The Xcerts*****
Flood Of Red*****
Drawings*****
The Borderline 18th January 2012
Tote bags. Beards. Plaid. More beards.
Fucking tote bags! Yup, tote bags. Sported by blokes. With beards. Bellends. Bearded bellends. With bags.What is going on? If any of the hipsters in tonight’s assembly
decided to commit a murder, there’s no way a conviction would stick. Any
identity parade would be declared erroneous because the line up would look
identical. Even the women.
Sorry, I digress. tonight’s show promises
the world. A buffet of slacker grunge alt bastards from all ends of this
sceptred isle.
Drawings*****
First up are a trio from Southampton. Why
that’s relevant is beyond me. Saying that, the old ship city is doing something
right; Burn The Fleet and, er, Craig David among the marine diesel infused conurbation's issue.
So what was on offer? A jaunty enough start
with a U2 ish delay fest followed by some tapping and guitar whizziness all
backed by a big-arsed bass and, well, to be honest, an average drummer.
Nonetheless, the assembled bearded, be-bagged
bellends seemed to quite enjoy what was being served up. Matthew Reynolds’
vocals were chocolately and mellow and hovered around rather than soared over
the interesting soundscapes.
All together now, Oom Pa Pa Xanadoooooo |
All-in-all, not bad. Not brilliant. But definitely
not bad. In a world of stunning trios, Drawings are going to have to dig a bit
deeper if they’re going to rub shoulders with the likes of Arcane Roots and
tonight’s main honey pot, The Xcerts.
Flood of Red*****
I don’t know how I’ve missed Flood of Red
until now. They seem to have been around since God was a nipper, but tonight
was my first live exposure to this ramshackle bunch of mainly Caledonian malcontents.
Guitars? Yes. Tote bags? Get off. |
Their songs were original, catchy, complex
and high wattage throughout.
The swollen crowd lapped them up and the
energy seemed to fuel fun and frenzy on stage. Thoroughly entertaining,
impressive and enjoyable. I will definitely seek these bad boys out again. (I
think they’re supporting the mighty Bled on their swansong tour!).
The only possible negative, was that on
their merch table, they were knocking out branded fucking tote bags!
This must be about the dozenth time I’ve
had the privilege of being in the presence of The Xcerts. And the joy,
anticipation and excitement gets only stronger with every performance.
Despite his new mane, Murray still looked 14 |
And, then, boom; straight for the money
shot. Do You Feel Safe opened the sermon and every one of the congregation in
this church of hipsterville began their collective worship joining in with
reverend MacCleod’s enchanting homily.
These guys must be one of the hardest
working bands on the circuit and all the hard work has certainly paid off.
There’s an innate telepathy between all the
individuals, Jordan Smith’s precision bass playing is neurally linked with Tom
Heron’s economic and sympathetic skin walloping. They are so tight, so slick,
so conjoined yet never clinical, sterile or predictable. Thankfully, there’s no
Steely Dan faultlessly true to the recorded original note-for-note rendition slavishness
here; far from it, a loosesness and delicious spontanaeity keeps the cauldron
bubbling with the three individual parts reacting and interreacting with like
one of those enormous shoals of herrings from a David Attenborough under the
sea special.
All the favourites are given an airing
tonight. Slackerpop, Young (Belane), the anthemic Crisis in The Slow Lane, Scatterbrain,
Just Go Home with it’s oo oos, a couple of new ones and the spine tingling
Aberdeen 1987 with Murray dispensing with his buddies for a truly
goosebump-inducing fragile and fantastic solo rendition. The crowd sang every
word and there can’t have been a dry eye in the house.
Judging by the masses of industry types
here tonight, along with the cream of some of the very best young UK bands –
Damiani, Pennels, Doyle, Duce, Delaney among others propping up the bar – the
importance of this band is gathering a well deserved momentum and it feels
they’re on the very brink of bigger things.
I’ve waxed lyrical so often about the
genius of these lads and on the strength of tonight’s brilliant performance, I
can’t add much more praise. They truly are one of the very best live acts in
the country and long may they continue spreading the gospel of slackery grungy
rocky beautifulness. A class of their own. Truly.
No 1. Bloody well No 1. |
The often miserable but wonderful Mike Duce
and his LTA boys next. Can’t wait.
More tunes soon, Bwoooar!