Setlist
Getting Away With It (All Messed Up) / Crazy / I Wanna Go Home / Sit Down / LaidSupport
n/aMore Information & Reviews
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That James is the most loved and respected band in Greece, was proved right last night in Apollon Basketball Arena in Patras.
It was just another sold out concert for James in Greece as usual, but the first time in Patras. Their great performance and the high attendance was kind of reassuring that they might visit this college town on their next tour and play on a bigger venue.
Abbie Gale, one of the most successful bands of the greek indie scene opened the show at 8.55 playing some new tracks from their forthcoming album and some tracks from their latest album 2, like Love song, Clown, Fall etc. The arena was full by the time they finished and about 200 people were standing outside without tickets.
At 10pm sharp the lights went out and Larry’s acoustic guitar sounded with the first notes of “Sit Down” ( though ‘Just like Fred Astaire’ was on the set list) and Tim Booth with Larry came out, not on stage but among the crowd playing the whole song on their way to the stage. People of Patras had never seen anything like this before and “Sit Down” was the perfect start, followed by “Senorita” (another Greek favorite) that made the 4.000 people go mad. “Ring The Bells” came just before “Dr. Hellier” and “Ten below” from the mini album “The night before”. “Upside” followed by “Come Home” and “Out To get You” and you could see the tears running from the eyes of most of the fans. I don’t need to describe what happened when they started playing “Say Something” with people singing along for almost 5 minutes after the song ended.
With ‘I know what I’m here for’, ‘Crazy’, ‘Tomorrow’ (the only song from Whiplash) and ‘Sound’, the main set was over.
But there was a special surprise for the people of Patras, a very special request.
“Dream Thrum” opened the Encore and you could see people stunned with the violin of Saul Davies. That’s why ‘Sometimes’ started as a slow song and then you could feel the earth move by the sing along of more that 4.000 Greek fans thirsty for James songs like “Laid”. A few fans from the crowd climbed on stage and danced along with Tim Booth and the rest of the Band.
But they couldn’t leave the stage without playing “Getting away with it” (not on the set list). I’m pretty sure that, from what you could hear from the small talk outside the stadium and the day after in Patras, this was the best show this town has ever seen and I think we will remember this concert for the rest of our lives.
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It’s over 25 years since James were last here, supporting The Smiths on the Meat Is Murder tour. Tonight the sold out signs all belong to James. There’s a few gaps in the seats and the standing isn’t as packed as it should be – as the air restrictions in place because of the Icelandic volcano means many fans are unable to travel.
As the lights go down, there’s trumpet call from the heavens and the lights shine on Andy at the back of the arena in one of the boxes. Then Larry’s guitar strikes up for Sit Down and he and Tim appear in the stalls seats at the back. As they go down to the standing area, Tim stacks it and ends up on his back, but continues to sing. The crowd, from those in the standing to those in the gods of gallery standing sing along, wave their arms in the air and generally go bananas. As at the other shows, it’s a killer way to start the show. Ring The Bells, by the time they make it back to the stage, gets the moshpit area going, the people further back dancing and most of the stalls still standing. The sound’s a bit ropey, the cavernous hall not really set up for this type of music, but it gets better as the show goes on. Hymn From A Village is fast and frenetic, again the lighting adding to it, flashes of yellow matching Tim singing drumbeat.
The three new songs take the pace of the crowd down a little, which is to be expected, but there’s not widespread chattering in the area we were stood. We continue to dance, there’s still arms raised in parts of the crowd. It’s Hot is still intriguing, the arrangement different from the Night Before version. Dr Hellier is dark, almost satanic in its brooding, menacing delivery. Ten Below is the pick of the three, one of those James songs that just grows and grows and grows the more you listen to it.
I Know What I’m Here For takes the pace back up and the crowd respond. Come Home then sees Tim make his way into the stalls area and through the crowd until he reaches Lee Muddy Baker who he embraces in a warm hug, before moving back to the stage. As before, the two tracks are both ragged, chaotic and almost on the verge of collapse, but it’s that thrill that makes them so exciting and thrilling.
Tim dons his mirrorball jacket, last seen on the 1999 Millionaires tour, and mounts the mirrorball box for a beautiful version of Porcupine, the reflection off the jacket swirling around the hall. I Wanna Go Home is as magical as ever, taking James’ knack of taking what appears a relatively sedate song on the album and turning it into a monster, not by turning up the volume, but by the interplay of the instruments and Tim’s vocal, which seems to stretch out the “home” for longer and longer every time they play it. Fitting it and Out To Get You next together is interesting as they are the two most compelling James tracks of that ilk.
Crazy is just that, again embodying what James do so well live, taking a song and twisting it and turning it. In the days of proper singles, it would have been massive.
Stutter is, as ever, utterly phenomenal. It forces people to shut up and watch and dance and as it builds to its stunning crescendo, you think this is why this band are the greatest in the world. Imagine sticking Honest Joe right on the back of it and you’d have something strong enough to bring down walls and ceilings.
The ending of the set really nails it for James. It’s hits or should be hits all the way now. Getting Away With It prompts a mass singalong, Tomorrow a mass mosh and Sound really catches fire tonight in a way it hasn’t quite on the dates I’ve seen before. Larry ends up guitarless with a megaphone. They leave and come back with a stunning version of Johnny Yen. The extended singalong of Sometimes needs no encouragement, whilst Laid has the floor shaking and Larry in the crowd. The slowed down Say Something works brilliantly and has the crowd singing back again. Top Of The World, a typically James curveball, closes the set with a comedown, a chill out, but still generates (off-key) clapping and some bizarre dog-like yelping from a woman at the back of the standing area.
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Sometimes from the lowest expectations, something wonderful can come. The lyrics of some of The Night Before songs refer to Tim’s childhood. Revisiting Boscombe (where the O2 Academy is, rather than Bournemouth) brings back memories of childhood holidays, walking past the mini golf at the entrance to what was Alum Chine and up the hill to the High Street, which has now become pedestrianised and has a bar next to McDonalds frequented by some very strange looking and clearly on an all dayer women with what I assume are their men playing football on the street oblivious to passers-by. You wonder what sort of crowd we’re going to get and whether James are going to fill the Academy.
The Academy, formerly the Opera House, is stunning, the first one of the newer Academies that you could fall in love with as a venue. There’s a nice high stage, there’s no sticky carpets and there are two balconies circling the main standing area. James Walsh comes and goes with a mix of his own solo material and some Starsailor oldies, but as the venue fills up, there’s a great sense of anticipation.
As the house lights go down, a big yellow light hits the ceiling of the venue, Larry’s opening chords of Sit Down start up and Tim appears at the back of the standing area. He makes his way through the crowd who are pretty much drowning him out before perching himself on the barrier or stage (it’s difficult to tell from where I’m stood) to sing the end of the song. As with the previous nights it has the crowd eating out the palms of their hands. The first indication of the shake-up in the set that’s to come is Tomorrow as the second song. It works superbly, there’s a heaving mass from left to right going back quite a way into the back of the standing area.
Next is Hymn From A Village, and the reaction isn’t that much different as Saul and Andy cowbell duel their way through the resurrected reinvigorated early single. James have changed a lot since the Factory days of the early to mid 1980s, but their songs truly stand the test of time up against their better known more popular siblings from the 1990s and beyond.
The new song trio that’s next is generally the gauge by which how the rest of the gig will go is measured. Naturally there’s a lot of people who haven’t heard them yet, despite the free previews on the official site and that’s fair enough. What happens though is that those who haven’t, in the main, shut up and listen and watch. Tim swaps his woolly hat for a black bowler type affair and almost appears as a dark shady villain character, appearing sinister as he belts out the lyrics to Dr Hellier. As the song reaches its end, there’s an explosion of strobe lighting as Tim shouts into the microphone. Ten Below is almost languid and laid back in comparison but possesses that dark beauty and character that many of James less obvious songs possess. The last of the trio is Porcupine, which sees Tim mounting the mirrorball stage to sing overlooking the crowd bathed in white light and with the effect of the mirrorball whirling around him, Saul’s violin piercing through the rest of the instruments as the song flies off into its extended outro.
Come Home is, like last night, chaotic, ragged and exciting and has the crowd back dancing and singing back every word. Tim introduces a new addition to the tour set, Oh My Heart, as a song about wanting to get your heart broken so it can mend, and the reaction shows that Hey Ma has driven its way into the consciousness and record collections of much of the touring fanbase. I Wanna Go Home just hammers that point home. It’d be easy to chatter over the start as it takes a while to build, but, boy, when it does it goes off in all directions. Tim holds the final “home” for what seems like an eternity. It’s stunning and the crowd love it.
Out To Get You is simply beautiful. Saul takes centre stage with his violin outro, stood on one of the monitors and bathed in white light. Tim explains the story behind his liver disease when he was younger and how it was the inspiration for the next song Crazy. The song is just that. In the way a relatively simple song like Laid is transformed into a different beast live, Crazy delivers in exactly the same way, there’s extra instrumental sections thrown in, Tim uses his voice, not to sing but to add colour as well.
Getting Away With It, pulled out of the encore, is introduced as the band’s anthem and it gets the best reception it’s had on the tour so far, there’s masses of arms raised and a massive singalong. The opening bars of Sound then chime up, which would normally signal the end of the gig, but it’s too early just yet. It doesn’t stop it being as tormented, spiteful and fierce as it’s ever been. Andy, taking the mirrorball stage, looks like he’s trying to blow Dave’s head off with his trumpet.
The main set finishes with Sometimes, the crowd are now well and truly blown away with the power of the performance tonight. The sound has improved during the gig which means the relentless guitar is piercing through the heat rising from the pit. As the song hits its end, Tim asks the crowd to sing for them and they’ll come back. The crowd settle for a “we want James, we want James” rather than singing the chorus.
The encore merely seals the victory. Ring The Bells takes off where Sometimes finished. Then Tim jumps down onto the barrier, there’s a slight delay as guitars are sorted out but you can tell Say Something is coming next. But it’s different. It’s slowed down, it’s under-stated, it’s stripped back, it’s finally getting the retreatment it’s needed for a long time. Tim is almost pulled over into the crowd as he tries to get a closer connection. And then the audience sing the chorus back with no encouragement. It’s five minutes that demonstrate just why James are different to any other band in the country.
Laid seals the deal as if any more was needed. The whole place goes wilder and then they’re gone. No second encore tonight unfortunately, but you feel it might have been a comedown had they taken on an extra song – sometimes less is more.
So, despite the lack of set highlight Stutter, this was probably the best gig of the tour so far that I’ve seen, matched only by Edinburgh which benefited from the more exotic set list. The venue was superb, the sound great once it got sorted out, the lighting was better than ever and the band still look like they’re having an absolute blast, playing what they want to play and mixing it about and not playing it safe.
So, James make their first trip to Southend, deep in the heart of Essex, to the Cliffs Pavilion, which will play host to the likes of the Chuckle Brothers and Brendan Cole in the future. Looking around the crowd, it’s a mixed bunch of ages, not surprising given the lack of bands of James size and reputation that make it out here.
Sit Down starts with Tim on the balcony telling the crowd he was here to see how they were faring by the seaside. The whole place sings along, arms raised, necks cricked. It’s a triumph, a genius opening and has the crowd eating out the palm of their hands. This is kept up by an elongated opening to a normal Born of Frustration, shorn of the jazzier, slow-fast elements of other performances on this tour. Tim hollers the “who put brown owl eyes on a butterfly’s wings” over the end section. The Essex men and women around us are suitably impressed, at least those capable of standing are. The teenage kids are obviously a bit too cool for school and don’t join in the dancing.
Next is Hymn From A Village, and here’s where the problem starts. Whilst the crowd in the centre appear to be having a blast, round the sides it’s a different story. How dare they play a song they haven’t heard before – you have to wonder if Best Of’s east of Canary Wharf were only sold with 17 tracks.
By the time we get to It’s Hot, the first of the “new beautiful songs”, about “steamy sheets resolving differences”, a few have mooched off to the bar already. It’s shocking. James are on fire, the new songs sound streets ahead of how they did just a week ago. It’s Hot sounds so fierce without the electronica and Tim loses himself in a singing / shouting at the end that must put huge strains on his voice. It’s brilliant, but it’s lost on most of them around us.
Dr Hellier is introduced as another song to test the crowd’s musical appreciation. Larry’s guitar and Dave’s drums drive the verse through the chorus which explodes in flashes of light. Ten Below broods through the opening bars and lines up to the “that’s a fucking lie” – Andy’s trumpet kicks in and it turns a song about despair and desolation into a celebration. Tim turns the song with the megaphone “he’s at war” section, aided by some fantastic lighting flourishes. It’s difficult, as Tim admits, for the crowd to listen to new songs, particularly as the album isn’t released yet, but there’s not huge respect shown for them where we are.
Back on familiar territory, and a fast frenetic rousing version of Tomorrow grabs the attention of the chatterers. Hup-Springs works brilliantly next to it, Saul on cowbells, Andy prowling with a tambourine, Tim firing the lyrics out with Jim and Larry on backing vocals. It’s almost 1989 all over again, and there’s nothing lost in energy and the ferocity of the song despite this incarnation of the band coming of age this year.
Johnny Yen is next. It doesn’t get the massive cheer that it always gets. Seriously, the first time I’ve not been deafened by cheering as it starts up. There’s clapping, but it feels odd. As ever, it builds and then descends, or should that be ascends, into a musical improvised cacophony. Tim brings the lyrics up to date with references to Pete Doherty and Amy Winehouse.
As the opening notes of I Wanna Go Home rumble around the room, it appears some people have forgotten they’re even at a gig at all, not even bothering to face the stage, squealing at each other in that most whiny of whiny Essex accents. But more and more people have realised they’re not witnessing some hits out for the lads and lasses band. What’s a relatively simple plaintive song is transformed into an absolute beast, Saul’s violin piercing the chatter, Tim again putting severe strains on his voice by aiming high and long. Out To Get You is a banker, grown men get in touch with their sensitive side, Tim climbing onto the mirrorball stage to sing looking down over the crowd.
Tim mischeviously asks the crowd who are from Southend, and when it appears most people aren’t jokingly says it’s pathetic being outnumbered in their own town. He introduces Come Home as a “sexy old one”, to which Saul says “you Tim”. It’s all over the place to be honest, held together by Mark’s keyboards, but it’s that chaos that makes it so bloody good.
Breaking from the setlist, Tim says they’re going to play a different song from the setlist they’d prepared for Southend because of “their travelling caravan of friends”. There’s some horrific noise from the back of the stage, so Tim tells the story about how Stutter is being about stood at the door of the woman he loved, having made a mess of things and feeling like a fucking idiot. If James songs were footballers, Stutter should be the first name on the sheet. Who cares it’s never been released in studio form, is nearly thirty years old and would never get played on radio – it stops people from talking and makes them watch. Andy takes over on keys, Mark joins Dave on drums and Saul has his own drumstick, Jim and Larry hammer out backing vocals and Tim loses himself as the lights go off around him. There’s an Elbow song called Switching Off about moments you want to remember just before you die. James playing Stutter is on that list.
Tim is far chattier tonight than normal. He tells the story about his liver disease and how he felt he was crazy before being diagnosed properly and how he celebrated reaching 30 without being committed. Crazy lives up to the name. Instead of crashing into the second verse, it goes off into an instrumental tangent with Tim yelling over the top. Andy’s trumpet spirals around the song too as it goes into an extended outro.
The set draws to a close with Ring The Bells and Sound. The chatterers shut up and dance and sing and punch the air. The moshpit heaves, Andy gets up on the mirrorball stage and the crowd go wild at the end. You do wonder if they were secretly listening all along.
As they come back for the encore, Tim introduces, rather interestingly, Getting Away With It as the most popular song they’ve ever done. According to Spotify it is. I’m not quite sure it is, but it gets a fantastic reception, lots of men doing the John Travolta pose, which you really have to be Tim Booth or John Travolta to pull off. It’s funny to think that with a bit of promotion of the track, James could have had a new lease of life back in 2001 rather than the meet the contractual requirement by putting the record out approach that Mercury seemed to employ.
Sometimes is a weird one. Tim gets down on the barrier and sings pretty much the whole song half bent over the first few rows, even throwing Southend on Sea into the lyrics of the song. He’s forcing a connection in a way only he can and it’s a joy to watch an artist take on a crowd and challenge them in this way. There’s no singalong at first, Tim hollers “arriba arriba” to try and get the others to go into Laid, there’s no reaction and then suddenly the crowd bring the refrain back up, the band join in and there’s a rather wonderful and quite spontaneous ending, which makes a change from some of the more orchestrated ends to the song. It works when it happens like this.
Laid has everyone going mental as it always does, pleasing even those who appear to be there for the sole purpose of hearing that song. And then they’re gone. Except that they’re not. The lights don’t come up, the roadies don’t switch the gear off, and most of the crowd don’t leave.
The band stroll back on, Tim tells a story about a customs official at Manchester Airport who asked him whether the verse and chorus of Sometimes were linked. Then they finish with a truly breathtaking version of Top Of The World. It’s an ultimate comedown from the highs of Laid and it’s James are their best, toying with the audience’s experiences of a singalong Destiny Calling, Waltzing Along or Say Something. It’s laying down a challenge to shut the fuck up and listen. Sadly not everyone respects the beauty and fragility – some pissed up bottle blonde who can hardly stand screeches her friend’s name several times and is lucky to escape a lynching. Her husbands gurns and laughs and finds it hilarious. Perhaps they should go and watch the Chuckle Brothers next time they fancy a night out.
In summary, a great gig by the band, a mix of the old, the new, the well-known, the obscure and the unexpected. The trouble with being the only gig in town is that there are expectations of hit after hit after hit. James are not that band. They could have done a Best Of set and left the place in ruins. Their power and majesty is in much more than that.
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The opening night of the Mirrorball tour, and without the benefit of a warm-up show to acquaint ourselves with the new songs from The Night Before in the live environment, there’s finally a sense of excitement once the long wait in the boiling hot Corn Exchange gets punctuated by Larry’s acoustic guitar. The lights go up at the back of the arena as the familiar opening strains to Sit Down start up, but it’s just Larry, Saul and Tim bathed in white light, starting the song on the raised wheelchair ramp area. Facing a boozed-up Bank Holiday crowd, it’s a genius start. The biggest hit, the best known song, but in a new way. After the first verse they make the journey down to the stage through the adoring crowd.
What happens next is unexpected. There’s been some curveballs to the past thrown in since the reformation, but resurrecting Hang On, a track ditched from the re-release of Gold Mother, to accommodate Sit Down, is one of the widest to date. Truth is of course is that most bands would kill for a song this good. Next is the strident, twenty-five plus year old Hymn From A Village, still as fresh and fraught as ever. As with the Hey Ma tours, leg one is clearly about James present with unexpected elements of the past. It’s great.
Two new songs follow. It’s Hot is stripped of a lot of the electronic background and as a result the start is a bit muted, but the guitars kick in and rescue the song, which focuses around Tim’s vocals as it reaches its climax. A different take on a new classic. Dr Hellier is a much straighter take on the album version, but doesn’t suffer as a consequence. What’s clear now is how much the band are focused and into this show, the excitement and the adrenalin of the new and not so familiar old is what has driven the reformation, and this setlist has both in spades. Seven is a case in point. Pretty much completely discarded in 1992 after the acoustic tours, it flits back in and out of the setlist (remember it opened the first Hoxton just over three years ago) but never fails to stand out, particularly as it gives Andy chance to roam the stage and puncture the air with the song’s trumpet calling card.
Shine is the best of the new songs tonight. It’s rocked up from the record and the climatic “when you’re gone, your songs outlive your story” build like all the great James live “classics”. Ten Below sees Andy on the “Bubbles drum pad” – what’s clear tonight is the joy the band are getting out of the new songs as well as those they haven’t played for decades.
A black cloth near the drums is removed to reveal a huge mirrorball with a glass platform over the top of it, which Tim climbs onto as the first bars of Walking The Ghost pierce the red-hot atmosphere in the venue. The mirrorball sparkles as Tim stands bolt-upright against a black and silver backdrop and orange lighting, almost touching the roof. Sensing there might be some unrest in parts of the crowd, Tim asks if it’s the Edinburgh crowd that’s come to listen to sophisticated songs or the Greatest Hits crowd. The roar says the latter, but to be fair, the crowd had responded wonderfully to the more obscure elements of the set. Tim promises the next song will be the last that might stretch them. Lullaby is as jaw-droppingly beautiful and aching as Walking The Ghost before it.
Tim comes down from the platform and tells the crowd he lied and that they’re going to play a really old song. Stutter just can’t be described adequately. It’s the best part of thirty years old, it’s never been released in studio form, and it’s one of the most tumultuous, ecstatic, absolutely bonkers live tracks. Saul goes from drums to banging Larry’s guitar with his sticks, Tim loses himself in the cacophony of noise the band creates and the lighting, whilst simple, just adds to the madness on stage.
Having indulged themselves and those of us who would die happy with this set, they throw in Destiny Calling, to the groans of the man stood next to me. His point that this was throwaway pop compared to what has gone before is possibly a valid one, but of that genre, it’s one of the best. The Edinburgh pogo society votes with their feet and arms and the temperature in the venue goes up many degrees.
Tim introduces Crazy as the new single and tells the crowd that they need to make it a hit. Mark’s electronics get slightly lost in the mix, but it sits proud and tall along most of the rest of James’ singles catalogue, despite Tim acknowledging to the front row at one point that he hasn’t quite nailed down all the words yet. But it’s James, that’s how they are. Get over it.
The biggest surprise of the evening is the inclusion of early b-side Hup-Springs. It is almost staccato, Tim almost chanting his way through the song as the band keep up the frenetic pace. Twenty years ago, performances like this made the “business” sit up and recognise James as the finest live band in the country. This, if anything, was more fierce and invigorating than that.
Having started with a bang, the run-in to the end of the set and the encore is a mini-Greatest Hits run-through, which leaves the crowd going out of the doors, happy, begging for more, and maybe forgetting that they might yet not be that keen on the songs in the middle that they haven’t had the chance to listen to and learn to love.
Johnny Yen is greeted as if it’s a number one single and has benefited from being put on the shelf for a while. Tomorrow reduces the front of the crowd to a heaving mass before the opening bars of Sound signal the end of the main set. Andy takes his place on the platform to blast out his trumpet, Saul, Jim and Larry converge and Tim loses himself completely in the music. There’s no extended outro tonight, which has a sense of relief as it is taken for granted by many that this is how it goes with the song and it’s good to see that they’re not afraid not to do it. The reception at the end is immense.
The encore starts with Say Something. Tim comes down to the barrier in a couple of places and stands on there only held up by fans and security as he balances and sings the song. It’s the one point of the night that feels like James-by-numbers. Other hits over time get new treatments but Say Something hasn’t. Not that most people actually care as they sing along to every word and jump and wave.
Getting Away With It has the crowd singing along before Tim even opens his mouth. It’s become an anthem as much as anything else in the set and there’s the first crowd-surfer of the night carried out.
Sometimes is introduced as the last song, and the end induces a singalong of the chorus at which point the band stop playing and just stand and watch and listen, Larry taking pictures. It’s inevitable now that this crowd isn’t going to go anywhere until they hear Laid, and it’s the long drawn-out trumpet-laden version that has the crowd from front to back of the venue going absolutely wild. It might have been an easy ending to throw in, but you cannot deny the power that it has, something that most of the big bands of today wish they could bottle and use because they can’t compete with this bunch of old-timers when they’re on this type of form.
So very little in terms of opening night nerves, some very pleasant surprises in the setlist, most of the new record (Porcupine surprisingly absent and Hero maybe needing more practice) and a set-list dreamed up by some form of genius that gives something for everyone – the die-hards get the old songs plucked from the back catalogue, the more casual fans get the fantastic opening, the hits laden ending and an opportunity to discover there’s more to James. And the band? Well they look they had an absolute whale of a time. Tim never seemed to stop beaming between songs, the looks on the faces of the seven at the end blown away by the response coming back from the crowd.
Rock n razzle.