Tag Archives: song-dream-thrum
Cardiff Utilita Arena – 11th June 2024
Setlist
Sound / Waltzing Along / Better With You / Dream Thrum / Stay / Rogue / Life's A Fucking Miracle / Tomorrow / Sit Down / Shadow Of A Giant / Butterfly / Five-O / Mobile God / Beautiful Beaches / Ring The Bells / Sometimes / Way Over Your Head / Come Home / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / LaidSupport
RazorlightMore Information & Reviews
Review: David Brown @ Even The Stars
“This was a supremely confident and assured performance from James, ever changing the setlist, playing around with songs, looking for new connections both within and without the band, taking us all on their journey. It may have been a Tuesday night in Cardiff, not the sexiest location on a school night, but it was one of their best shows and audiences for a very long time.”
Read the full review at Even The Stars
Blackpool Opera House – 12th May 2023
Setlist
Magic Bus / Dream Thrum / Dust Motes / Beautiful Beaches / She's A Star / The Shining / Seven / We're Going To Miss You / Born Of Frustration / Say Something / Nothing But Love / Sit Down / Love Make A Fool / Medieval / Just Like Fred Astaire / Of Monsters And Heroes And Men / Someone's Got It In For Me / Hello / Moving On / The Lake / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Sometimes / Tomorrow / All The Colours Of You / Many Faces / Top Of The WorldSupport
N/AMore Information & Reviews
Review: Dave Brown @ EvenTheStars.co.uk
“There’s then a really emotional moment as Debbie steps forward to the microphone to tell us that her Dad passed away the night before after a long struggle with cancer. She tells us that there being so much joy in the room will help her celebrate him and that they’re going to play her favourite song. We’re Going To Miss You is another song that feels like this was exactly the moment it was written for, particularly when the instruments drop out and the song’s chorus line is sung by Tim, the choir and half the band a cappella.”
Read the full review at EvenTheStars.co.uk
Review: Laura Dean @ God Is In The TV Zine
“Never a band to go through the motions, James are constantly challenging themselves and it’s part of the reason that they’ve had such a lengthy career. The band’s 2021 arena tour was their biggest and most successful tour to date and with Summer dates and a double orchestral album on the way, it’s safe to say that James are showing no signs of slowing down.”
Read the full review at God Is In The TV Zine
Review: Natalie Royle @ Louder Than War
“James are renowned for their improvisation during their live performances and Tim announces “lets do another one”, much to the audiences delight. It would be easy for James to finish with one of their hits which is often the case at a standard James gig, but as we have already learnt this tour is about much more than that. The band’s final song of the night is Top Of The World, which brings the evening to a hauntingly beautiful and emotional close.”
Read the full review at Louder Than War
Manchester Apollo – 9th May 2023
Setlist
Dream Thrum / Dust Motes / The Shining / Seven / Just Like Fred Astaire / Space / Hello / Ten Below / Say Something / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Nothing But Love / Magic Bus / Love Make A Fool / Medieval / Beautiful Beaches / Moving On / The Lake / Someone's Got It In For Me / Hymn From A Village / Tomorrow / Sometimes / Sit Down / All The Colours Of You / Many Faces / Born Of FrustrationSupport
N/AMore Information & Reviews
Review: David Brown @ EvenTheStars.co.uk
“The first time James played Manchester Apollo was in December 1989 when they were on the cusp of their initial breakthrough, about to release Gold Mother and newly expanded to a seven-piece. The ensuing stage invasion during Sit Down, already released as a single on Rough Trade but yet to be the huge hit that shot them right into the public consciousness, was captured by Snub TV. The last time was in April 1998 with The Best Of having reached number one in the album charts. Tonight it feels like James are in similar celebratory mood, as this tour is to commemorate their fortieth anniversary, albeit in more refined mode with the orchestra and choir in tow.
All The Colours Of You and Many Faces complete the written setlist, a reminder of James’ ability to create anthemic monsters still, the segue between the two is a real thing of beauty, transforming from the biting snipes at US politics under the previous president to a message of love, togetherness and union that the crowd sing back to them as the choir stand in a line at the front, the orchestra mouthing the words. At this moment it feels like James have swelled from a nine-piece to a thirty-nine piece by a process of osmosis.
The audience demand more, even from their sitting positions in the stalls, and Born Of Frustration, with the choir singing the “la la la la” section is soaring way to finish the night before they all take their final bows and leave us reflecting on a night that wasn’t as celebratory as the previous show in Liverpool, but equally as full of magic of a different kind created by the audience’s attention and listening.”
Read the full review at EvenTheStars.co.uk
Review: Dianne Bourne @ Manchester Evening News
“The show heads to an all-singing and all-clapping conclusion where there is no stopping a crowd now in party mood. There is full voice for the familiar strains of Sit Down, Tomorrow and Sometimes in their reinvented new form.
The finale comes with the woo-woo wail of Tim, to herald a boombastic “second encore” of Born of Frustration. It was a near perfect setlist for me on Tuesday, but who knows what surprises the band will spring tonight?
But one thing’s for sure for those heading along to the Apollo for the second sold out gig in Manchester on Wednesday is you’re in for a truly memorable night.”
Read the full review at Manchester Evening News
Review: Joanne Marsland @ We Shoot Music
“This was a truly memorable experience, it was so different for me and I wasn’t sure if I was going to enjoy the lack of freedom you get at a normal gig but it so worked. No 7 foot giants standing in front of me, no one chatting all the way through, and the no phone rule should probably be applied more often as you can truly immerse yourself in the moment and there’s less chance of missing anything (well apart from the fact there was a huge harp being carted off stage at the end that I hadn’t been aware of, I think I was too busy enjoying those drums. So apart from unnecessarily having to climb several flights of stairs to get a drink in the interval the whole night was magnificent and I will most definitely be buying the new album, BE OPENED BY THE WONDERFUL, on June 9th.“
Read the full review at We Shoot Music
Liverpool Philharmonic Hall – 7th May 2023
Setlist
Dream Thrum / Alaskan Pipeline / Dust Motes / The Shining / Space / Seven / We're Going To Miss You / Hello / Ten Below / Say Something / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Magic Bus / Love Make A Fool / Tomorrow / Beautiful Beaches / Moving On / The Lake / Laid / Medieval / Hymn From A Village / Someone's Got It In For Me / Sometimes / Nothing But Love / Sit Down / All The Colours Of You / Many Faces / Born Of FrustrationSupport
N/AMore Information & Reviews
Review: Dave Brown @ EvenTheStars.co.uk
“They start with Dream Thrum, which Tim says at the end is the first time that they’ve played it on this tour and it’s a way of getting the adrenaline going for those on stage at the start of the night. Adrenaline might take the room away later in the evening, but the early part of the show is about demonstrating the band, orchestra and choir’s mastery of the more subtle and demanding songs in this collaboration. Alaskan Pipeline is haunting and ethereal, Tim losing himself in letting his body immerse itself in the music so much that he almost misses coming in. One of the most striking aspects of this tour is the vocal interactions, first here with Tim and Chloe and then Chloe and Wayne from the choir who comes down to the front.”
Read the full review at EvenTheStars.co.uk
Review: Janet Harding @ All Music Magazine
“One epic show, a packed set list full of extended songs. It’s honestly felt like some sort of musical healing therapy. I leave tonight feeling as light as air, like I’m floating and brimming with happiness. I’ve been moved by the music – a poignant, touching and spiritual happening for me tonight. I’m completely in awe of this wonderful, orchestral, mesmerising choir and legendary band. Thank you all.”
Read the full review at All Music Magazine
Review: Dixie Ernill @ Penny Black Music
“Of course there are the crowd pleasing moments such as ‘Ten Below’, ‘Getting Away With It (All Messed Up)’ and ‘Sometimes’, and sing-a-longs to understated versions of ‘Laid’ and ‘Sit Down’, spared the bombastic thump by subtle strings, but the positive message portrayed in the brilliantly played ‘All the Colours of You’ and ‘Many Faces’ top the lot. The fact that ‘Born of Frustration’ follows these two in the encore to end the show, but can’t surpass them, highlights hat the relevance of James forty years on from when they started, remains as strong as ever and I for one have some catching up to do.”
Read the full review at Penny Black Music
Cleveland Agora Theatre – 19th July 2019
Setlist
Dream Thrum / To My Surprise / Born Of Frustration / Nothing But Love / Busted / What’s It All About / Heads / Sometimes / Come Home / Stutter / Many Faces / LaidSupport
with Psychedelic Furs (co-headline) and Dear BoyMore Information & Reviews
Review: Cleveland Scene
…even the “soft” songs in the set possessed an intensity to them thanks to the chrome-domed Booth, who’d often tip-toe to the front of the stage to sing to the fans in the pit or gyrate under a flickering strobe during instrumental sections. At one point, he even made his way to the back of the pit to sing and dance with fans.
Read the full review at CleveScene.com
Review: EvenTheStars.co.uk
James rise to the challenge of playing in the Republican heartland of the rustbelt, and deliver a well played set. It is a challenge though: the introduction of politically charged new song Heads by Tim is met with some howls of disapproval from the audience. It is certainly a tightrope act for James tonight. It also doesn’t help that the Cleveland audience are noticeably older and a larger number of them than in previous nights are out to see the Psychedelic Furs. That’s just luck of the draw though when you have co-headlining bands from two different decades on tour together.
Read the full review at EvenTheStars.co.uk
Auckland Powerstation – 9th November 2016
Setlist
Dream Thrum / To My Surprise / Ring The Bells / Move Down South / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Say Something / Moving On / Walk Like You / Bitch / Just Like Fred Astaire / PS / I Wanna Go Home / Born Of Frustration / Attention / Laid / Come Home / Nothing But Love / Sound / SometimesSupport
MelicMore Information & Reviews
None.
Sunset Festival, Sigulda Castle, Latvia – 6th July 2016
Setlist
Dream Thrum / To My Surprise / Move Down South / Catapult / Sound / Tomorrow / Walk Like You / Dear John / Out To Get You / She’s A Star / Just Like Fred Astaire / Bitch / Surfer’s Song / Come Home / Sometimes / Attention / PS / Moving On / Nothing But Love / Sit Down
Support
n/a
Review
n/a
Amsterdam Melkweg – 19th June 2016
Setlist
Dream Thrum / To My Surprise / Move Down South / Catapult / Moving On / Sometimes / PS / Dear John / Feet Of Clay / She’s A Star / Just Like Fred Astaire / Bitch / Surfer’s Song / Tomorrow / Sound / Attention / Out To Get You / Nothing But Love / Come Home
Support
n/a
Review
James hadn’t played in Amsterdam since 1992 on a balmy night across town at the Paradiso, but returned as part of a trio of European dates that also took in Paris and Berlin. In a 500-capacity venue where the band and crowd were almost eyeball to eyeball, James mixed songs from their number 2 album Girl At The End Of The World with some of their biggest hits and favourites from their back catalogue on a truly special night.
Seeing your favourite band in a tiny European venue is a really special experience. Firstly, like James tonight, they are performing in a venue far smaller than you’d see them in at home, there’s no space or budget for the big lighting show, the expansive sound set up. It’s raw, naked and vulnerable, but James thrive in that environment and the looks on their faces tells us that they’re having one of those nights where everything flows and feels perfect.
The Oude Zaal of the Melkweg is a wonderful venue, it holds around 500 in a circular shape with a balcony and has a fabulous sound set-up, imperative for a band of eight that James are live these days, but there are moments of delicious subtlety that are so perfectly amplified and separated that the impact of it brings grown men and women to tears.
They open with Dream Thrum from Laid and that sound quality is immediately obvious, the fragility of the arrangements crystal clear and the band, as they were for much of the recent UK tour, appear to have found that intuitive connection that makes some tours stand out even more from the crowd. From there they go into three songs from Girl – the lead track To My Surprise, Move Down South and Catapult – that channel the power of the record and then release it with cyclonic impact. They’re immediate and they get the audience moving, even if they’re not so familiar with them (the biggest record shop in town didn’t have the new album when we looked earlier in the day) to the point that we don’t hear a single moan about the non-inclusion of Sit Down, Laid, Ring The Bells and a plethora of their other best-known songs.
Moving On, a tale about coming to terms with the death of loved ones, feels particularly poignant in an environment as raw and naked as this one. Sometimes has a magnificent uplifting feel to it and five hundred voices, a mixture of Dutch, British, German and a few from further afield, join in the chorus that feels like some form of catharsis and release. Adrian deserves special mention for making the guitar solo very much his own; true to the original, but very much his own man and an integral part of the live sound.
PS comes from the same album, but is a completely different beast – a spitting, vitriolic vocal delivered with venom and finishing with Tim standing agog, as we do, then starting to dance at the improvised interaction between Saul’s violin and Andy’s trumpet that entwine around each other. When the band surprise each other like this, then you know you’re witnessing something extraordinary. Dear John and Feet Of Clay follow and give further demonstration, not that any is needed tonight, that this band aren’t just capable of the big hitters that they’re best known for. Mark’s keyboards and Andy whistling through his trumpet provide the canvas for the revelations of the former, whilst the latter packs a punch that belies its recorded version without ever compromising its tenderness.
She’s A Star and Just Like Fred Astaire form the semi-acoustic section with Adrian on cello and Jim on that magnificent acoustic bass he’s brought out this year. Once again the songs benefit from the separation in the sound that accentuates each and every instrument. As Fred picks up pace in this unfamiliar arrangement, Tim loses himself completely in the music as do we and that continues, albeit at a wildly different pace as they return to Girl for Bitch and Surfer’s Song.
These two songs are some of the boldest examples of the James 2016 sound. The three minute introduction with its throbbing thrilling insistent bass line turns up the temperature in the room a notch higher, whilst the latter has been a revelation at the live shows, audiences being simply bowled over by the song accelerating just about in control but thrillingly on the edge of potential breakdown.
It’s testament to them that Tomorrow and Sound, monoliths of many a James set, don’t overpower or overwhelm them. Recollections by this point are slightly hazy as everyone is so lost in the music, in a world where everything else is shut out for ninety magical minutes. As well as a lot of love in the room for the band, the audience are as one, a joyful celebration of the band returning after so long away or seeing them perform in such intimate surroundings. Andy joins us in the centre of the floor mid way through Sound as we create a circle around him.
They finish with Attention, the real show-stopper on the recent UK tour. As it reaches the breakdown where the two elements of the song come together and then go their separate ways, the audience come in and almost beat-perfect raise it with hand clapping at a volume that belies their numbers until the song explodes back into life and light spectacularly.
Out To Get You opens up the encore, so crisp and sharp you think it might snap in two if pressed, but every note feels like a heart string is being plucked as well as the guitar string. Mark has made his way to the front of the stage and the interaction between him and Saul has Tim mesmerised as it does us – he lets himself go and loses himself in the music as many of those around us do too. Nothing But Love sees a wonderfully poignant moment where large sections of the crowd wrap arms around each other’s shoulders and sway, dance and sing along. It encapsulates the magic and the feeling of unity that’s been created (there’s a few references to the upcoming referendum) by the eight of them up on stage.
There’s no way we’re going to let them leave it at that and they have no intention of going anywhere. Tim suggests Come Home and very soon joins us in the crowd, falling on top of us and being lifted around the room, the crowd managing to both dance and move Tim around without dropping him although he does look a mix of shaken and exhilarated when he gets back to the stage.
Amsterdam was a wonderful experience. The band were as good as I’ve seen them for a very long time, thriving on the intense intimate environment they are performing in, feeding off the energy of a crowd that’s there to enjoy themselves rather than drink themselves into incoherence. The set list is a challenging one that refuses to take the easy route of rolling out a series of hits because they haven’t been to the Netherlands for so long. Amongst us national barriers are irrelevant, everyone is united by a common love of music, the adrenalin rush of a loud guitar and crashing propulsive drums, the contemplative beauty of a violin solo and the impact one man’s words can have on so many.
I’d recommend to anyone going to Europe to watch their favourite band play in these types of venues where there is none of the protection that bigger stages and huge production provide a protection and distance of sorts. The environment, the fans, the connection between them and the band made this one of the very best James gigs I’ve ever been to and looking around at the beaming faces both on stage and in the crowd, I doubt I was the only one feeling that.
Paris Le Trabendo – 17th June 2016
Setlist
Dream Thrum / Catapult / To My Surprise / Bitch / Moving On / Alvin / Waking / Surfer’s Song / She’s A Star / Just Like Fred Astaire / Out To Get You / Interrogation / Dear John / Sound / Sometimes / Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Attention / PS / Come Home / Nothing But Love
Support
n/a
Review
n/a
Newcastle City Hall – 17th May 2016
Setlist
Dream Thrum / Walk Like You / Move Down South / Catapult / To My Surprise / Curse Curse / Alvin / Come Home / Sometimes / PS / Girl At The End Of The World / Dear John / She's A Star / Just Like Fred Astaire / Interrogation / Surfer's Song / Tomorrow / Sound / Attention / What For / Moving On / Nothing But Love / Waltzing AlongSupport
The Slow Readers ClubMore Information & Reviews
None.
Hull City Hall – 16th May 2016
Setlist
Dream Thrum / Walk Like You / Move Down South / Catapult / To My Surprise / Alvin / Curse Curse / Come Home / Sometimes / The Shining / Girl At The End Of The World / She's A Star / Just Like Fred Astaire / Surfer's Song / Tomorrow / Sound / Attention / Bitch / Moving On / Nothing But Love / Say SomethingSupport
The Slow Readers ClubMore Information & Reviews
As James’ Girl At The End Of The World tour enters its third and final week, the band made a long-awaited return to Hull and the resplendent surroundings of City Hall after a nearly quarter of a century absence. The Slow Readers Club supported.
It’s great to have The Slow Readers Club back on the tour after they weren’t on the bill at Leeds. Whilst Jack Savoretti might have sold a million copies of his last album, they are the ones that have won the hearts and minds of James fans on this tour like no support band I can recall since the eighties when the likes of Inspiral Carpets, Happy Mondays and New Fast Automatic Daffodils were in tow.
It doesn’t take much listening to them to realise why that is. Their ten-song set of powerful electronic anthems hits the mark each and every time with a diversity and range that’s impressive for a signed band, let alone an unsigned one. With three of the standout tracks from their debut self-titled album (Sirens, One More Minute and Feet On Fire) being given extra life and fire with this line-up and seven from last year’s Album Of The Year Cavalcade, there isn’t a weak spot in the forty-minute set.
The five singles from that album are all present and correct as well as the more contemplative but no less impactful Days Like This Will Break Your Heart and the bold album and set closer Know The Day Will Come. The sound in City Hall is almost perfect so every little nuance in the music can be heard clearly – the intricate patterns that the effervescent Jim Ryan weaves on his bass and Kurtis Starkie on his guitar and the clarity and dexterity of David Whitworth’s drums.
It’s a revelation how much they’ve blossomed in these rarefied surroundings. Aaron’s stage presence has developed in two short weeks to the point that we wonder how he’ll manage when the stages get smaller again at their headline shows – although the recently announced November Ritz show might mean it’s not a problem he might have to face. At one point he tells us they’re having the “best time of our lives” on the tour and it shows. They’re also winning over a new army of fans as the prolonged applause when he tells us they’re just an unsigned band from Manchester and also at their end of their set testifies.
The Slow Readers Club played Start Again, Sirens, One More Minute, Days Like This Will Break Your Heart, Don’t Mind, Feet On Fire, I Saw A Ghost, Forever In Your Debt, Plant The Seed and Know The Day Will Come
A Monday night in Hull City Hall is quite a different experience for both band and audience than arenas in Manchester and Leeds at the weekend. Firstly, it’s far more sedate, those with alcohol or other substances in them stand out more (although a girl constantly shouting “Get your fucking knob out” to Tim would probably stand out anywhere) and there isn’t the outpouring of pent-up energy and emotion at the end of a working week that the release valve of the big shows gives the crowd.
It’s with that in mind that Tim tells us they’re going to start slow and build. They’ve already done that on this tour with Out To Get You and Top Of The World, but tonight they choose to start with Dream Thrum. We’ve already mentioned the quality of the sound in the venue, which is the best of the tour so far of the dates we’ve attended, and that allows the understated beauty of this song to shine through and its subtlety to be appreciated as Saul brings the song to its conclusion bathed in blue light focused on his violin.
Walk Like You, the opening track from La Petite Mort follows and doesn’t feel at all like them easing us in as its breakdown section is something truly special with Andy Diagram taking centre stage with trumpet as Tim, as he does often tonight, roaming the stage seeking connection with his band mates as a lift and spur to himself to help take us to higher plains. Move Down South is the first of nine songs from Girl At The End Of The World (Dear John is dropped due to technical issues with Dave’s drumkit) and it still feels like they’re searching for an additional spark to really set this one alight. Catapult has no such issues though, its tumultuous journey assisted by Tim disappearing off stage and reappearing up on the balcony, making his way round the front row of seats connecting with the audience up there before surveying the scene below him and grabbing a girl’s camera phone and pretending to throw it off the balcony.
It wouldn’t be a James gig without a false start to a song and tonight it’s To My Surprise once Tim has made it back downstairs. It’s the price of a band taking risks, not playing the same set every night and trying to do something different with songs that stay in the set from night to night. Tim takes the opportunity to remind us that the tour is called the Girl At The End Of The World tour for those who haven’t immersed themselves in the number 2 album they’re promoting and also to request that people treat him with care if he ventures out amongst us. He only makes it to the barrier at this point, but as he stands perched on it surveying us, To My Surprise confirms to us that it’s one of the songs that has blossomed most of the album tracks when translated to the live environment. Alvin has had a similar transformation though – its French lyrics taking on an even more playful tone live and the more expansive approach taken to the music makes it one of the highlights of the set.
Tim explains Curse Curse is about being a hotel room and hearing the couple next door making love and the natural jealous male reaction of turning on the football on the TV. When Tim describes it as “almost a hit” before they play Come Home and Sometimes to follow it, it feels like it was just born at the wrong time as it has that same forceful impact on these ears as those two. Naturally the familiarity of the crowd with them means the response is more delirious and the static crowd around us start to move a bit. Sometimes once again has the audience taking the song away from the band and making it their own – but what’s most refreshing is that it’s being done at a different point each night dependent on where we are, a sign of spontaneity and freshness that has revitalised the song.
The Shining is also given its first airing on the tour. Whilst probably not as much a rarity as Saul suggests, it’s a very welcome reminder of the massively underrated Pleased To Meet You album that was released as the band was disintegrating at the turn of the century. The stunning acoustics of City Hall are the perfect environment for it too, uplifting and allowing the rich detail of the song to be heard properly. The title track from Girl has a similar uplifting effect on us, now they’ve nailed it with a beautiful slide guitar opening from Adrian (who is really blossoming in his role as the tour progresses) and the power as the chorus kicks in after a slight delay.
There’s technical problems with Dave’s bass drum that causes a rethink. Tim thinks it’s his drum stool that’s the problem and jokes about the power of Dave’s drumming going all the way through his haemorrhoids to the stool and whether there’s a music shop open in Hull at 9 o’clock at night. We lose Dear John as a result as they huddle centre stage for acoustic versions of She’s A Star and Just Like Fred Astaire. Tim’s almost drowned out on both songs, clearly crowd favourites in this part of the world even in this wonderful stripped-down form that reinvents particularly Fred.
Surfer’s Song has been one of the revelations of the tour and a game changer in the set and tonight is probably the best example of that. Tim comes down to the barrier, ponders it and then launches himself across us and he’s raised on a sea of arms all the way back to the mixing desk, turned round and dispatched back to the stage, not missing a word in the process. As he sails past us facing up towards the sky it’s an intense moment of connection where band and audience become one.
Tomorrow starts off slow with Tim eyeball to eyeball with Saul who slowly ratchets up the tempo of the song through the first verse until it reaches the chorus where it explodes into life with Andy’s trumpet once again playing a central role. As it reaches its octane-fuelled conclusion, Tim’s at the other side of the stage encouraging Adrian whilst Ron and Andy weave circular patterns with their tambourines.
There’s no Honest Joe tonight, but Sound more than makes up for that, a song that they manage to continually find new twists on as they improvise when the song hits the breakdown, there’s flashes of gorgeous violin from Saul that the sound quality allows us to hear, there’s even a mini drum solo at one point as the other instruments drop and Andy ends the song leaning over the balcony upstairs sending shards of trumpet across the hall. Before it Saul tells us that this was one of the first places he and Adrian played music together as teenagers in Hull and that it means a lot to him to come back here and do the same thirty four years later.
Attention is no less powerful in its impact. The band are rightly proud of this and it’s refusing to be budged from its position at the end of the set – it starts all brooding and menacing before dropping away to almost nothing then rebuilding. Tonight’s light set-up for it is very dark, almost in darkness at some points with white rotating lights shattering the black and adds much to the impact it has as well.
The encore tellingly is three songs from the past two albums rather than the obvious rush to the greatest hits to prop up the set. Bitch is struck up by the band before Tim makes his entrance dressed in one of the band’s striking BI-T-CH takes on the classic JA-M-ES shirt and loses himself in the swirling cacophony of sound. Moving On and Nothing But Love are songs that in another time and place would be nestled alongside some of the big-hitters that people are calling out for in vain and deserve their places at the end of the set. Both are uplifting in contrasting ways. As Tim stands high on the monitor, arm raised as the chorus of Moving On kicks in and Hull responds in kind, it feels like we’re all joined together as one celebrating those that are no longer with us, whilst Nothing But Love celebrates those that are by our side.
There’s still time for a second encore and in democratic fashion Tim asks us if we want Sit Down or Say Something. The audience’s vote is clear, although there’s a few disgruntled advocates to the contrary, ourselves included, that they want to hear Say Something. As the song finishes with Tim down amongst us on the barrier, the audience bring it back up and it finishes with the band and audience together as one sharing the moment.
Whilst Hull might have lacked the adrenalin highs of the weekend, it was probably the best performance of the tour so far and definitely the best sounding of the shows that we’ve been to in an environment that allows detail in the band’s music to be heard fully. It would have been very easy to simply replicate the weekend’s set list but to the band’s eternal credit they’re not resting on their laurels and want to challenge us as well as themselves and, after the crowd took a while to get going, they did exactly that.