Posts mit dem Label live werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label live werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Donnerstag, 1. September 2016

Reading Festival Day 1

First band on the bill for myself were Creeper [8] that day. Even though getting let into the festival area took a bit longer than expected, I arrived just in time for the end of the first song. The energy within the rather big gathering under the tent of the Pit stage is intoxicating as the band belted out another one of their songs to the hungry mass. Considering that this bunch of musicians from Southampton haven’t been on the radar for too long, the amount of people passionately yelling their lyrics back at them covered in Creeper merch is quite astounding. One word from the singer and the crowd obeys. Circle pits, mosh pits, jumping, crowd-surfing, people on other people’s shoulders. Anything suggested is getting transferred to actions with the blink of an eye. This band is destined to grow exponentially bigger as they progress in the future.

Next on the bill are Lower Than Atlantis [5] set to play on the main stage of Reading. While the gathering in front of the stage is quite big, there isn’t too much movement noticeable in it. To be fair, I’m personally not surprised to see that. Song after song, there’s hardly any change in rhythm and energy. You nod your head along to it and don’t stop till they finish their set, all kept at the same pace.

Much different to that is the next artistic performance on the same stage since the maniacs of Die Antwoord [6] make it their duty to get the crowd up and going again. Even though they’re certainly entertaining, visually and musically, the setting of them playing a set in the bright sun on a Friday afternoon is rather unfitting. If the same show had taken place on one of the tent stages as a closer, it certainly would’ve had a bigger effect and been a better representation of their full potential. Die Antwoord aren’t for everyone, but with a different setting, I’m sure a lot more would’ve enjoyed and engaged in their performance.

Over at the NME / Radio 1 stage, the crowd is already a wild mixture of people trying to see the current artist performing on stage and gatherings of hardcore fans waiting for their favorite band to come on. More particularly, Twenty One Pilots. But more to that later.

Giggs [6] just finishes up his set as I enter the tent and make my way through the dancing and bouncing mass to the front. The energy in there is electrifying and intoxicating to make you join in even though you usually don’t particularly enjoy that kind of music. Kudos for that.

Next up are The Internet [2] who manage to drown all of that previous energy down to Ground Zero. The only person on stage to even do anything close to performing is the guy on the keys who does his best to dance and motivate others to do the same. Not only is the singer’s voice extremely quiet and tedious but combined with the motionless rest of the band and slow rhythms, it’s a pure mood killer.

As The Neighbourhood [9] take the stage, it all gets turned upside down rather quickly again. Considering their music isn’t particularly fast-paced either, they still manage to get the crowd moving again, swaying from side to side. Most credits for that are due to Jesse Rutherford (vocalist) who not only already partially amazes the audience by entering the stage in nothing but high-waisted hot pants, but also by his general attitude of not being afraid of anything and presenting himself with enough charisma to fill the whole stage with it. Their tunes set you to feel like you’re strolling down a beach promenade somewhere on the coast of California. Luckily for them, the temperature that day actually adds up to that, neglecting the cliché of the usual muddy UK festivals.

Preset to be shocked by Crystal Castles [8] are the girls who are doing their everything to defend their place in the crowd for any latter bands. The band is faced with girls booing, screaming for them to stop and yelling disgusting commentary at the singer as she descends to the front of the barrier. Clearly, she isn’t bothered by that in any way, probably not even hearing most of it. None the less, it certainly dulls the experience of this band for others in attendance. Still, Crystal Castles reignite the room with hectic strobe lights, screaming and spastic movements fitting their equally messed up music. Again, as with Die Antwoord, a different placement on the timetable and stage might have given them a better atmosphere to perform in and improved the way they were to be received by the crowd and appropriately appreciated as they deserve to be.

During changeover, dozens of girls are getting lifted over the barrier. Crying, screaming, shaking … most of them are having panic attacks and are getting carried off to the paramedics by security, some instantly faint in their arms. The hysteria is unbelievable. Every five minutes, a big push waves through the rows up to the front caused by people outside the tent trying to mingle their way in. More people fall over, get trampled on and have to get carried out of the venue. A setting like this makes you assume the worst for the upcoming performance.

Twenty One Pilots [8] enter the stage and the screaming in this tent threatens to make your ears bleed within the next couple of minutes. The band performs as flawlessly as usual though. Every song in the set smoothly proceeds into the next one. Josh Dun (drummer) rises above everyone as he steps onto a platform held by the crowd to play on their heads. One of many highlights this band has put into their set. To properly judge their performance, you have to consider that there are only two guys in this band who are putting on this masterpiece of a show. It goes without saying that there are dozens of workers behind the scenes to make all this possible but the duo certainly manages to entertain more than a big number of five-piece bands.

Any pause between songs is still filled with continuous screaming and chants. One chant in particular is carried out across the whole festival that quickly manages to do nothing but annoy every fiber of your being: ‘Whoop there it is!’ It’s like Seven Nation Army all over again.

Back to the gig, it all progresses as per usual until Tyler Joseph walks up to the barrier to crowdsurf his way through to a pole in the crowd to climb onto. This is a rather regular part of TOP’s show though, most of the time, Joseph usually simply appears on any kind of high point of a venue instead of making his way there visibly through the crowd. But the second he enters the thirsty hands of the audience, the poor guy drowns in it. People rip his shirt multiple times, pull off his mask, push him down in between all of them, giving him a hard time to get back up for air. Once he finally reaches his destination he stares over to Dun on stage and speaks into the mic: “We gotta be done, Josh … we gotta be done.” And with this, ends their performance early, cutting off their infamous finish. I wasn’t surprised at all to say the least, personally wouldn’t have done it differently. To not be treated like an actual human being with feelings and the ability to feel pain is something no one should have to go through, especially to receive such rough handling from a crowd of people who are supposed to be your fans, friends and admirer. 

I’ve seen comments online trying to justify behavior like this by stating that ‘[…] this is just what the Reading crowd is like! We’re not like the States. We’re not constantly on our phones. We’re rowdy and passionate! He should’ve expected nothing less when giving something like that a try.’ First of all, rude. Secondly, I’ve been to festivals and gigs all over the world, from Australia to the US to the UK to Europe … genuinely almost everywhere. The UK isn’t any better than the US when it comes to phones. 80% of the people around continuously filmed everything, took endless pictures of the same thing, tweeted about the gig rather than look at it. Plus, no matter how ‘passionate’ you think you are, to behave like this is nothing but disrespectful and disgusting and has nothing to do with anything stated. Unbelievable.

During the last changeover, the tent almost empties and dozens of girls have to get carried outside again by security as they simply start to faint all over the venue.


Not any less pushy and hysteric is the crowd for the upcoming Jack Ü [9] though. While the audience is mostly males at this point, they are all equally ecstatic and mental. The duo gig by Diplo and Skrillex is a unity of menace, hypnotic screens, blasting bass and rhythmic overflows. As the gig processes, the crowd gets rowdier and soon crosses over into violence.

Even though the two guys up on the stage, hiding behind their DJ counters, don’t particularly perform as much as the previous bands, they surely know how to properly get a crowd going. Both dive to the front of the stage occasionally, hype the audience, motivate them to escalate further and the audience follow any requests the artists yell at them. One hour later, the show is finished … every piece of clothing in the ‘room’ is dripping with sweat … everyone is trying to catch their breath … the majority of them all leave with a huge grin on their lips verifying the fact that Jack Ü delivered a show worth of a closer set. 

Dienstag, 8. Dezember 2015

The 1975 - November 28th, 2015 - The Academy, Manchester (Concert Review)

Feeling the desire to hop on a plane again, I decided on November 27th to book a flight and headed off to the airport about 6 hours later at 4AM on Saturday, November 28th, to get transferred over to Manchester where The 1975 were scheduled to play their sold out hometown show.

After a couple of hours in the city center, exploring the alleys and browsing through the Arndale, I went to check out the sight of the venue and wasn't exactly surprised when I saw a whole lot of people already lining up at the doors of it. Some had even been camping out there since the day before. While I used to do my fair share of waiting in a queue all day for gigs in the past, I will never understand how people manage to actually camp outside the venue, especially during cold winter months. That's dedication, I guess … with a certain amount of insanity. Considering that this certain band has already sold out the Apollo thrice for their future tour in March 2016, the insanity seemed a little more appropriate considering their popularity in their home country.

Doors opened at 7PM and the process went by rather fast to my own fascination. The queue at that point went down Oxford Road, all the way down to the University of Manchester and probably even further. It was mental.
After another half an hour outside, I finally managed to make my way into the Academy and after giving my belongings away at the cloak room, I placed myself rather in the back with enough room around me to dance and a proper view to the stage.

As support act, RatBoy [3] got chosen and while the choice seemed logical, it didn't throw me off the rails. Some songs had rather interesting instrumental parts and arrangements, but I didn't really get into it all that much. Unlike the crowd around me of which quite a percentage even knew the lyrics to the songs that got played.
45 minutes later, the band left the stage again, the crowd got blinded with bright lights instead and the changeover of the stage was happening in disguise.

The tension in the venue got close to unbearable and the screams got louder and louder by the minute. Finally, The 1975 [10] hit the stage with Love Me, their first song to have gotten released from their upcoming record I Like It When You Sleep For You Are So Beautiful Yet So Unaware Of It (What a title, guys). The second the track started, the whole crowd exploded with joy. What an unreal moment to experience. But also, the second it all began, the stage light installation (by Tobias Rylander) instantly consumed you and goosebumps rushed all over your body. The combination of this artistic use of lights and the feeling the music by these British fellows gives you is such a unique feeling, it's unexplainable.
There was nobody standing still. Everybody danced. Everybody sang along. Everybody enjoyed themselves to the fullest. It was purely beautiful.
Without hesitation, Heart Out started and the party kept rolling. One of the many highlights of the light show was during The City when the whole setup looked like White Noise on a TV screen and the band members were nothing but mere silhouettes moving in front of the screens, producing one of the most gorgeous images I ever got to see.

(Picture by Phoebe Dalton)

With HNSCC, the band took a short break and the room quieted down to take a breath and fuel up on energy again of what was to come.
The vibe though didn't die down as they hit the stage again with Menswear and then presented the crowd with two of their unreleased songs from ILIWYSFYASBYSAOI (… wow …) called Change of Heart and She's American.
For the next song, frontman Matty Healy asked everybody in the room to put away their phones and just listen and connect with everybody for the next five minutes, to live in the moment and experience it all together, which was an amazing act seeing as 98% of the crowd actually participated and the atmosphere got created perfectly for the heavy and nostalgic Me.
With another ballad called fallingforyou, the band further showed their softer side to the crowd and engaged everybody in their performance as it got more and more hauntingly beautiful.
After thanking the crowd for their consideration and participation in the no-phones-rule, the party opened up again with Somebody Else, another unreleased song, and probably my favorite. With another new song called The Sound, the whole room jumped at the order of Healy when the 'breakdown' of the song kicked in.
Another short interlude, An Encounter, later, the beloved Robbers got its show time and then got closed off with one of their many huge hits called Girls.
The band left the stage for a bit to then reappear with the most gorgeous lighting to guide them through Medicine. Not gonna lie, the pure beauty of it all, visuals and music combined in such a way, made me tear up a bit.
Obviously they couldn't leave the stage without their two biggest songs, Chocolate and Sex, and the room exploded once more. Or as Healy demanded: Go fuckin' mental!

Without any exaggeration whatsoever, the current show by The 1975 is the most gorgeous, all-consuming and enjoyable around these days. There is absolutely no doubt about that. I see about 300 gigs every year, and this one was the best one of 2015. The hometown factor definitely added to it all as Healy talked a lot about Manchester during the show, but even without it, it would have been the most beautiful thing.

Huge, huge shout-out to Tobias Rylander for the creation of this light installation because without it, the gig would still have been amazing, but not as hauntingly beautiful and overwhelming as it is now, incorporating The 1975's old aesthetic with three frames above the stage and the new with the screens in the background.

This is art.

Here's the full setlist:

Love Me
Heart Out
Settle Down
So Far (It's Alright)
The City

You
HNSCC (played from tape)
Menswear
Change of Heart

She's American
Me
fallingforyou

Somebody Else
The Sound
An Encounter (played from tape)
Robbers 
Girls

Medicine
Chocolate
Sex


The 1975 will be back in the UK in March and will tour Europe in April, as well as several festival appearances following that. Check all dates, including for North America in May, on their site: |x|


I Like It When You Sleep For You Are So Beautiful Yet So Unaware Of It will be released on February 26th, 2016, pre-order it now!


Cheerio xx

The Neighbourhood - November 17th, 2015 - Gloria Theater, Cologne (Concert Review)


Long overdue but about three weeks ago, on November 17th, I spontaneously hopped on a train to Cologne to see The Neighbourhood at the sold out Gloria Theater. Let me tell you one thing straight ahead, they made it worth it all.

When I got to the venue at around 5:30PM, there was already a huge line of girls queueing to get into the venue. Occasional screams echoed down the street whenever the door of the tour bus, parked right in front of the building, opened and someone hopped in or out of it. 
The point the doors opened at 7PM, the girls went utterly mad and started sprinting towards the entrance. It was quite a sight.

Once inside, there wasn't much time left till the support act would hit the stage since going into the venue took ages. If that was due to security staff being overwhelmed with their duty or the girls being too impatient and interfering with their work is hard to tell, it was probably a lot of both.

Tunji Ige [6], a rapper from Pennsylvania, had quite a hard time getting to the crowd who were only interacting with the artist for the most part whenever he mentioned the headliner band. Nonetheless, some of his tracks got the room to jump along and dance for a while, but only for a short amount of time. After about 30 minutes, he and his accompanying DJ leave the stage again to make way for the main act.

As the stage gets prepared, not much has to get changed and it all remains pretty much the same. There's no back drop. No extensive lights. No huge production. All things viewable are the instruments and a couple of mics. Minimalism and simplicity as we know it from The Neighbourhood guys.

The Neighbourhood [9] open with the thundering intro of Ferrari, a new track from their just recently released record Wiped Out! (you can check out my review of it here: |x| ), but don't got further into the song than that and instead smoothly go into What Do You Want From Me.
The show gets played with hardly any talk sequences in between, which is much to my personal liking as the whole performance seems a lot smoother due to that. All tracks flow smoothly into each other and trap you further in their haunting and mezmerizing performance, no matter if they go from a more playful Prey into a slow Baby Came Home, or back from Daddy Issues into a more upbeat Female Robbery.
There's a bigger rumble of dislike going through the crowd as the band gets to the experimental and instrumental part of Wiped Out!, I personally loved that certain part the most as the focus is solely on the music and the track is also one of my favorites off of that new record.
As it has to be, Sweater Weather found a place in the setlist, too, as the second to last song. The crowd goes mental to the band's biggest hit up-to-date. No matter what though, it is a solid track and it is after all what brought them to a bigger audience. It is also clear that the most part of the people that night were only waiting for this to be played.
Despite that, they decided to go out with another bang instead of letting Sweater Weather fade and close up their show with RIP 2 My Youth.

A special shout out at this point to the band's FOH guy and light engineer because the sound and visuals were nothing short of stunning, working perfectly well with the band's concept of minimalism.


Here is the complete setlist:

Ferrari Intro
W.D.Y.W.F.M.
Let It Go
Wires
Prey
Baby Came Home
Afraid
Daddy Issues
Female Robbery
The Beach
Wiped Out!
Warm
Sweater Weather
RIP 2 My Youth

Personally, from their debut I Love You, Staying Up was definitely missing, and as far as their newest record is concerned, I would've loved to hear Cry Baby and Single. But the show was beautiful nevertheless, worth the travel and surely worth experiencing again.

The Neighbourhood will be back in Germany in March 2016 for their Underwatour, check their website for all tour dates: |x|

Listen to their latest release Wiped Out! on Spotify and buy it at a record store near you!


Cheerio xx