Category: Gigs


Latitude 2011 – The Complete Review

Suffolk’s Latitude Festival prides itself on diverse music, cultural titbits and quality comedy. This is our second trip down and unlike last year, our review will focus purely on the music – and God knows there was enough of it!

FRIDAY

Opening everything up on a scorching day are Canada’s Braids in the Sunrise Arena who pull a more than decent crowd for a late morning slot, though surely because there’s little else on. Each slice of melodic drone-pop bleeds into the next so chat is minimal, but the band express their delight at how receptive the audience at their last European show have been, so we all leave happy.

With the music now firmly underway, Avi Buffalo have new material to test on us, often a bit of a chore at festivals. So it’s just as well that it’s very much in keeping with the distorted Americana of last year’s fine debut album, with upcoming single How Come a particular highlight. But it’s older choice cuts What’s It In For? and Remember Last Time that get the biggest cheers.

Edwyn Collins‘ comeback album Losing Sleep was stuffed full of guests but sadly there’s no Cribs or Drums onstage with him today. We do get Paul Cook behind the kit though, and Collins’ mini-me son William takes Jonathan Pierce’s vocal part on In My Eyes. Rip It Up and A Girl Like You prompt the first big singalongs of the day and it feels like Latitude has started for real.

Continuing on a Scottish tip – with Isobel Campbell and KT Tunstall gracing the main stage we arguably could have filled our day with nothing but kilted types – are the Phantom Band back in the Sunrise. Set-up issues mean they only have time for five songs but they power through A Glamour, O and more with gusto. “Getting to this stage was like Planes, Trains and Automobiles. And boats” moans Rick Redbeard but it feels like it was worth their while. Special mention to guitarist Duncan Marquiss who toppled head over heels mid-song to huge cheers. And laughter.

A little later in the Word Arena, Deerhunter‘s Bradford Cox is complaining of voice problems and seems more than happy to let guitarist Lockett Pundt take the strain on spiralling opener Desire Lines. Cox’s voice holds though, and the band noisily tear through highlights from Halcyon Digest and a handful of older songs. You suspect that the drawn out jams test the patience of the casual festivaller, but that’s half of what this band are about, and this is a quality set.

Caribou‘s Swim album was just about perfect and the presence of Dan Snaith and co in the Word Arena is a terrific piece of booking. Playing as a tight four piece, the tent is absolutely packed for their hypnotic euphoria. After a difficult start they settle into a groove with the chiming Bowls and push energy levels higher and higher until a stunning Sun brings everything to a close, leaving the crowd exhausted but grinning like idiots. Arguably the band of the weekend.

At the other end of the spectrum are Jonny, Norman Blake and Euros Childs’ little country-esque side project. Both are surely used to playing to bigger crowds than this, but they’re unfazed and cheerily charm the gathered faithful, largely by taking the piss out of themselves. Speaking of *ahem* jonnies, our spies over at the Sunrise Arena tell us that Jenny and Johnny are in fine form, all cute couply rhythms and rhymes, but there’s a warning that they may not be doing many more shows together. Aaaww.

“There’s always one Scots cunt ruining it for everyone” sighs Louis Abbot after a misplaced chant of ‘Here we, here we, here we fucking go’. “A nation’s shame.” There’s a definite partisan element to the Lake Stage crowd for Admiral Fallow, but the impressive numbers present can’t be all be Scots. Both band enthusiasts and casual listeners having their tea couldn’t fail to have been moved by a short, heartfelt performance. Old Balloons stands out but the increasingly anthemic Squealing Pigs gets the biggest cheer. Admiral Fallow’s UK fanbase is clearly growing and things are looking decidedly up.

Dutch Uncles‘ debut album Cadenza may have gotten a mixed reception, but it’s a firm favourite at Tidal Wave towers. Their Lake Stage headline set –  their first – is an absolute beauty with the quirkiness of XTC and the edge of Gang of Four. Their similarly articulate Manchester cousins Everything Everything played this slot last year and haven’t looked back, and we fully expect Dutch Uncles to follow suit. What a pity then, that the inexplicably huge Vaccines are on at the same time and annex a large proportion of their potential crowd. Looks like the multi-coloured woolly jumper suppliers that Latitude is famous for, aren’t the only sheep present today.

There had been a few pre-festival doubts as to the National‘s status as main stage headliners. Incredible though they were in the Word Arena a year ago, and with High Violet continuing to rack up sales, this still felt like it could be a step up too far. And yes, it does take time for them to grow into their set. Recent singles Bloodbuzz Ohio and Afraid of Everyone are thrown away early to a muted reception. But half an hour in, Squalor Victoria provokes a mass singalong and the introduction of Annie Clark adds a little extra class to proceedings (although why St Vincent weren’t booked to play if she’s here is anyone’s guess), and come the end, and in particular, the encore of Mr November and Terrible Love, they’re in stunning form.

With lighters already having been aloft for Fake Empire, they’re back out for Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks, reduced to a near-unplugged piece for a few thousand hardy souls. Oh yeah, that’s the thing. While the band may have conquered the stage, the crowd was a little lacking in numbers. Shame.

SATURDAY

Saturday brings an altogether different atmosphere – rain. And lots of it. It starts tipping it down well before the gates open, so when they do, it’s a scramble to find anywhere with shelter. The first ever live Never Mind the Buzzcocks is happening over at the comedy tent, a popular enough draw without the need to stay dry, and hundreds are left outside watching it on the big screen. Getting wet.

After finding ourselves in the Poetry Arena listening to some girl whine about what a b!tch she is (easy solution: stop being a b!tch!) something catches our ears from the Word Arena. Something from our childhood…… unbelievably, a post-psychosis Adam Ant playing Stand and Deliver from 500 yards away sounds amazing and we’re drawn over to squeeze into a packed tent alongside the 40-something Mums and dandily-attired uber-fans for an early highlight. The artist formerly known as Stuart Goddard does everything you’d want him to and we get Goody Two Shoes, Kings of the Wild Frontier and Prince Charming – all without signs of the madness that he’s almost now equally well known for. Although a man who wears his own t-shirt does often look a little foolish.

The rain’s still beating down, so we’re in no rush to leave and it’s Villagers up next. Becoming A Jackal continues to shift units by the bucketload and it’s easy to see why – these are unchallenging but beautiful little songs with charm to spare. The full live band adds plenty of ooomph too.

The skies are starting to clear but it seems no-one has told the Walkmen. The snappily-dressed Americans have brought us their tales of angst and woe to keep spirits low. Angela Surf City and – naturally – The Rat are clear highlights but it’s hard not to wonder, for all Hamilton Leithauser’s razor sharp vocals, whether the band would be half as good without drummer Matt Barrick. The man does much more than just keep time, he’s just about the best thing we’ve ever seen behind a kit. Outrageously good.

That’s not something you could say about British Sea Power‘s last record. In fact you’d struggle to say anything good about it at all, but at least in a live setting songs like Who’s In Control and Georgie Ray manage to hold their own alongside singalong anthems No Lucifer and Waving Flags. It’s good to see the fans in high spirits too, with many bringing in scavenged bits of foliage, harking back to the band’s stage sets of old.

The local forest turned out in force for British Sea Power

With the rain off, it’s time for some outdoor music and the Cribs on the main stage will do just nicely. Ryan Jarman is sporting a bizarre purple wig but at least it beats his usual awful bowl cut. Far removed from their indie schmindie roots, they’re now one of the UK’s finest indie-punk bands. With a circle pit in full flow we’re treated to hit after hit – We Were Aborted, Our Bovine Public and Men’s Needs all feature but if pushed on a highlight, Sonic Youth man Lee Ranaldo’s video screen appearance for his backing vocals on the feedback-strewn Be Safe would have to be up there.

All very much a contrast to My Morning Jacket, whose appearance near the top of the main stage bill, where singalongs rather than drawn-out jams should be the order of the day, came as a huge surprise. The crowd haven’t turned out in huge numbers either, and it takes a while for them to generate any kind of movement among the few that have taken the time to come along. Wordless Chorus and Holding On To Black Metal finally get heads nodding but it’s disappointing overall. Good band, but an odd place to put them.

Ex-Beta Bander Steve Mason was here playing acosutically last year and is now back with a full band headlining the Sunrise Arena. As the sun comes down, his beat-laden dream pop is met with rapturous cheers from a sizeable crowd. Tracks from last year’s terrific Boys Outside dominate but fans of older material aren’t left disappointed either.

The slow build-up for My Morning Jacket, isn’t something you could ever say about Foals who get things moving so quickly that opener Blue Bloods has to be stopped halfway through due to a moshpit collapse. Mud, dancing and blitzed teenagers are always a lethal combination, and to the band’s credit they demand that everyone calms down a bit before restarting the song.

The dancing’s a little more tentative but there are no further problems and the Word Arena well and truly gets its top blown off. We’ve never really understood why Foals have such a young audience demographic – they’re basically Gang of Four channelling Battles and Slint, but if this leads kids to discover those bands then all’s well and good. Their last show on the lengthy Total Life Forever tour, Yannis Philippakis and co are on stunning form. Spanish Sahara is a beautiful moment and urgent closer Two Steps Twice is a blur of activity with Yannis throwing himself all over the shop. It’s not just the bairns that leave happy.

SUNDAY

Thankfully it’s not raining as things get moving on Sunday. The cloud-based party pooper does make intermittent unwelcome appearances through the day, but not to the same extent as the sodden Saturday which has left the site a bit of a sludgy mess. But no matter, we have Latitude’s prestigious Sunday lunchtime guest to look forward to don’t we? Well no, not really. The announcement of Belgian girls choir Scala and Kolacny Brothers was met with a massive shrug all round, and while they’re perfectly pleasant, covers of Radiohead, Coldplay and Peter Gabriel are played far too straight for this to be anything other than wallpaper music. Compared to previous incumbents of the slot, Joanna Newsom and Thom Yorke, this is a massive disappointment.

If PJ Harvey taught maths rather than politics and shopped in Morgan rather than the Barking Mad Banshee Emporium you’d pretty much end up with Anna Calvi. Her debut album has been a huge success, but she seems a little lost on the main stage and has about as much chat as Marcel Marceau. Album highlights Blackout and Desire sound good but the performance is a little workmanlike.

What we’ve been lacking so far this weekend is a little apocalyptic post rock, always a favourite round Tidal Wave Towers, so three cheers for These Are End Times who bring precisely that to the Lake Stage. Adding trumpet, harmonium and melodica to the quiet/LOUD post rock sound is a fresh and interesting take on the genre and there are scattered vocals too. Their short set feels like a complete piece of music with a number of ‘movements’ and is certainly something different, not least for the lunchtime diners caught somewhat unawares by the sporadic blasts of noise.

Over in the Word Arena, the Naked and Famous are an altogether poppier affair. The Kiwi five-piece seem set for big things and the juicier cuts from Passive Me Aggressive You justify the hype and the tent – stuffed again, partly due to the rain – is jumping by the time they hit party favourite Young Blood.

Brazilian legends Os Mutantes, very much on the reunion trail, are a fun addition to the Word line-up and after a few technical hitches, spray out some fun psychedelic pop for a fun-sized audience.

On paper Iron and Wine are the perfect Latitude act – sunny-sounding Americana with flashes of pop nous. The bushily-bearded Sam Beam looks genuinely happy to be here and while an over-use of saxophone and needless jams occasionally rankle, Walking Far From Home and Tree By the River reward the patience of those with a shorter attention span.

Despite the awkward nature of their music, Everything Everything haven’t half gotten popular and a stuffed Word Arena is further evidence that they could be on their way to the very top. Opener Qwerty Finger could strip paint and a year on the road has helped hone them into a formidable live act. Last year’s math pop gem Man Alive seems to have yielded hit after hit but it’s the closing salvo of Schoolin’ and Photoshop Handsome that truly gets the crowd bouncing.

Back to the Lake and grunge revivalists Mazes are running a little late and having a few technical difficulties, which is a damn shame, as when they do get going, they’re great. It’s just a shame that much of their vocals are sacrificed for added distortion, when the two sit together in perfect harmony on record.

Oxford’s Fixers are on next and while their synth-y indie-pop is utterly harmless, they don’t do a great deal for us. The band don’t seem to be enjoying themselves much either, perhaps down to the smallest crowd we’ve seen all weekend. Oh well.

Lykke Li has no such worries and it’s a busy Word Arena that greets her stylish but defiantly odd brand of pop. She’s developed from a softly spoken ingenue into a huge performer and with the aid of an excellent, percussion-driven band puts on a storming show. Wounded Rhymes is stuffed full of future classics and unsurprisingly dominates proceedings but Youth Novels highlights get a look in too. The pounding, filthy Get Some rounds things off and we’re wondering if that Gaga fellow may have something to fear if Lykke Li keeps putting on shows like this.

Alas, that’s where Latitude peaks for us. We’d never been big Suede fans but feel equally ambivalent towards Eels whose Word Arena performance clashes with Brett Anderson’s mob on the main stage. They kick off with The Drowners and blast through Trash, Film Star, Animal Nitrate and numerous other biggies early on and shattered from a full weekend of standing in a field, we don’t feel compelled to hang around. We troop off with So Young drifting across the site, by which point Brett Anderson still hasn’t said a single word to the audience.

Once again, a terrific weekend and the discerning festival goer should still consider Suffolk for their outdoor music needs.

PHOTOGRAPHY A MIXTURE OF LATITUDE’S OFFICIAL PICS AND TIDAL WAVE’S OWN. BET YOU CAN’T TELL WHICH IS WHICH, EH?

Yes, after a year of blogging, ligging, and general arm-chancing, the Tidal Wave of Indifference is finally branching out into the inevitable, and putting on our own gigs.

Our first event will be on Saturday September 24 at Edinburgh’s legendary Wee Red Bar with a mouth-watering line-up.

The debut album from Aberfeldy’s Star Wheel Press was named album of the month for June by Team Avalanche and The Life Cycle of a Falling Bird has been practically flying off the shelves down at the Grassmarket. With endorsements from Ian Rankin, Lauren Laverne and more, the band are influenced by Bon Iver and Midlake and have built their sound around Irishman Ryan Hannigan’s languid storytelling and Craig Milton’s sparsely played banjo and guitar. We’re absolutely cock-a-hoop to have them involved.

After a series of successful EPs, packed shows and being named the inaugural winner of the Radar Prize, French Wives are in the middle of recording their debut album with producer Tony Doogan (Belle and Sebastian, Mogwai, Teenage Fanclub) set for release later in the year. Also named as ‘one to watch’ by Drowned in Sound, the Wee Red Bar will be the perfect showcase for their upbeat, classically Scottish songs, before their inevitable push into the big league.

Former Jesus H. Foxx man Neil Insh released the Douglas Firs debut album, Happy As a Windless Flag, a six year labour of love, earlier in the year but is wasting no time in recording a follow-up with a full band in tow. If the new material is half as good as the likes of I Will Kill Again or the Shadow Line, we’re in for a huge treat come September.

Opening the event will be Edinburgh’s latest exciting alt-folk prospect, Lost Telegrams. Currently looking at recording their debut EP, the band hope to have it ready by the time they take the stage at the Wee Red. Still in their infancy as a band, we’re tipping them for big things and are delighted to have them on board.

Tickets will be available for £6 through Brown Paper Tickets. Doors at 7pm, over 18s only (obviously).

For more information, please email thetidalwaveofindifference@gmail.com. There’s also a Facebook page over HERE. Hope to see you there!!!

Latitude 2011 Preview

The Tidal Wave of Indifference got hit with a lot of perplexed questions when we opted for Suffulk’s Latitude as our festival of choice last year. Why somewhere so far away when Scotland is heaving with plenty of great festivals?

Well the reasons are almost too many to mention but in short, we wanted somewhere sunny, relaxed, where Mrs Tidal Wave and ourselves could BOTH have a holiday while having a diverse range of high quality musical entertainment with numerous other distractions. Since the demise of Connect and the (metaphorical) journey southward of T in the Park, Scotland hasn’t had an event to fit that bill.

Our first Latitude, however, was exactly what we wanted, even if the line-up seemed to have nudged towards the mainstream compared to previous years.

So a return trip was pretty much guaranteed. So what’s the script with this year’s festival? Well, the line-up has taken ANOTHER step towards the mainstream, much to the concern of posters on the festival’s official forum.

It’s a great pity and it looks like its unique reputation is being gradually eroded. That said, there are still plenty of excellent bands playing. As with last year’s preview we’re sticking with the music, but don’t doubt that we’ll be spotted in the comedy, film and cabaret arenas a fair bit too.

So who are our tips? We’ll not talk about the likes of the National, Suede, Eels or Foals as you’ll know about all of them already, but here’s a dozen acts on the undercard that come highly recommended by the Tidal Wave of Indifference.

ADMIRAL FALLOW

Ah yes, first up the Scottish contingent. Mitchell Museum sadly didn’t get much of crowd in a similar slot last year, but Louis Abbot’s girls and boys have an album on national release, have attracted radio airplay, sound tracked American TV shows and supported Frabbits nationally. Latituders, get your butts down to the Lake for these guys. Or else.

Where to see them: The Lake Stage, Friday.

AVI BUFFALO

Country grunge? Yes please! In fact, we can’t think of a better non-genre to add to the Latitude bill. Quality pop twang with added effects pedal battering, we’re looking forward to this one alright…

Where to see them: Obelisk Arena, Friday

CARIBOU

We’re expecting a near religious experience as we’ve never seen Dan Snaith’s brand of woozy, yet euphoric beats live. 6 Music’s coverage of Glastonbury, which has included live versions of Melody Day and Odessa has whetted our appetite in a big, big way. Wild horses, or indeed caribou, couldn’t keep us from this.

Where to see them: Word Arena, Friday.

CROCODILES

Doom-y, shoegaze stuff from Caifornia. Arguably not a band well-suited to blazing hot (fingers crossed) outdoor sets, but both their albums are great and they’re well worth a look.

Where to see them: Sunrise Arena, Friday

DEERHUNTER

Easily our 2010 Album of the Year winners, after a great-but-not-mind-blowing set in Glasgow earlier this year, we’re a little apprehensive about how this’ll go in a large tent. But there’s absolutely no doubt about the quality of the songs.

Where to see them: Word Arena, Friday.

DUTCH UNCLES

Cracking little band this. Don’t know an awful lot about them but they’ve harnessed the spirit of XTC, mixed in a wee dodd of Field Music and produced some fine angular tunes. Yes indeedy!

Where to see them: The Lake Stage, Friday

EDWYN COLLINS

Blah blah blah… Orange Juice… blah blah blah… brain haemorrhage… blah blah blah… amazing recovery… seriously, what can I possibly write about the legendary songwriter that hasn’t already been said? It’s simple, go watch him. And with guests on his recent album, the Cribs on site, what’s the bets on a wee collaboration or two?

Where to see him: Obelisk Arena, Friday

ESBEN AND THE WITCH

Ah yes, more wholly inappropriate festival fare. Not unlike These New Puritans who were excellent in their ironic ‘Sunrise’ slot, this three piece promise to bring the gloom to sunny Suffolk. Their Violet Cries album is excellent, but don’t expect any fist pumping festival anthems here.

Where to see them: Sunrise Arena, Friday

JENNY AND JOHNNY

Jenny Lewis is an absolute musical goddess. End of. Ok, so maybe Rilo Kiley let themselves down on their last album, and her solo stuff has been so-so, but last year’s collaboration with long-time squeeze Johnathan Rice has found her at her absolute best.

Where to see them: Sunrise Arena, Friday

IRON AND WINE

Sam Beam’s latest record Kiss Each Other Clean added a rich texture of new sounds to the Iron and Wine sound, with saxaphone and strings enhancing Beam’s beautiful voice and wondrous storytelling. Quite a catch for the festival, we must say.

Where to see them: Obelisk Arena, Sunday

MAZES

Scuzzy, sunny indie pop should suit Latitude’s tiny outdoor Lake Stage just nicely and that’s exactly what Mazes bring to the table. Their debut album A Thousand Heys was an absolute joy and their punchy riffs and rousing choruses should go down a treat.

Where to see them: The Lake Stage, Sunday

STEVE MASON

Incorrectly described by Festival Republic as a ‘rising Scottish star’, the former Beta Band man played in the film arena last year, showcasing a film about the 1980s miners strike with a few songs played acoustically. That fleeting glimpse left us wanting more. A late addition to the line-up, the organisers have done well here.

Where to see him: Sunrise Arena, Saturday

It’s disturbed us a little bit to look back on the above, just how much good stuff is happening on the Friday compared to the other days. There is quality throughout the bill, but Saturday and Sunday just don’t have the same ‘must see’ factor.

Nonetheless, Latitude again has stacks to offer the discerning music fan, with plenty more to boot. See you there, aye?

————–LATE BREAKING NEWS!!!!!————–

Not long before we were due to the publish, Festival Republic announced the near-completion of the bill including the excellent addition of Scotland’s own Phantom Band who’ll be be playing the Sunrise Arena on……. guess what day? A fine, fine addition to the bill but where they’ve been placed will surely see them clash with Edwyn Collins or Avi Buffalo, possibly even both. Some tough decisions may be needed on the day.

Last year’s event took place in blazing hot sunshine, to the point where, on our return to East Lothian well after midnight, Mrs Tidal Wave was still quaffing wine in the back garden with friends.

So it stands to reason that this year it’s absolutely chucking it down. Typical Glasgow.

Last year’s plan of parking trusty steed Big LEZ (who is hereby christened the Tidalwavemobile) outside the Captain’s Rest was so cunning, that’s what we do again, and after pushing past all the footy fans watching Celtic turning over Motherwell in the cup final, we’re straight downstairs for Blue Sky Archives*. They’re hugely enjoyable and you’ll be reading more about them here soon.

Having heard their latest EP Plural, their quality didn’t come as a surprise. What did, however was the Victorian English Gentlemans Club. We’re here partly on a friend‘s recommendation and partly because there’s little else on.

But my, my we’re rather glad to find ourselves here. This is thunderous, experimental art rock at it’s very best. Clad in slightly baffling outfits, they batter the hell out of their instruments as if McLusky never existed and we’re already considering looking out their music. Outstanding.

French Wives* weren’t someone we were hugely excited to see either. Yes, our chums over at Radar awarded them the inaugural Radar Prize, but they never felt like our cup of tea. So surprise number two of the day – they were absolutely brilliant.

Following them was always going to be a struggle and after having to fight their way through a barely dispersing crowd to set up, the Scottish Enlightenment must have been downcast whenthe bodies had all but evaproated by the time they were ready to start. It’s hard to tell whether the band have let it get to them but after the indie pop blast of French Wives, their downbeat sprawl just isn’t what people are looking for at this stage, even if their honest melancholy is entirely appropriate for the weather outside.

So it’s off to Stereo for Kid Canaveral. In theory, we should be utterly sick of the sight of them but, like crack, their jangly hook-laden pop is utterly addictive. Stereo is nowhere near as busy as Anstruther Town Hall but at least one familiar face is lurking about – Johnny Lynch a.k.a Pictish Trail is filming the occasion and heckling from the front row.

B-side to new single And Another Thing!!, Missionary doesn’t reinvent the wheel but if they can keep churning out glorious tunes like it, then global domination surely beckons.

We haven’t seen Admiral Fallow play live since they were Brother Louis Collective but with superb album Boots Met My Face having been re-released and their star firmly in the ascendant, the band’s old name must feel like a dim and distant memory.

They’re not resting on their laurels either. It would be easy to simply peddle to old tunes until this fresh burst of publicity wraps, but there’s three newies aired to an appreciative ABC audience too. Again, not a change in style, but if you’re producing high quality literate, hummable indie, why change? That said. Subbuteo and Squealing Pigs are still the strongest tunes in their portfolio.

They’re followed the excellent all-girl four-piece Warpaint* who are excellent and impeccably cool throughout, despite bassist Jenny Lee Lindberg sporting dungarees.

Tempted as we are by the return of Sons and Daughters, it’s at this point that we decide that it’s been a long day, and an early jump the next day means that we’d be better off heading home. So it’s off to pick up the Tidalwavemobile.

On arrival at the Captain’s Rest, it dawns on us that English scuzz-pop foursome Mazes are still on so it’s back downstairs to catch a few of their tunes. But again, we despair of the crowd. Where is everyone? They’re a better band than the low numbers suggest. Bah.

So as we make our way along the M8 it turns out that it’s not just tipping it down in Glasgow, it’s raining all the way to East Lothian. But least some astoundingly good music has brightened our day.

*It might look like I’m short-changing a few acts with my write-ups, but I was also covering the event for another publication.

First things first. This is quite a triple bill for the Garage, a venue that Trail of Dead and Rival Schools could arguably have packed out on their own steam. Asobi Seksu would surely have made a decent fist of it too.

But all three on the one night? Ouch!

Unfortunately for Asobi Seksu it means an early start, and as a result, the venue’s still barely half full by the end of their set. A pity – those who made it along early got to hear a brisk, but bruising set.

On paper, the quietest band on the bill, they still made a real effort to test out our eardrums. However, with their delicate melodies already wrapped up in layers of feedback and reverb, a muddy PA sound was always going to cause a few problems, and so it transpired.

They’ve a new album out, and while Fluorescence isn’t quite a return to the excellence of 2007′s Citrus, its songs are effective live and engage the sparse crowd enough to make the enterprise worthwhile.

Sadly, Rival Schools go over our heads a bit. Yes, we own a copy of United By Fate, but that was 10 years ago, and we’ve moved on somewhat.

Still, the crowd (the Garage is rammed by this point) love it, there’s singalongs, moshing and general worship of Walter Schrieffels.

They close out with über-anthem Used for Glue after a teasing few bars of Bon Jovi’s Dead or Alive. Enjoyable stuff, but hardly vital.

Not something you could say about And You Will Know Us By the Trail of Dead, even 16 years and seven albums into their lifespan.

Slimmed down to a four piece, ever-presents Conard Keeley and Jason Reece are now joined by drummer/guitarist Jamie Miller and bassist Autry Fulbright II and kick off with the epic jam Strange News From Another Planet that closes latest album Tao of the Dead.

It’s an ambitious and risky move, which they follow with another two newies. More than one crowd member will have wondered if it’ll be another one of ‘those’ gigs, but the big guitars and choruses on the likes of Ebb Away fit nicely in their sound.

And anyway, we needn’t have worried – that’s the last we hear from Tao… – a good record, but older fans want oldies, and no-one’s left disappointed. Will You Smile Again? is thunderous and gives new drummer Miller a chance to show what a powerful addition for the clan he is. Reece is spitting sweat and screaming in the crowd during Caterwaul, much thrashier here than on record.

Relative Ways is a fairly sedate moment in comparison, with Miller now brandishing a guitar and Reece and Keely taking turns behind the kit, but the noise is cranked back up for a seething Perfect Teenhood, a song which has always sounds like it’s teetering on the edge, and 12 years later it’s still sounds noisy as hell.

A perfect way to finish up – but they’re back for How Near How Far, an unsung hero from 2002′s Source Tags & Codes and a ragged Totally Natural which ends with Conrad onstage solo strumming out some country-style melodies.

At this stage of their career, they’re unlikely to win many new fans, but they’re still a terrifying live proposition, making great records.

The Russian Futurists’ profile in this country is such that there’s a mere 20 or so people watching them as they take the stage – and in a venue the size of Oran Mor those are pretty low figures.

Disheartening? Maybe, but the Canuck foursome don’t let it show. The amiable, cagoule-clad Matthew Hart and his cohorts deliver a belting set of fun synth-based pop with female backing vocals and sharp beats and it’s easy to see why they’re supporting Architecture in Helsinki on this tour.

They wrap up with old single Paul Simon with a now healthy-looking crowd paying full attention.

If the Russian Futurists were synthy, Architecture in Helsinki take the adjective to an extreme when the whip the covers off no fewer than three keyboards as they set up – but not a great surprise for anyone who’s heard their new album Moment Bends.

From the found sound/DIY alt-pop of 2005′s In Case We Die to the more robust-sounding (and not as good) Places Like This, the Aussie six-piece have progressed their sound again with pure synth pop now the order of the day.

Their set weighs heavily on the new album and where some songs sound a little lightweight on record, live they’ve been beefed up. And thankfully for fans of their earlier material they’ve taken the old tunes with them. The likes of It’5 and Wishbone have had a mild makeover to fit with the band’s latest approach – the crowd, now numbering a respectable 100+ go suitably apeshit.

It’s a fun set, albeit one with little banter and if we were enjoying ourselves before, the home strait turns us into a mess of flailing limbs. Moment Bends highlight That Beep melds into stonewall classic Do the Whirlwind, which in turns morphs into catchy latest single Contact High, with the whole thing rounded off by a blinding version of Heart it Races.

There’s no encore, even though they’re finished beyond 10pm, but anyone feeling short-changed should be asking themselves ‘what the hell else could they have played?’ and ‘how could they top that?’.

Fantastic effort by a band that deserves more recognition.

Have a wee listen to Heart it Races from Places Like This below.

Following a triumphant year of critical acclaim and rising profile, undoubtedly capped by topping the Tidal Wave of Indifference’s Album of the Year list, Bradford Cox has brought Deerhunter back to Scotland for a rammed Oran Mor show.

In tow are Baltimore’s Lower Dens, a typically oddball act with colorfully named songs like A Dog’s Dick and Two Cocks. They’re an appropriate support band though, and litter their set with droney guitars, effects pedal workouts and minimal, breathy vocals.

They’re fronted by Jana Hunter, a mere slip of a girl, who my daughter could probably take in a fight, and could be worthy of further investigation even if tonight’s sound is a bit muddy.

It takes Deerhunter a while to get going. They open with a song allegedly written in soundcheck (meh) and even the mighty Desire Lines underwhelms until it hits the spiralling, hypnotic guitar that makes up its lengthy outro.

But it’s at these moments when Deerhunter are at their best – freewheeling, distorted guitar jams that stop short of pretension. Nothing Ever Happened from Microcastle is particularly epic, with Cox screeching lines from Patti Smith’s Land towards the end.

More than 10 minutes long live, it sets heads nodding universally, as does main set closer He Would Have Laughed, allowing the band to stretch their musical legs.

With ‘single’ Helicopter already having been stripped of its gentle electronics and turned into a thundering beast of a tune, they return with a similarly heavy Cover Me and round things off with 15 minutes of feedback – a little self indulgent and unnecessary under the circumstances when the crowd would probably have liked another ‘proper’ song added to a fairly short set.

Minor quibbles aside, tonight Deerhunter went some way to justifying their live reputation.

As highlighted recently, Over the Wall are embarking on an 80 day odyssey round these isles.

The Edinburgh leg has taken them to regular band night Limbo with support from local three-piece Dupec and Glasgow’s For Abel, formerly known as Nacional.

Dupec’s sound is enormous, effects pedal driven riffs with tight, twisting arrangements, sounding like 90s hardcore merchants Helmet taking on And So I Watch You From Afar. In short, they’re excellent.

For Abel are a little less fulfilling. The name change seems to have come about to avoid confusion with the National, but to be honest it’ll take more than a name change to escape the shadow of Brooklyn’s finest, who lurk heavily around the band, from the distorted melodic guitars, down to them having a handsome waistcoat-wearing singer.

Admittedly their guitarist was clad in ripped jeans and has clearly been rummaging round my t-shirt drawer and the above paragraph doesn’t mean they weren’t enjoyable either. They gamely try to play ‘big music’ in wee venues and while not everything works, recent Sky Sports soundtrack inclusion On TV is quite a tune.

In keeping with their 80 days theme, Over the Wall kick off with a genuinely funny short film that depicts them doing a Phileas Fogg and rocking up in places like Bristol and Milton Keynes, before falling out in ‘BNP stronghold’ Oldham.

It sets the tone nicely for their cheery brand of articulate indie pop. As ever it’s a simple set up, with Gav wielding a guitar and Ben doing keys, beats and trumpet, but one that works superbly and charms the Edinburgh audience, one of which has driven down from St Andrews to see them simply on the back of Shifts being used in an episode of unrealistic teen drama Skins.

A fair chunk of debut album Treacherous is aired and it’s a predictable but emphatic finish with album standout Thurso. The Voodoo Rooms is busy too, which will hopefully set them up nicely for the rest of the tour. If nothing else, everyone should get the chance to see their hot air balloon film. Marvellous stuff.

It’s St Patrick’s Day and the smell of cheap booze and bullshit is in the air.

Mercifully, sanctuary from the pseudo-Irish tat and faux Paddies on Edinburgh’s Grassmarket can be found deep underground with a celebration of what St Patrick’s Day should be about – great music.

The fact that both of these bands are Scottish and there’s not a foot-high Guinness hat to be seen among them doesn’t matter a jot – THIS is where the St Patrick’s Day 2011 fun is to be had.

It surely won’t be long until FOUND end their days of playing second fiddle in reasonable-sized venues like Cabaret Voltaire.

There’s a new record deal, new album and goddamnit, some cracking new tunes in the air for a band who seem poised to make a commercial jump and they seem to sense it.

Tonight’s brisk set is lifted entirely from factorycraft, from the ragged opening guitar of I’ll Wake With a Seismic Head No More to the pulsing echo of Johnny I Can’t Walk the Line.

Album highlights like Machine Age Dancing and You’re No Vincent Gallo are aired too but it’s Blackette that seems to really find its form live with some particularly pounding beats.

A growing , enthusiastic crowd is eating out of their hands by the time they finish, but Cabaret Voltaire is packed to the rafters when the Phantom Band cram their six bodies onto the tiny stage.

With two excellent albums under their belt, they can now craft an impressive setlist with ‘hits’ Folk Song Oblivion and Everybody Knows It’s True dispensed with early on.

It’s a bit of a balancing act between the two records but each song fits nicely together. Rick Anthony’s on good form too, undoubtedly heartened that the place is hoaching and bassist Gerry, a bit greyer around the gills since we last saw him, is full of the banter as well.

A Glamour is an absolute beast live, with the pounding rhythms on record sounding enormous in this wee cavern and the more reflective moments like Islands give everyone’s ears a chance for a breather.

There’s an encore, of course, but it’s surely main set closer Left Hand Wave with its electro noodling and fine vocal refrain (Oh my lovinheart/ underneath the rocks and stones) that tonight’s satisfied punters will have buzzing round their heads as they make for home.

The Phantom Band could have played – and possibly filled – bigger venues than this, so here’s hoping that’s precisely what they do this year.

The amount of respect afforded to Mogwai, not just in Scotland, but globally is terrifying, so god knows what will happen if they ever screw up.

Thankfully that’s not likely any time soon. Straight off the back of an album that might just be their best yet, comes a lengthy tour that’s already taken in Japan and some of Scotland’s less obvious haunts.

In tow are doom-y Kilsyth noise-mongers the Twilight Sad, themselves gearing up to release new material, some of which gets an airing in this evening’s meaty support slot. One sounds particularly synth-y and suggests something of a change of tact, but the oldies still sound huge with Cold Days From the Birdhouse and And She Would Darken the Memory closing out an impressive set that’s dominated by their first album.

That it’s taken Mogwai fifteen years of releasing music to create a song called White Noise is something of surprise – it’s almost the perfect title for them and naturally the set opener is a hissing, fizzing crackle of, well… white noise.

It’s one of a number of tracks from Hardcore… that get blasted out and the likes of Rano Pano and You’re Lionel Richie are as good as anything they’ve got up their sleeve with the latter sounding particularly huge, all riffing and reverb.

The response to the new songs doesn’t go unnoticed with Stuart Braithwaite particularly animated and chatty – not exactly full of the banter but he takes the time to thank the crowd after almost every song.

Christmas Steps is strategically placed in the middle of the set and perfectly so – the slow build and huge sounding middle section (a girl is seen to visibly jump when the third guitar kicks in) is rounded out spectacularly by a slow, ebbing violin provided by tonight’s sixth member (Luke) who did the same on White Noise to striking effect.

A particularly vicious Batcat is marred by a few guitar problems for Barry Burns, but the encore of George Square Thatcher Death Party, Mogwai Fear Satan (of course) and Mexican Gran Prix- transformed into a Battles-esque dancefloor thump by a pounding beat and clear-sounding vocals from Luke – sends the Edinburgh crowd away with one hell of a ringing in their ears but conscious that they’ve seen an unforgettable band at their peak.

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