CocoRosie has somewhat reinvented religion for a new generation. And this time around, they’ve beautifully balanced the intensity of prophetic moaning with sounds that are a little more accessible to today’s youth. (Yes, those animal sounds texturizing “Noah’s Ark” were coming from that circular toy from which we all discovered, by way of pulled string, which sound the duck makes.)

Julie Lawrence Special to OnMilwaukee.com

OnMilwaukee.com staff writer Julie Lawrence grew up in Wauwatosa and has lived her whole life in the Milwaukee area.

As any “word nerd” can attest, you never know when inspiration will strike, so from a very early age Julie has rarely been seen sans pen and little notebook. At the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee it seemed only natural that she major in journalism. When OnMilwaukee.com offered her an avenue to combine her writing and the city she knows and loves in late 2004, she knew it was meant to be. Around the office, she answers to a plethora of nicknames, including “Lar,” (short for “Larry,” which is short for “Lawrence”) as well as the mysteriously-sourced “Bill Murray.”