Tindersticks don’t play London gigs often, which was why the dedicated were out in force tonight. The notoriously chatty Shepherds Bush Empire (which Stuart Staples professes a dislike for) was almost totally without back whispers. It was quite a nice change.

The group arrive on stage with the self assurance of a band with nothing left to prove. They may have experienced a few line-up changes, but they play with supreme confidence. It’s almost as if the audience isn’t there – that’s not a bad thing, it creates a kind of intimacy; like you’ve snuck into a private performance, where everyone concerned is playing as if no one is watching.

The set list unsurprisingly is made up mostly of tracks from their new album Falling Down A Mountain. However, fans of all periods were appeased with at least one track from every long player, although not necessarily an obvious one. Although known for their dark brooding songs, it’s actually their more (relatively) uptempo numbers which get new life on stage. They start off with the new album opener and title track, and tackle it without restraint, making it a more chaotic, more raucous mixture. They even manage to get the crowd dancing for new number Harmony Around My Table and for the classic Can We Start Again, which turns into one of the real highlights of the evening.

In contrast the slower brooding ballads, for which the band are more widely known, become more restrictive. They must remain wrought and carefully restrained. Stuart Staples’ elegant howl remains tender and beautiful; his performance sometimes tugging hard on your heart strings. But several of these slow ballads together, begins to make the audience a little restless. They save the tracks from their most adored albums, 1 and 2, till the latter portion of the set, but patience is rewarded in the encore, with a couple from album 1, City Sickness and Raindrops, which both go down a treat.

But a few minor complaints aside, this was a triumphant performance. A good live show should leave you with a greater appreciation of a band’s music. Tonight Tindersticks gave their music volume, what might seem quiet, sparse, restrained on record, was lively and full bodied live, even danceable.  It was a different experience; and for that it was worth every penny.

Rating: ★★★★★☆

Tindersticks – Keep You Beautiful (mp3)

Photo: Maurice @ Paard van Troje – The Hague, Netherlands, 03/10

Setlist:

Falling Down A Mountain
Keep You Beautiful
Sometimes It Hurts
Bathtime
The Other Side Of The World
Dying Slowly – Can Our Love
Hubbard’s Hill
Peanuts
Factory Girls
Marbles
Black Smoke
A Night In
Harmony Around My Table

No Man In The World
Can We Start Again?

City Sickness
Raindrops

Buzzcocks

Got an email through last night from the people over at Fabchannel letting me know that tomorrow (Wednesday 11 Feb) they will be streaming a live performance by Buzzcocks for free. I thought this warranted further investigation, so went and had a look  at their site. It houses an archive of performances from various bands, ranging from big international names (The B-52s, Calexico) to smaller Dutch acts – all in really good quality, and best of all completely free!

The shows are all in Amsterdam and I spent a few idle hours yesterday trawling the archive. A couple really caught my attention and I thought I’d share – Sons & Daughters from early 2008, and Calexico from later last year. In particular try to watch Bend To The Road by Calexico – one of the best live performances I saw last year.

Who says you can’t get something for nothing!

That link again in case you missed it.

Buzzcocks – What Do I Get?

M83

It is dark inside St Giles, an eighteenth century church deep in the West End, and Anthony Gonzalez has just walked unannounced between the pews. He steps alongside his transparent box of tricks as analogue hiss seeps from the speakers. Slowly Gonzalez builds and tweaks the waves, heading towards a gentle pulsating crescendo. It’s an unassuming yet fixating live introduction, and begins a gig that I have awaited with absurd levels of excitement.

The night didn’t start that well – due to a late soundcheck the doors didn’t open for over an hour, leaving a cosmopolitan queue snaking it’s way along St Giles High Street on a cold December night. Once the doors opened, it was strange to head down the aisle of a church and file into the pews, facing an altar spread with all sorts of wired boxes and synths. To my great pleasure there’s a full drum kit alongside an electronic equivalent. The full band wouldn’t appear for three tracks or so, leaving Gonzalez to demonstrate his prowess with electronic manipulation and a guitar. And when he sings the clarity is amazing – I’d been told the acoustics in the venue were superb, and my source wasn’t wrong.

M83bWhen the full band did join the noise levels went up a notch, but only from the low dais. Befitting the ecclesiastical surroundings, the crowd remained relatively silent. The first widespread nods of recognition occur when the spoken word introduction to Moonchild echoes around the high space. As with many of the tracks, it gets a live re-working with the crashing drum fill delayed until the midpoint of the song. It doesn’t quite sound as huge as I have imagined it would in concert, but it doesn’t prevent the angelic stabs sending pulses down every spine in attendance.

Unsurprisingly, the set is weighted towards this year’s supreme Saturdays=Youth LP. Even relative lowlights on the record such as We Own The Sky are reinterpreted as windswept epics, pounding beats from the excellent drummer pegging down cyclonic patterns from the two keyboards. Whilst the drummer is excellent, the second guitarist and the female vocalist are equal – supporting and enhancing Gonzalez’s singular vision. The band are tight, rhythmic and clearly enjoying themselves. Gonzalez and his opposite are frequently pumping at the keys, hips thrusting against equipment racks.

As the set builds towards climax, M83 have saved the best until last, launching into the keening strains of Saturdays=Youth‘s highlight Skin Of The Night. Spun out and spiralling it is the peak of the set – the vocals striking incessantly and poignantly, as electronic beats shudder the wooden seats. The set is finished with the unfolding, complex and utterly breathtaking Couleurs, the instrumental pivot that the rest of the album rotates around.

And then it is done – Gonzalez heads back down the aisle to a standing ovation. Whereas coming into the evening M83 had been merely an artist I’ve enjoyed greatly; I leave with it concrete in my mind – 2008 belongs to them.

M83 – America
M83 – Skin Of The Night

Photos: Matt Biddulph

This song contains the word Hal-lel-ujah. Words that strike fear into my very heart. The Water Rats resounds with silence – the act that just left the stage proclaiming ‘I’m a Christian, yeah that’s my thing‘ successfully murdered the very concept of rock music. Anodyne instrumentation is overlaid by the worst kind of X-factor, teapot-dancing, yelping, pious nonsense. Thankfully I can’t remember the act’s name (despite several exhortations to ‘friend her up’ on myspaz) but AVOID.

Thankfully, Bears from Labrador are much, much better. Fresh from a Track of the Week nomination on the Radcliffe and Maconie show, the band are clearly high on confidence. Recent EP Wilderness is garnering glowing reviews across the board. The main theme here is smoky MOR, shot through with occasional jolts of mariachi brass.

The overall sound transmits perfectly live, especially as the band is tonight augmented by a trumpeter. Aforementioned radio triumph God is tossed in second, and fizzes with the kind of Americana done so well by bands like Midlake. In fact the whole set is a curious clash between the stateside sounds and quintessentially English psychadelia.

Set highlight Trees is a case in point, kicking off with a Calexico brass-blast, pinned back by an elastic Pixies bassline, before singer Dylan Rippon pops up with the kind of wistful vocal that made Syd Barrett’s name. Strangely towards the end, the band shift into what I am sure sounds like a Cream cover – Dylan assures me afterwards it isn’t (not a bad band to sound like though, he smiled) but it just adds to the performance.

Big things are expected in 2009; further EP releases, constantly rumoured US dates… For now though, their reputation is being built here in the UK and shows like this can’t help but spread the word. Catch them next time around – it may be your last chance in surroundings like this.

God (Live Video from Hoxton Square Bar & Kitchen)

Trees (mp3)

All photos by me!

Don’t forget to vote in our Best of 2008 section!

Photo by preamble

Who’d win in a fight between a tiger and a cockatoo? It’s the type of conversation you might hear down the pub after a few too many beers. However, this and many more questions are answered in technicolour style by Kevin Barnes and Of Montreal at Koko. The evening began in contrasting drab fashion, with Eugene McGuinness twanging away on Koko’s grandiose stage. I was expecting more given the hype, but the set seemed to consist of sub-Arctics quick-slow musings.

Following a cracking little set from the inter-band DJ (Roxy, Tom Tom Club, OMD) Of Montreal took to the stage, Barnes looking like a cross between Adam Ant and the genie from Aladdin. Better still was the guitarist, bedecked like a long-overdue extra from The Flintstones. Sadly there was no Godiva-esque entrance on a white horse, but there were theatrics aplenty to come.

Shooting off with Id Engager, the band got through most of Skeletal Lamping before the night was out. Unfortunately the live show mirrored the problems of the record. By the second half things were dragging, the band seeming to lose the focus and drive that propelled them through the first half-dozen songs. Some of this must be attributed to the ever-present theatrics. On the one hand, a welcome respite from the standard band-instruments-audience triumvirate; on the other frustratingly disrupting the flow of the band.

There were however, some interesting set pieces. The pose-able quartet, manipulated into position by Barnes was particularly effective. Most are lost on me though, halfway back from the stage I simply can’t see the floor of the stage! Too many of the songs had been spun out into long instrumental sections whilst Barnes went through another costume change. Of course, there were spots of pure inspiration.

Heimdalsgate… and Women’s Studies Victims are particularly good, and the band has a talent for overlaying melody on top of hypnotic groove. But, as the band headed off between set and encore I’m left feeling that something special was going to be needed to elevate the performance beyond the patchy showing so far. In the main the crowd are loving it, maybe it was the bright colours and loud noises, the ADHD generation lapping up the kaleidoscopic free-for-all onstage.

Gronlandic Edit arrived too late to redeem the overall experience, and even a gutsy and entertaining (if a little by rote) cover of Smells Like Teen Spirit only briefly sets the fires burning. I leave Koko with the feeling that Of Montreal should be applauded for attempting to bring some showmanship back to live music performance. Kevin Barnes is an unabashed popstar, drawing attention in every action and hip-shake. However it’s a reach too far, the whole affair comes across as a glorious, messy shambles. Oh, and somewhat unsurprisingly, the tiger won.

Of Montreal – Women’s Studies Victims