Archive for the Gig Category

Splendour Review: Coldplay

Posted in Festivals, Gig, Gigs, Reviews with tags , , , , on August 1, 2011 by keelykov

Opening on a new song doesn’t instill the greatest faith in those of us that aren’t die hards; but this is Coldplay. They do what they want. And it’s damn rad.

After project: open with new song, the Brits launched into Yellow, showing their claws with their first smash single.

In your place followed. What a lovely sing-a-long. And then… Oh another new song. My vocals just got warmed up. New songs sound a little rubbish, sorry guys, but we only like you when we can sing along.

During this time an interesting conversation popped up: would having sex with Chris Martin be like fucking your female best friend? Does being sexually attracted to him make you a lesbian? Possibly. But there are way sexier girls… Insert Allison Mossheart… But I digress.

The Scientist filled every lung in every person in every corner of the dusty amphitheater. Shiver had people swaying left right and centre and we loved them and let them know in Violet Hill.

While I’m not convinced on their new album yet, this set has made me a believer that all hype surrounding their live shows is justified. Martin’s voice is clear, perfectly on key and at times even incredibly soulful. The band are amazing live, playing flawlessly without sounding like their recordings and their crowd… Well, the people have definitely spoken, they love this band.

With a much bigger production and budget to the last time they headlined this festival in 2003, there were fears that the incredible inclusive feel of their live festival show would be diluted. Fears 100% unfounded. They’re singing to me and you know they are. Don’t try and convince me or the lady next to me otherwise.

What did you think? Who was the highlight of your Splendour In The Grass?

Splendour Review: Pulp

Posted in Gig, International Artists, News, Reviews with tags , , on July 31, 2011 by keelykov

Pulp is more than bits of crap you wish weren’t in your juice. They are the high light of Splendour In The Grass 2011.

Opening with a laser conversation with the crowd. Flashing pink PULP letters illuminate the stage and the best parts of the nineties walk on stage.

Employing his trademark sarcasm and fact of the day (does he own shares on wiki) and drinking his red wine, Cocker led the band and crown through a pulp greatest hits set. From Disco 2000 to Underwear to This Is Hardcore and of course Common People (sans William Shartner) Pulp killed it. Literally, it’s dead.

We danced, we got sexy, we thought about the people we wish we hadn’t slept with, and we sung. Yes. We all sing like mother fuckers.

Jarvis baby, you still got got it.

Top that Coldplay.

Splendour Review: Regina Spektor

Posted in Festivals, Gig, Gigs, Reviews with tags , , on July 30, 2011 by keelykov

The princess of quirky indie pop is currently on stage at the G.W. Mclennan tent. I am 50 meters from the stage, and Regina Spektor is sounding suspiciously like Aston Shuffle.

Oh wait, no, that’s the mix up tent. The sound engineer is just A FUCKING INCOMPETENT DOUCHE!

Why would you have the sound of a piano artist like Spektor down so low that people on the hill directly next to the stage(which just quietly would have made a perfect ampitheatre) can’t hear a single word?

It’s completely ridiculous. Sort this shit out. The wonderful voice of Regina has been drowned out by bass and her quirky live show ruined for at least a thousand fans.

GGGRRRRRRRR.

Aston shuffle however sound Luke they are going off. Might go check it out.

Review: Groovin’ The Moo @ Maitland Showground (07/05/11)

Posted in Festivals, Gig, Gigs, Reviews with tags , , , , , , , , , , on May 9, 2011 by keelykov

Groovin' The Moo - Maitland

Nestled inland from Newcastle in the New South Wales Hunter Valley, the city of Maitland is a sleepy and mostly unassuming place.  The local showground plays to the same tune as the town– neighbour to local sports clubs, a smattering of small suburban houses, and many a green field. It will surely arouse little controversy to suggest that this is no great champion of the Australian festival pantheon.

But this Saturday that venue plays host to the Groovin’ the Moo festival, and the shackles of quiet regional life have been very much discarded. From modest beginnings in 2005, the event has continued to gather momentum in successive years. Although it seems almost mandatory for festival spruikers to make such claims, a scan of this year’s line up suggests it is indeed the ‘biggest yet’ – featuring a host of local Triple J favourites and a selection of quality internationals. It’s little surprise the event is sold out, and many punters have made the eight-hour trip from Queensland for the pleasure of attendance.

After a two-hour drive of my own and a festive beer in a nearby car park, The Go! Team’s mid-afternoon set kicks off the festivities for yours truly. The UK sextet deliver with typical charisma to a reception audience. But, with the boundless energy, athleticism, and sporty attire of frontwoman Ninja, it is sometimes difficult to escape the impression that I am an out of shape participant in an Aerobics Oz Style rerun.

Obvious personal insecurities aside, it is still rap veterans House of Pain who truly get the afternoon going. In behaviour sure to alarm haughtier rock stars, Everlast is happy to reproduce solo hit ‘What It’s Like’ for the gathered masses. There’s also a charming, self-effacing moment, where he acknowledges that most of the young crowd were barely alive for his crew’s last visit. But, naturally, the biggest cheer is reserved for iconic closer ‘Jump Around’ – instructions which all in question dutifully follow.

Gyroscope are left to follow, and maybe it’s the search for some of that same idolatry that sees them cover giants Nirvana and Midnight Oil during their forty minutes. The Perth rockers also play to the first violent ejection of the afternoon – though it’s hard to know why Mister Bliss N Eso-themed basketball singlet requires no less than four men to escort him from the premises, after what seems like a minor scuffle.

And it’s a shame to see much of the Gyroscope crowd disperse as The Drums take the stage. Undeterred, they passionately exhaust the best from their first-rate, Curesque debut album. It comes as a surprise to learn that vocalist Jonathan Pierce is in fact a Maitland aficionado, noting that the experience has made him “really want to come back.”

Their departure ushers in nightfall over the showgrounds, and with the only light source coming courtesy of the racecourse next-door, festival navigation is suddenly risky business. But at least rubbish strewn everywhere is not an issue. Organisers have effectively traded one variety of messiness for another, allowing punters to exchange empty cans for refunds on their next beer or spirit purchase. Some of the more frugal in attendance roam the fields with satchel bags full of gathered empties. Needless to say, this critic is most impressed.

Art vs Science are as much a festival favourite as a teenage favourite, so it’s little surprise the very youthful crowd here affords them a rapturous reception. The tent stage is positively heaving as the Sydneysiders reel off their full repertoire of tongue-in-check electro. Everybody in attendance agrees that in the beginning there was a fountain, and that it was indeed a magic magic magic magic magic magic fountain. Particular kudos goes out to the many punters who climb the tent scaffolding, braving both the danger of falling, and a storm of cups from below, in search of a better look at the ongoing battle between creativity and reason.

Back at the main stage, a duo of promoters giving out as many free red frogs as possibly provide a welcome distraction from Birds of Tokyo. All the earnestness in the Hunter doesn’t succeed in selling the worth of ‘we made plans to kiss the sun at night’ to me as something which should be said out loud.

But never mind – their departure sees the biggest crowd of the day gather for what feels like a headline performance from British indie favourites The Wombats. The Liverpudlian trio rise to the occasion, mixing the better parts of their debut with larger slabs of its more consistent follow-up. But, really, most are just itching to hear heavy-hitting singles ‘Tokyo’ and ‘Let’s Dance to Joy Division’ – which close the set. Tokyo doesn’t quite scale the heights, the frantic energy of the recorded version somewhat lost in transition to live performance. Thankfully they nail ‘Joy Division’, to grins and poor ironic dancing all-round.

The visuals accompanying the portion of UNKLE that I manage to catch are an easy best in class for the day. Particularly memorable is the giant electronic Nick Cave, featured on recent single ‘Money and Run’, looking very much himself with a dapper suit and two Uzi submachine guns.

As locals, Triple J darlings, and able to boast of a genuine international profile, Cut Copy surely qualify as the ultimate Groovin’ the Moo band. But by now a bitingly cold fog has formed over Maitland, so they are left to see off the day to a smaller, less enthusiastic crowd than expected. Thanking those who persevere, they offer a thoroughly professional showing. But, understandably under the settings, it lacks some of the flair and atmosphere of their performance at the recent Sydney Laneway festival, where they played the same slot.

None of which really detracts from what was a fairly diverse, mostly joyous, and very can-heavy day. As a Sydney local, it is tempting to think of the event as something of a sideshow in the festival circuit – taking place away from both the big cities and the summer months as it does. This sort of thinking probably doesn’t bother those from the regions. They know they’re onto a winner, and on today’s evidence will almost certainly continue to enjoy it in great numbers amongst themselves.

- Tom Mortimer

Gig Review: The Gaslight Anthem @ The Metro (28/02/11)

Posted in Gig, Gigs, International Artists, News, Reviews with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on March 4, 2011 by keelykov

How do you put what happened that night into words? I’ve been staring at this page just shaking my head for the better part of 15 minutes now, just trying to explain the magic that is The Gaslight Anthem. Maybe if I just start from the start…

Diehard fans believe no one can hold a candle (or a gas light) to Gaslight Anthem. The hardest thing in the world would be to open up for a band revered by so many; Delaying the crowd from being in the presence of their musical icons. You expect docile applause, heckling and chants of the headline act – but once in a while a band comes along that does the support slot justice. Foxy Shazam was that band.

A late addition to the bill – Polar Bear Club had been scheduled to support the mighty Gaslight, but pulled out within the last month – Foxy Shazam basically had a blank slate with the crowd at Sydney’s Metro theatre. I mean, who had ever heard of them? Truth: No one who was in the crowd will ever forget them.

Brian Fallon (Gaslight Anthem front man), put it best when he described Foxy Shazam’s front man Eric Sean Nally as “the love child of Steve Tyler and James Brown”.  Writhing around on stage like a epileptic and jumping around like a wound up toy, Nally fronted a rag-tag group of misfits and apparent deviants who  not only put on a fucking brilliantly entertaining show, but who also were all incredibly accomplished musicians.

Stage antics highlights: Frog jumps, body mechanics, push ups, commando rolls, headstands, back climbing, story-telling, playing your keyboard through your legs, playing your keyboard while on your head, playing on your keyboard while standing on it & a doo-wop acappella finale. Amazing.

As the very foxy, Foxy Shazam left the stage, the sold out metro started to sweat with excitement. By the time red curtain opened and the New Jersey four-piece swaggered on, the anticipation was palpable.

“We’re the Gaslight Anthem  and we’re from New Jersey. We don’t have any jokes, so we’re just going to play some songs,” Brian quietly said to the screaming crowd before bursting into their first track.

Combining the best parts of Bruce Springsteen and The Misfits, Gaslight Anthem are the epitome of the Jersey Sound – Working class heroes on a journey through love and heartbreak from the crowded streets of Manhattan to the boardwalks of the Jersey Shore.

Kicking out tracks from all three of their LPs as well as the amazing ‘Blue Jeans & White T-Shirts’ from their EP Senor and The Queen, the hour and a half set at the metro not only cemented Gaslight as one of the best live bands getting around today, but also proved that their entire catalogue is – to quote Sum 41 – all killer, no filler.

Front man Brian Fallon offered a complete contrast to Nally of Foxy Shazam. While both are incredible storytellers and had the Metro eating out of the palm of their hands, Fallon did so with as much humble modesty as Nally did extraverted flair.

While Nally’s nervous energy made him seem slightly pretentious and Hives-esque, the huge smile on Fallon’s face when the crowd took over vocal duties on Here’s Looking At You, Kid made you believe he was genuinely surprised by how embraced his band were with audiences so far from home.

Faux – closing their set on Backseats from The 59 Sound before returning for a six song encore (Really? That’s practically a whole other set), The Gaslight anthem galloped into their final song – a hard hitting cover of The Who’s Baba O’Reily. And then, alas, Gaslights love affair with Sydney came to an end as they took their bows and left the stage – promising to return to our shores sooner rather than later.

What a fucking great band. What a fucking great show.

Gig: The Rapture @ The Metro (06/01/2011)

Posted in Gig, Gigs, Reviews with tags , , , , , on January 20, 2011 by keelykov

Shorts were a good choice. The Metro has gotta be hot favourite (excuse that) for the biggest sweat box in Sydney, just ask the geezer that hurled abuse at the massive bearded bouncer for not providing us with temperature perfection. He’s going places that Pom.

Speaking going places (or lack of?) what happened to The Rapture? Three albums full of dancing party tunes, the latest being back in 2006. Songs filled with catch-me-if-you-can riffs, high pitched wails and hip swivelling beats. Some even sprinkled with sax. And everyone loves sax. Then nothing… well I heard nothing anyway. With an album due out soon, it’ll be interesting to see what’s happened to The Rapture over the last few years (besides losing their bass player).

Last Thursday the New Yorkians played to a moderately full metro. Luke Jenner the mop haired singer said a few words before jumping head first into Don Gon Do It, instantly making the fans gush.

When they then went on to frenetically bang out tracks like The Devil, W.A.Y.U.H and crowd fave Get Myself Into It, the room was a hive of excitement, each kid buzzing from song after song they could sing a long too. I hadn’t had any beers, yet I found myself dancing…  yes sober dancing. They had the Metro in the palm of their hand for the first half of the show.

The frenzied excitement ramped the temperature up to what felt like 40 degrees, but as the thermometer peaked the second half of the show came down a notch with a few slower and lesser known songs, including the new and pretty plain Sail Away. That was until they “finished” with the very synthy and club-sounding version of OLIO, which reminded me off Booka Shade with vocals or maybe Hot Chip with pinger thrown in. This really saved the show from losing all its momentum.

Everyone standing behind the sound desk had a perfect view of the set list the engineer had stuck to his controls, so seeing the band walking off wasn’t concerning. We knew there were still three songs to come, two of which no one had heard ever live. Firstly there was No Sex For Ben, a song written for Grand Theft Auto IV, which didn’t really work live, but had everyone singing nonetheless.

Then there were the two unheard tracks in Miss You and Grace. The latter being up there with OLIO for song of the night and in which Jenner’s voice sounded like the Cold War Kid’s singer more than ever.

Overall a very pleasurable and sweaty show, one that could have been even better with some set list modifications, but no one’s complaining… except one hot and bothered pom.

-          Niall Roeder

Gig: Public Enemy @ The Metro (04.01.11)

Posted in Gig, Gigs, Reviews with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , on January 18, 2011 by keelykov

It’d been two years since Public Enemy came and rocked our nation of millions, and there wasn’t a chance this member of the Revolutionary Generation would be missing out on seeing the hip-hop immortals on stage. From the five buck posters being hustled out the side alley to the usual congratulatory high fives of fans inside while lined up for beers, this had all the makings of another classic show.

Ozi Batla put on a very solid 40 minute set which seemed to get the crowd buzzed and excited for the boys from strong island. Despite needle problems and fighting his own excitement, Batla was able to get the crowd ready to roll by finishing off his set with The Herd’s classic 77% which got the metro pumping their fists and fighting the power.

PE’s Hype Man, Daniel Mcgowan, was greeted with the usual uneducated cheers of the people who came to the concert to be “scene” instead of the right reasons. About 10% of the crowd figured Chuck D had jumped on stage, but after 20yrs in the game I’m sure he’s used to it.

When Chuck did finally come out, the roof was torn off the metro, with beers spilling and people jumping around to Brothers Gunna Work It Out.

The next 30 minutes was made up of six straight PE anthems in the same style as their 2009 Takes A Nation tour, which kept the electricity high in the building and had a lot of people (myself included) gasping for a chance to catch a breath or a sip of their VB tinny.

The energy on stage was exactly what you’ve come to expect from Public Enemy, Chuck D most definitely didn’t look like he was 50 yrs old; jumping around with the type of energy some of these “rappers” nowadays should take note of. Not only is he an incredibly MC, he’s a masterful performer and knows how to engulf you aesthetically and lyrically. Also was great to see him and Flavor Flav in the crowd within the first hour and the respect they were shown by the fans speaks eons of them.

Pop Diesel and Brother Mike of The S1W’s were back again, proving a PE gig is not be the same without their militant influence. Along with the three-piece band PE has incorporated, they keep the show fresh and impulsive as well as showing off the groups love & appreciation of music as a whole and just not the sampled beats that DJ Lord is spinning.

Flavor had his chance to make up for missing 2009’s metro gig by dropping (my favourite track) Cold Lampin’ With Flavor, which followed up other classics off their previous album; Bring The Noize and Don’t Believe The Hype. Playing a few older jams was a great move, allowing some of the less attached fans to get right back into the swing of things, and let’s be honest who wouldn’t want to hear PE play anything off Takes A Nation.

We were honoured to have PE play Can’t Do Nuthin For Ya Man and War At 33/3 which are possibly two of the rarest live tracks they perform, so as a life long fan, I felt as if I was part of something very special in Sydney that night.

Only ting I could say they did wrong in the show (which ironically was their message) was not finish with Fight The Power, although they had finished their set, the fact that the metro had told them they were past curfew tempted them to come back on, practice exactly what they preach, and rock out for another five minutes.

Overall the show was everything I have come to expect from Public Enemy, Chuck dropping push ups for messed up verses, Flavor throwing his shirt and rocking the clock, leaving dripping wet, unable to hear, emotionally and physically drained, unable to find public transport because they had run 60 minutes over scheduled time, and in such a great mood I spent the next two hours on twitter ranting on with other fans about how great the show was.

PE are true kings of the rap game and some of America’s other MC’s should take heed at how they perform and what sort of energy they bring to the stage, because that my friends is how a rap concert should leave you feeling.

Incredible show, hopefully see them next yr for the Apocalypse 91 tour?

FIGHT THE POWER!

Gallery: Gypsy & The Cat w/ Papa Vs Pretty @ OAF (29/09/10)

Posted in Australian Artists, Gallery, Gig, Gigs, Reviews with tags , , , on October 11, 2010 by keelykov

Oxford Art Factory, haven of alternative Sydney, played host to a line-up of up and coming Aussies on a rainy Wednesday night in late September.

While headliners Gypsy & The Cat were passable, it was supporting act, the very young, very brilliant Papa Vs Pretty that really blew the crowd’s socks off.

Dishing out a perfect mix of pop hooks and holly-crap-it’s-not-fair-you’re-that-talented blues influenced guitar work, the Sydney three piece played tracks from their new EP Heavy Harm as well as some tasty older tunes.

Check out the gorgeous photo gallery, taken by Lost In Suburbia’s favourite photographer Stu Anderton.

Review: Splendour In The Grass Wrap-Up

Posted in Festivals, Gig, Gigs, News, Reviews with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on August 5, 2010 by keelykov

Splendour In The Grass 2010

Bands, dust, injuries, bands, burritos, bands, margaritas, bands, traffic jams and bands; It’s Splendour In The Grass and for another year, it is sadly over.

In its tenth year on this planet, Splendour grew up, kicked out some unforgettable sets and blew our minds with consistently brilliant sound. This time around it was Splendour on pink elephants as 32,000 punters enjoyed three of the best days of Australian music festivities our fair country has ever seen.

While many campers got stuck in the ten km traffic jam leading into the Woodford site on Thursday, our trip in was smooth sailing. After being directed to a nice little patch of heaven on top of a secluded cliff, we set up camp and proceeded to get giddy on our imported ‘water’.

Friday morning dawned bright and sunny with no hint of the cool weather Splendour promoters convinced us would be nipping at our heels. Icy cold showers aside, life seemed good in Tent City.

Making out way into the festival Horrorshow broke our Splendour 2010 virginity. The two boys from Petersham kicked out a killer set in the Mix Up Tent and after the party (and bullshit, and party, and bullshit) we made our way over to Violent Soho.

Fresh from the US where their single Jesus Stole My Girlfriend has achieved Alternative radio success, Violent Soho introduced us to the beautiful Woodfordia natural Amphitheatre in spectacular fashion. Performing tracks from their newly (re) released album, the boys from Mansfield played to a small, but highly appreciative audience.

Friday flew by in a blur of Foals with an incredible math rock set, Little Red Rock(ing) It at the Amphitheatre and Black Rebel Motorcycle Club getting down, dirty and just a little bit sexy with the crowd.

And that’s when things got ugly. When making my way down from the Amphitheatre post BRMC, thinking I could get a quick phone charge in at the Virgin Mobile van and still make it to the end of Hot Chip, I fell down the hill. And, like the awkward human that I am, couldn’t get back up. Luckily two lovely strangers carried my down the bottom and on to the Medic Tent where I sat for the next four hours. Yes. Four hours.

While I’m not one to complain, I just don’t understand why there were no crutches available on site? I was the 14th ankle of the day the lovely medical students told me, that means that 13 other, probably equally as intoxicated, fools were out there hobbling around and holding up eager festival goers. Anyway, moral of this tale is Amphitheatre Hill = 1, Keely = 0.

Through the walls of the Mixt Up Medical tent, I could hear LCD Soundsystem take the stage. They belted through Drunk Girls & I Can Change as well as classics like Daft Punk is Playing At My House and All My Friends before closing with Losing My Edge. One sweaty punter who had been hanging off the sound tent fence said they “blew [her] face off”. Parts of said face are currently still missing.

Saturday. The Sabbath. The day of rest. Well, not for 32,000 people in south-western QLD. A cheeky trip to Caboolcha and a pair of killer crutches later, day two’s sonic boom erupted.

Braving the slope of Amphitheatre hill on crutches, I settled myself down for a day of main stage frivolity. We didn’t want to party party, but we did ‘cause Philadelphia Grand Jury were fantastic, Operator Please threw down the gauntlet with tracks from their new album Gloves and Tame Impala hypnotised the crowd with their own brand of psychedelic rock.

But the real winner on the day? Three words: Guzman Y Gomez. Burritos Y Margaritas. Delicious Y Deliciouser. Yes, and while the Burritos and frozen cocktails of tasty doom had all run out by the Sunday, that moment on the Saturday, sitting in the Guzman tent with a mariachi band filling my ears while beans & chicken filled my stomach really could have been a perfect moment. It’s sad, but it’s true.

Still basking in the glory of the burrito no one was prepared for the almost-riot that was about to occur. Heading back to the main stage as Florence belted out her last, theatrical notes and as her legions of ‘oh-my-god-she-was-AMMAAZZINNGGGG’ fans spewed out of the two-gate entry/exit to the floor of the amphitheatre stage, we faced ourselves with a conundrum. How. The. Hell. Were we supposed to get through those tiny gates to see The Strokes?

People pleaded, people complained and I think a girl almost cried. These were The Strokes! It wasn’t like they came here every day! We had to get in there; we had to get into that amphitheatre. I saw people climb the walls. People were going bush just to get a glimpse of Julian Casablancas in his oh so attractive leathers. It was like a cattle crush. The bottleneck crowd crush from hell. One more wrong move and these promoters were facing a riot. Then, finally, twp minutes out from the opening act, the bars of life opened up. The red sea parted. Those bloody gates opened up, and in we rushed, as though our lives depended on it. Me, limping and with crutches, the others, pushing their way past me to chance a glimpse of the hero of our generation.

The Strokes, it has to be said, are a pretty good band. They aren’t my favourite, ill be honest with you, they aren’t. But they are pretty good. Their splendour set, however, was FANTASTIC. Capitals on purpose. For a hardcore lover or a weekend fan, The Strokes, on that winter night in July (or was it August) delivered. Playing all their hits, and a few of their lesser known, but still hip as a replacement tracks, the Strokes entertained one and all… what a ridiculously good end to a killer Saturday.

The third day, the frost, except this isn’t a John Marsden book, and this winter in Queensland seem determined never to get cold. So the third day, the third awesome summer-in-winters day in a row, I guess that title seems more appropriate, dawned in spectacular style. Leaving the knob jockey crutches at the campsite, I chucked on some gumboots and we moved with the crowds into the festival site, swigging the last of our illegal ‘water’.

The mix up tent produced Miike Snow; the quirky and fantastic Indie electro act out of Sweden, playing a flawless set which included rad new song The Rabbit and a guest appearance by a man in a gorilla mask climbing the tent poles during set closer Animal. Brilliant.

We Are Scientists played to a slightly empty amphitheatre, and while the set was good, nothing about them grabbed me, in fact, as a band, We Are Scientists have failed to grab me since their first album. Not their fault, just not my cup of tea. Still, people seemed to dig it. Nice for them.

And so began the last of our Amphitheatre marathons. Over the next four hours The Vines, Passion Pit, Mumford & Sons & Pixies graced us with their sonically awesome presence.

Other than having teenage flashbacks to Get Free, the best part of The Vines set was seeing Craig Nichols looking healthy on stage. He powered through the 7 or 8 songs, even engaging with the audience, seems like break from touring had a very positive effect. Lets hope it lasts.

Possibly the best set of the festival, definitely the best crowd of the festival was Passion Pit. The falsetto vocals engulfed the audience cracking a smile on even the harshest of faces and a bounce in the stiffest of legs. Punching out tracks from their debut album Manners and their EP Chunk Of Change, the lads rallied the audience into a bouncing, singing, sweating whole. While Passion Pit can seem a little distant and disconnected in a club show, they are a band that is perfectly suited to playing to hordes of slightly worn down, in need of a boost festivalgoers.

The mood was set for current musical darlings Mumford & Sons to take the stage and wow us with their nu-folk stylings. Joined at times by Julia Stone and Boy & Bear, the English four-piece went through their well-oiled motions, and they managed a fairly decent show. It was just a pity that their performance was overshadowed by the amazing set which had come before them. Unlike Passion Pit, Mumford & Sons are more suited to intimate, smaller venues where their music can really connect with its audience. In a setting like the Amphitheatre, it seemed as though the feeling behind their music was almost lost.

Bringing Splendour In The Grass 2010 home were godfathers of alternative music, Pixies. While it has been drummed into my brain for as long as I can remember that this band is awesome, I just didn’t feel it. Even signature tracks Galvanize and Where Is My Mind felt flat and, to be perfectly honest, boring. The hill was cold which distracted audience attention, and people just seemed to be staying more out of ‘Oh man, it’s the Pixies, you HAVE to see them’ than out of actual enjoyment. It could have been that the excitement hadn’t returned so soon after their last visit, but overall, it wasn’t a great end to what had been an outstanding festival. Shouldn’t have left it at Passion Pit and we all would have gone home happy.

Splendour In The Grass is the countries premiere festival. It is smartly set up with bands enough to cater for every punters music tastes, expertly run with no real hiccups and long enough to feel as though you have really embraced the festival experience without leaving you too drained and wishing it were over. The festival injected $18 million into the Woodford community, so it’s no wonder they are petitioning to have it stay in the area. Whether next year it moves to its new home in North Byron or sees another year at the well set out Woodfordia, Splendour In The Grass 2011 is sure to be one hell of a ride. Strap in kiddies.

 

 

 

 

Review: Miike Snow @ Splendour

Posted in Festivals, Gig, Gigs, International Artists, Reviews with tags , on August 1, 2010 by keelykov

Mix up tent packed out at 2pm on Sunday for the lads from Sweden.

Miike Snow, shroud in a sea of black and blue lighting put the crowd through their electro indie paces as the sun beat sown on the stragglers stuck on the stage edges. The winter promoters advised us to pack for seems far from Woodfordia

New song, The Rabbit, which was introduced via a Rabbit Proof Fence reference (good one wiki), is a driving track with accentuated drums built around a synth structure. Less pop than their last albums tracks, The Rabbit predicts good things for the groups next album.

Following up with love song of the year Silvia, from their self titled debut album, the vocals and sound production live are spot on. All sound at this festival so far has been on the awesome side of insane.

Hazy dust and fog spilt over punters. And then there was a breeze!

Closing with crowd killing Animal. With Seven on stage, three on the album, miike snow just blew my mind.

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