Setlist
Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Ring The Bells / Sit Down / Hey Ma / Stutter / Out To Get You / Not So Strong / Sound / Sometimes / LaidSupport
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James take to the stage at 4.40 with the backdrop bedecked in some cheap looking inflatable flowers. They start off with Getting Away With It, and the opening bars see the crowd down the front raise their hands and start to clap along, it’s a good indication that James will get the respect they deserve from this festival crowd, which contains a reassuring large number of James shirts in its midst. I have the misfortune to be stood behind a guy who knows none of the words, but sings loudly, so I move away. The sound is excellent for a festival and the band are clearly up for it, Tim prowling the stage, catching the attention of various band members as he does.
Ring The Bells is now a festival staple. It lifts the mood with its upbeat, fast pace and has Tim starting to dance manically. The strobe lights don’t have quite the desired effect in the bright sunshine, but it causes one James virgin stood next to me to ask if the strobe lights set off Tim’s epilepsy. She gets let off as it’s her birthday.
Sit Down is messy at the start, but majestic. Tim comes down to the barrier and interacts with the crowd in a way none of the other performers do today. Whilst Guy Garvey later has them eating out his hand with his charm, wit and uniquely Mancunian manner, Tim goes for the more personal contact. The song itself is ideal for these huge communal singalongs, but doesn’t lose the personal, sad tinge to the lyrics.
Hey Ma again sees hands raised as the song kicks off. It doesn’t feel out of place in the set and people sing along. Tim dedicates the song to Blair and Bush’s fuck ups in Iran, before correcting himself.
The highlight of the set is Stutter. Twenty seven years old and as fresh and vibrant as anything seen on the main stage all weekend, and probably as wild too. The triple drum approach with Saul ending up bashing his drumsticks on Larry’s guitar makes for a huge wall of noise. Again, it’s a shame that it’s not dark to get the full on lights effect.
Out To Get You calms the mood down and results in a sea of arms waving and people singing along. The song’s delivery means it doesn’t lose any of the poignancy. Grown men hug and link arms, you know the kind of thing this song brings out in people.
Not So Strong is introduced as a song about boxing. Whilst not as immediate as some of the hits in the set, the chorus has a singalong quality to it that some of the crowd catch onto towards the end. It really should have sat on Hey Ma, somewhere between Semaphore and Upside.
Sound gets truncated, and I’m having issues with this song in the set at the moment. 12 or 13 minutes long versions take down the momentum, yet the short version makes you feel short-changed. Something like Tomorrow would have fitted better to bring the crowd back up for the climax of Sometimes. There’s no singalong, there’s no attempt to get the crowd to it, which would have been interesting. Laid is a perfect set closer. It’s sounding wilder than ever, the crowd go mental and all it’s missing is the mad scramble over the barrier to get on stage, forbidden by the V security and the killjoys of health and safety.
A good solid festival set, one of their better V performances in my memory. It’s never easy to play in bright sunshine at 5 in the afternoon to a crowd that’s not your own. James pull it off, the reception they get at the end tells the story.
Lose Control / Sit Down / Oh My Heart / Ring The Bells / Come Home / Upside / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Born Of Frustration / Stutter / Not So Strong / Out To Get You / Tomorrow / Sometimes / Laid / Sound
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So after another blistering hot summer day with temperatures bordering on 100 degrees fahrenheit and 70%+ humidity, which made soundchecking a nightmare, James return to the stunning Earth Theatre for the second of three shows. As the previous night, the venue is sold out and the hillside seats are packed as the band take the stage around 9.30. As the previous night, they start with an acoustic version of Lose Control, with Tim, Larry and Andy starting at the top of the banking and making their way down through the crowd to the stage during the song. The crowd is evidently as fervent as the previous night and sing every word.
True to their word last night, the set does get quite a major workover. Waltzing Along gets the standing area dancing, Tim loses himself in his own dance over the instrumental sections, and if it could happen here, it’s warming up very quickly. Ring The Bells sees Andy take centre point on the extended front section of the stage. The sound is superb in the venue, crystal clear and just about the right level, so you can hear the subtleties without losing any of the power.
Tim introduces Hey Ma as a song about George Bush and Tony Blair which is met with a series of boos from the crowd. The song is met with mass arms held aloft and clapping as it builds to its climax. She’s A Star starts with Saul playing guitar with his violin bow.
Tim introduces Don’t Wait That Long as an ancient song. It’s beautiful, dreamy and lilting, with Larry’s guitar piercing through the heat as Tim dances next to him with Larry apparently oblivious to his presence. They hadn’t played this particularly well when they’d attempted it on previous post-07 tours, but tonight it was pretty perfect.
Having witnessed the response to Senorita last night, it’s less of a surprise just how the whole venue gets up on their feet, waving, singing as they play it. Born Of Frustration is epic from the opening yodel which the crowd do back to Tim, through the middle section where Tim comes down into the crowd as Larry and Andy take the song off in a different direction.
Stutter is next. Tim jokes that hardly anyone in the audience will know it. That’s probably true but the sheer power and chaos it creates sucks everyone in. It’s fast, frenetic, the lights spasm and jerk as the song builds. Saul comes to the front of the stage with a drum which he beats, Mark joins Dave on his drums and Andy takes on keyboard duties. By the end of the song, Larry has joined Saul at the front of the stage and Saul uses Larry’s guitar as a drum. Outstanding.
Out To Get You sees Saul take centre stage for the end of the song with the spotlight on him at the front as he plays like a man possessed. It’s a different take on the end than the normal huddle around Dave’s drumset and works beautifully with the sound allowing every note to be heard.
Dream Thrum, as Tim describes as not one of our pop songs, is next and has revised lyrics in the first verse but sounds, like it’s name, dreamy. Upside does fail to quite get the euphoric response it has on UK shows in the past year and a half, although it’s played beautifully, with a pause before the crash into the final chorus and the outro.
The whole place erupts for Getting Away With It. Everyone on the banking is on their feet, hands in the air, singing along, almost drowning out the band. It’s astonishing to see the song get this reaction, but the Greeks have taken it to their heart more so than even some of the better known hits.
Sometimes and Laid finish off the set. The crowd join in at the end of Sometimes without prompting from the band, but the singing isn’t as long and vocal as the previous night, so the band come back in and finish the song off, before Saul kicks into Laid, which is wilder and longer than it’s been for a long time, particularly with Andy playing trumpet over the top.
Coming back on for the encore, Tim asks the crowd what they want to hear. I’m surprised he can hear anything above the melee but they play a laid back languid version of Sit Down, before hammering a vicious version of Tomorrow. Say Something, which couldn’t be left out after the previous night’s singing from the crowd, sees the last of the planned encore, but as the band take their bows, it’s clear noone wants to leave, so they decide to play another.
Saul and Tim ask for dancers as they kick into Gold Mother and 10-15 people are pulled out of the front rows to dance on the stage. Saul urges them to dance as the song builds and builds to its climax. It’s a great way to end the set and the applause and cheers from the crowd at the end confirm that it had been another special set in a stunning location with a crowd that’s fully up for it.
The Earth Theatre is, despite the location on the outskirts of the city with no signposts for the English traveller, pretty much a perfect place for a James gig. It holds around 5,000 in an amphitheatre carved out of the hillside. Stage right is a large vertical cliff, on the other sides large sloping banks with seats, which explained the bizarre concept of people selling sheets of polystyrene outside the venue with a standing area in the middle.
The support band were pretty dreadful. They were a local band and their own songs didn’t sound too bad but they insisted on absolutely murdering Fleetwood Mac’s Big Love and Bjork’s Violently Happy.
The band, minus Tim and Andy, come onto stage and there’s silence until Andy blasts out the intro to Lose Control on his trumpet. The crowd turned round to see them on the steps of the banked seating, although initially there’s some confusion as they can’t work out the route to take down to the stage. It works itself out though and the song is performed by just Tim, Larry and Andy which is an interesting and different take on prior versions. The crowd sing along to every word.
Oh My Heart is next and it’s good to see the crowd are generally familiar with Hey Ma. Greece has taken James to their heart quite late – Pleased To Meet You, Getting Away With It (Live) and Hey Ma were all big hits here, probably chart-wise far more so than in the UK.
Ring The Bells has the crowd jumping up and down and generally going wild. Tim comes to the front of the stage and starts dancing, whilst Andy’s trumpet takes the song off in a different direction. Whiteboy is played pretty straight but it is a great pop song nevertheless.
Tim introduces English Beefcake as a song that they’d learnt especially for Greece as they were the only ones that seemed to understand it. It’s a wonderful version too, improvised lyrics in parts and some superb guitar from Larry. One of the highlights of the set. And it links into a stunning version of Bubbles. The poignancy of the song seems to grow in the beautiful setting.
Senorita gets a massive reception. It hardly ever got played in the UK, in 2001 or later, but the fans here love it. It’s a great song and should have been a single, had Mercury bothered to promote the album at all. Born Of Frustration is huge too. The sound of the trumpet piercing through the warm night air. Tim comes down onto the barrier in a number of places to make a connection with the crowd.
For Gold Mother, he invites four fans up on to the stage on the condition they are good dancers. They are a bit more subdued than the UK stage dancers which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. The song elongates itself into what is almost a free jam with Tim hollering into the megaphone.
Of Monsters and Heroes and Men is a surprise inclusion for an outdoor show, particularly as there is no Upside tonight, but works well without the use of the mirrorball which added so much to the visuals on the 2008 UK tours. The song builds to its climax and the crowd go mad. I Wanna Go Home is simply stunning. It’s the prime example of how the magic of a James live show is something that is very difficult to capture on a shiny disc. Tim prowls the stage, the desperation of the lyrics coming through in his vocals, the band just adding to it with their playing. Outside in the warm Thessaloniki air, it’s amazing.
Out To Get You has the crowd singing along and once again it ends in something resembling a free jam. The song must last eight or nine minutes as the band pair off to encourage each other and then end in a huddle around Dave’s drums. It seems to stop once and then start again.
Then something amazing happens. The opening bars of Getting Away With It start up and the crowd go absolutely wild. Mental. It’s absolutely crazy. A song that is one of the middle range recognised hits in the UK gets the best and wildest reception of the evening. The crowd start singing it before Tim gets chance and it’s difficult to hear him throughout the whole song.
Sometimes ends with the crowd singing the chorus back at the band. For those experienced in James 2008, it might seem a bit corny and put on now, but there’s real emotion in the way the crowd just pick up on Larry and Andy and take it away. As tradition goes, it kicks into Laid which has an extended outro with Andy blasting trumpet out over Dave’s frenetic drum beat. And then they’re gone.
Mark comes out first for the encore and starts to play the extended intro to Sit Down as the rest of the band make their way back to the stage. The crowd holler back every word. Sound goes off in a number of different tangents, stopping, starting, stopping again, going quiet, getting loud. Yet every time they do it, it sounds different to how they’ve done it before. It’s simply wonderful stuff.
That’s meant to be it, but as the band take their bows, the crowd start singing Say Something. Really loud. There’s no way they can leave without playing it so they do. Tim fluffs the words at one point which almost has Saul bent double as the crowd look on confused. It finishes with an improvised outro and Tim back out on the barrier. The applause is deafening and the band stand there for a good few minutes taking in the applause.
An excellent show in a stunning setting.