Showing posts with label o2 academy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label o2 academy. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 March 2014

LIVE REVIEW: Bombay Bicycle Club - O2 Academy Bristol, 12th March 2014



Bombay Bicycle Club are our very own home grown, quintessential indie band. The fresh faced poster children of their generation – but can their fourth album in four years, a fast turnover for any band, do enough to keep us interested?
BBC dove in with their game changing debut record (I Had The Blues But I Shook Them Loose) back in 2010, followed it with a folk-acoustic offering (Flaws), dabbled in art-rock shoegaze (A Different Kind Of Fix) and have now added beats and loops on their current album So Long See You Tomorrow. They have fearlessly done the unthinkable – considerably reinventing their sound with each album, pleasing current fans and keeping them thoroughly refreshed, whilst attracting new ones in their droves.
Their fantastic new album has finally taken the idiosyncratic North London foursome to the lofty heights of the number one spot, which is surprisingly their first. What an achievement - the entire LP was also their first to have been entirely self-produced– promising wholly raw talent and hopeful longevity for this superb band, without needing to hide in the shadows of impressive producers.
Most bands are either loved for their ‘happy’ or ‘sad’ music, it’s not often that a band can receive equally strong reactions live to these opposite ends of the spectrum. Their live show did just that, sweeping us up in the dizzy euphoria of ‘Carry Me’, back down to the bashful heartache of‘What If’.

Having spent the last year travelling Turkey, India and Asia, Front man Jack Steadman is said to have drawn the exotic influences on the record from these travels, finding not only himself – but the true essence of the band, as trite as that sounds. ‘Feel’, another gem from their latest record was an amazing moment live, and gauging the crowds response to this unusual swerve in sound – it seems these risks have well and truly paid off.

Their performance was a whirlwind or colour and noise through their impressive back catalogue, mixing the old with the new, cherry picking from the best with no vanity filler ballads or boring, overly long instrumentals. The audience was excitable and completely consumed throughout. 
They have in the past, (and still to this day) been criticised for lacking an identity. But does having a number one album suddenly mean that they should start smashing up their guitars and making grandiose statements about the state of ‘modern music’ during their live shows now? They are a band of few words, with art and craft at the forefront of their imaginations.

Thursday, 28 November 2013

LIVE REVIEW: Kodaline @ O2 Academy Bristol 18/11/2013

Originally published at Middle Boop Mag: http://www.middleboopmag.com/music/live/live-kodaline-o2-academy-bristol-18112013


Radio friendly. Soft rock. One for the mums. These are some of the connotations that your mind may subconsciously throw up at the mention of Kodaline, and you could be forgiven for this for it’s certainly how they’ve been packaged. You’ll probably recognise them from tracks like ‘High Hopes’ and ‘Love Like This’, which are played religiously on the hour, every hour on Radio One.

Essentially, the Irish four-piece are all of these dreadful things, but (hang on in there) they were bloody good live, and their album In A Perfect World is bloody fantastic too, despite it all. They’ve been compared with Coldplay, Muse and The Script, so they really are a mixed bag of what some people might call 'easy listening'. 
The gig was comprised of 30 something’s and swooning teenage/a little older girls. Their album washed appreciatively over the crowd as they fiercely and some a little too intensely (listen to ‘High Hopes’ and imagine the person next to you wiping a tear from their eye and singing along in a rather wobbly voice)  lost their minds to their biggest hits.  

It was easy, it was pleasant, and for a gig on a Monday night after a rather messy weekend, they were just what the doctor would have prescribed, if doctors dabbled in events based remedies.  I entered the building jaded, over it before it had even begun. I left a fan, and listened to the album on repeat for upwards of a week. To all your high-brow muso's out there, initial thoughts deserve to be cast aside on this one. 

Thursday, 28 February 2013

Of Monsters and Men - Bristol's O2 Academy 27/02/13


Last night I had the pleasure of watching these guys perform. 


It was SENSATIONAL. Review to follow...