Live Reports
Indietracks 2009 in photos
0Well, that was just about the most perfect weekend ever.
A proper review (you know, with words and stuff) will be following tomorrow, but here are 134 pictures from the joy that was Indietracks 2009.
As usual, you can click through to Flickr for the full size versions.
Hop Farm Festival 2009: A Review
7This past weekend brought the second festival of 2009 for Another Form of Relief. It was a local festival, but one that I never intended on going to given it’s ludicrous £125 ticket cost. Seemingly others thought the same, given ticket sales struggled to such a degree that they were giving £250 of tickets away with £10 items via a clothing store. So, one Kangaroo Poo beach towel later and I had guestlist access to two days of live music. Not too shabby.
Arriving on site at around noon, the car parking was fairly well organised and it wasn’t a long walk (in festival terms) to the box office entrance. Where, of course, we weren’t on the guest list where we should have been. Joining a second queue of people all in the same boat, it took a bit of hassle with customer services, but eventually we got our wristbands and got in.
To be presented with one of the most deserted festival sites known to man.
After exploring the site for a bit and getting our bearings, we headed over to the main stage and caught a bit of Howling Bells. They are a band that I’ve been vaguely aware of but never heard much of it, and I’m happy to say that relationship is perfectly intact after their set. They were fine I suppose, but nothing grabbed me to a degree that I had to rush home and find some of their songs.
Next up were Noah and the Whale, a band I rather like, if not entirely. I love 5 Years Time and a few others, and thankfully they played all of the ones I knew. They weren’t exactly what I expected, the sound of four of them live without the voice of Laura Marling was a little bit odd. Not too bad, but 5 Years Time certainly lost some of it’s shine. The newer songs they played were fine, if not as immediate. I suspect they will be growers though.
After that it was a quick dash over to the stupidly small Third Stage, which had some of the best bands of the weekend. We arrived to find Let’s Wrestle about halfway through their set. They sounded good, replicating their recorded sound incredibly well. The only downside was that they ran out of songs 20 minutes before their set was due to end. It was salvaged my audience participation, an extra long jam session and a boisterous rendition of their signature “let’s fucking wrestle!” that certain members of the audience seemed to take to heart.
The mighty Johnny Foreigner followed them and provided the highlight of the weekend. Their set was littered with new songs, and new renditions of old favourites. The band flirted with some new arrangements too, including one song where Kelly took to the drums and Junior picked up a bass and a couple more songs that made use of a fourth member. Alexei seemed to be having a good time throughout, correcting the MC when taking the stage with “we’re actually Editors” and calling a Twang cover of Bran Van 3000′s Drinking in LA “the worst fucking thing I’ve ever heard” when they were playing the same festival.
Back to the main stage afterwards for Ash, a band where I know the singles and that’s about it. Which is fine given that is mostly what they stuck with, just littering in the odd new song while constantly assuring us they would get back to the hits. All of the usual suspects made it into the set: Burn, Baby Burn and Shining Light, with the superb Girl From Mars providing the first almighty audience sing along of the day.
Off to the Third Stage once again for The Joy Formidable, who to my surprise had completely packed out the tent. I must have missed the point between Reading last year and now where they became massive, but it certainly felt like they had made it. It was a loud, messy set that went over incredibly well and if they aren’t playing headline slots by the end of the year I’ll be amazed.
That was where day one ended for us. The festival itself went on for a few more hours, with The Fratellis and The Pigeon Detectives being the highest acts on the main stage. But given they are shit, why bother staying?
We returned for day two and had a much longer walk from a much further car park. Which was at the very least good exercise.
Ladyhawke is someone I only know via one song that I’ve heard in someone’s car over and over again. I wasn’t expecting anything more than generic dance nonsense, so I was pleasantly surprised by her set. She seemed rather awkward on stage (apparently she has Asperger’s) and was plagued by technical difficulties throughout, but her performance was rather good. Not spectacular by any means, but an enjoyable way to spend 40 minutes.
The Super Furry Animals were up next, a band I’ve never been much of a fan of short of one or two songs. Neither of which they actually played. They were rather fun though, bringing their own “Woah!” and “Applause” audience cue cards. We actually left about halfway through their set to get to the Third Stage, so maybe they did play the songs I like after all.
I’ve read so many things about Dananananaykroyd’s “legendary” live performances, but nothing quite prepared me for what I walked into. Arriving in the tent, the band were just having the audience perform the Wall of Cuddles. They followed this by storming through a song with such ferocity that they immediately blew out an amp. While this was being fixed, the band killed time by telling jokes (“What has eight legs and is harmless to kids?” “The Jackson Four”) and playing a television theme tune quiz. We got through Eastenders, Hollyoaks (“that show sucks balls”) and another before everything was good to go again. The band launched into their second wind even more manically than the first, security trying to drag Callum back on stage from crowdsurfing while singing repeatedly. It was an insane, but utterly fitting show for the band, and I hope to see them playing outside of a festival environment in the future.
If it’s possible to go to sleep while standing in a crowd of people enjoying themselves at a festival, I could have managed it during Doves. Nothing particularly wrong with them at all, just all very uninteresting.
Speaking of uninteresting, Editors were on next. The crowd seemed to enjoy them, so maybe it was just me, but they bored me to tears on the most part. I just spent the time watching the lead singer flail around like a lunatic for seemingly no apparent reason. Never have I so randomly and intently hated a man as much as that guy. Thankfully we left about halfway through and I didn’t have to suffer any more of his twattery.
The last band of the weekend for me were the rather pleasant Rumble Strips. I missed most of their set, but I enjoyed what I saw. The band seemed to be very much on form, even managing to get the brass instruments sounding good in a live setting, which isn’t always an easy feat. I felt kind of bad that I only caught about three of their songs after the event.
And that was it.
Some random observations:
- The security guards were fine at times, dickish at others.
- The bar had nice, cheaply priced drinks.
- The food stalls had crappy, expensive food.
- The toilets (in the bar at least) were excellent by festival standards.
- The Grilled Chicken & Bacon Salad in the Brookers Oast next door to the site is lovely.
- The ridiculously long walk to get in and out of the site (and thus to the pub) was a bit of a git.
- For a festival that prides itself on “no VIP areas” so “everyone has the same experience”, it seems odd to have a VIP bar.
Pretty damn good for the price of a towel though.
Hop Farm Festival 2009 – Day Two
0Photos from Day One can be found here.
The second day of the Hop Farm Festival was a bit busier, presumably due to the headline appearance by Paul Weller. Still fairly well organised, although security seemed a bit more regimented. Everything ran more or less to time, and the music wasn’t too bad, if a little close to middle of the road blandness for me at times.
Highlights today:
- Ladyhawke was surprisingly enjoyable, given I didn’t expect her to be very good at all.
- Dananananaykroyd had an insane set on the Third Stage, including the “wall of cuddles”, band crowdsurfing and technical difficulties masked by a tv theme tune quiz and jokes.
- The grilled chicken and bacon salad I had in the pub next to the site.
Photos below of course. You can still click through to Flickr for the full size versions. Next up on the Another Form of Relief festival tour: Indietracks!
Hop Farm Festival 2009 – Day One
2Photos from Day Two can be found here.
Interesting first day at the Hop Farm Festival down here in Kent. Even with the massive ticket giveaways it has obviously still struggled to fill out the 20,000 capacity. Which is kind of a shame, firstly because it’d be nice to see a local festival succeed, and secondly because it’s actually quite decent. Despite suffering from some odd lineup ordering (The View higher than Ash, really?), it’s a fairly professional, well laid festival.
Highlights today:
- Johnny Foreigner who included a whole bunch of a new material in their drunken set, a new band member on a few songs, saw Kelly and Junior swap positions and more.
- Let’s Wrestle played to a small, but certainly rowdy audience.
- The Joy Formidable seem to have become ten times more popular than when we saw them at Reading last year too, which was a pleasant surprise.
- Ash, who I haven’t heard anything from in the best part of ten years, were really bloody good.
Photos below. You can click through to Flickr for the full size versions. Tomorrow’s lineup includes British Sea Power, The Rumble Strips, Super Furry Animals, Editors and the mighty Dananananaykroyd.
Big Session 2009
2I was up in Leicester over the weekend for the Big Session Festival. If I’m honest, it wasn’t my musical cup of tea on the most part. I can appreciate the folk and all, but it’s not really my thing. That said, a couple of acts did stand out. Babel were a rather pleasant discovery, and Billy Bragg was highly entertaining. I’ve never been a particularly big fan of Bragg, but the man puts on one hell of a show.
A small gallery of photos can be found below. Not many from inside the festival itself largely because I hadn’t worked out how to take pictures in the dark on my new camera. So a handful from the festival and a few pictures from around Leicester in general.
Live: Sky Larkin at The Farmhouse, Canterbury
0
One of the things I always find lamentable about Kent is the lack of a quality music scene. Sure, you’d get odd bits and pieces at the Tunbridge Wells Forum, but that was about it for the entire county outside of unknown local bands playing in dodgy bars every now and again. It always amazed me how Canterbury, a city with a large student population, didn’t have any real full-time venue for indie music.
Welcome The Farmhouse. It’s about damn time.
The Farmhouse is operated by the same people that run Canterbury’s Lounge on the Farm festival, an event that is now entering it’s fourth year. The venue has actually been up and running for a while now, but this was the first opportunity I’d had to get down there.
The thing that most struck me upon entering was how unlike a typical venue it was. Sure, it had the usual bar, posters and tiny stage in the corner. But also sofas, a ton of tables and hell, even flowers in the toilets. See, the place is only a live music venue after 9pm. All day, it’s a restaurant, and it retains the laid back feel that comes with that right through the night.
First band on were The Goodtimes from Southend. They started things off pretty well too. Nothing sensationally original granted, but solid, fun rock and roll that kicks off the night perfectly. Next up were local Rochester band The Mind Without Maths. If I’m honest, they weren’t entirely my cup of tea, but they were decent enough.
Finally, and getting close to midnight before even stepping on stage, it was Sky Larkin’s turn. Now Sky Larkin are a band that I have been following on here for the best part of three years now. In that time they have gone from being an unsigned band with a few good songs to a signed band who has released their first album, toured all over the place and even supported the likes of Broken Social Scene and Conor Oberst.
This was the second time I’d seen them the live. That time they were a support to Los Campesinos! but two years later they are enough to attract a crowd themselves. The set itself is of course made up mostly of songs from their recent album The Golden Spike. Songs like Antibodies, Fossil, I and Keepsakes all come across particularly well, even if the last struggled with a minor incident instrument failure (see tweet below). The band seem much more rounded than that last time too, the three of them managing to fill the room with a melodic racket.
weareskylarkin twitter
Scoreboard tonight; 1 Stevie nicks style dancing injury, 1 broken 45yr old snare skin, 1 bottle vin rouge, 1 van rouge. Canterbury roolz kx
Upcoming gigs at The Farmhouse include Jeremy Warmsley, Maths Class and Eben. Details here.
Video: Los Campesinos! – Reading 2008
2After scouring Youtube for a while and not finding anything, eventually I stumbled across this delightful little video of part of Los Campesinos! set at Reading. While the quality is kind of crappy, you get to experience the joy of the “fuck you Ting Tings” chant that Gareth accidentally started, a brief cover of Pavement’s Frontwards* before the almighty sing-along that was You! Me! Dancing!. I was located somewhere down at the front, somehow taken aback by just how boisterous it all got.
* Correction: I’m a dumbass, it’s actually Box Elder.
Reading Festival 2008
0Where the fuck were all the books?
Seriously though, fun time had, lots of good bands seen, nothing bad happened to me or my stuff. I did learn that you don’t capture the greatest pictures in a packed crowd with a phone camera, but there is enough to get a rough sense of things. I’m also never going to a festival without a ‘VIP/guest’ pass thing again either. Oh, to sit down on a vaguely comfortable seat.
Live: Another Form of Relief at Life:Temper:Riot, 1 March, London
0
So this blog turns a year old and I disappear entirely for more than a week. That was on the most part an accident as I’ve had a lot going on lately (some good, some not so good), but it seems like an appropriate time as any to have a little break. I’m back now though, and the list of bands to tell you about is even longer than ever, so normal service will be resuming immediately.
The first thing I should get to is the gig I was involved with last Thursday. It was a joint venture with the great folks at Life:Temper:Riot, and saw us putting on four bands in the heart of London. Now I’m a little wary about how to approach writing about this, largely because I’m involved in it and something seems a little wrong about telling you how great it was. So this will be a relatively brief run through of the night, with some mp3s included, so you can try out some of the bands yourself.
Our setting for the evening was the Horse & Groom pub in Shoreditch, a lovely little pub in a Shoreditch backstreet that seems to have not aged since it opened, even though it’s now surrounded by modern office developments. Due to a small organisational error, the night had to be run downstairs, which is the first time the pub has had live music in the main bar area. An impromptu stage is constructed toward the back of the bar, leading to fun things like the “backstage” area also doubling as the route to the toilets.
Captain Phoenix are our first band to take to the stage, and set a suitably rocking tone. I was a little wary about these guys before seeing them, fearing their set would be a little “rock-by-numbers”, but that thankfully turned out to be wrong. By the end of the first song, the not insubstantial crowd seemed to be into them, with upbeat numbers like ‘Living On The Guest List’ being the highly. Given how young the members of the band are, they already sound like they know exactly what they are doing, and they seem destined to break out of the small indie circuit in the near future.
The next band on the bill were rather more polarising. Thomas Tantrum put on a set that I enjoyed on the most part, but they seem to suffer the Ryan Adams syndrome of not knowing when to edit their own output. The good songs in their set are fantastic, but the weaker ones are pretty bad at times. Each song was interesting, and they certainly weren’t afraid to try something new, but they are in need of a producer that will reign in their eccentricities. That said, a lot of the audience did seem to be into them in quite a big way, so who am I to judge?
Talk Taxis were the last band to be added to our lineup, coming straight off the back of touring with the Maccabees. Their set seemed to go by very quickly, although I don’t know if this was due to it being short or me just really enjoying it. Every one of their songs sounded great, bringing a driven, garage rock kind of sound. ‘Publicity’ was the highlight of this, but other songs like ‘Mother’s Eyes’ and ‘Liverless’ also came over very well. These guys will be playing all over London in the coming weeks, so try and check them out if you can.
Our headliners for the evening are Royal Treatment Plant, and they turn in a storming set of songs, from the opening rock out of ‘You Don’t Need Me’, through to their single ‘Carry Me’ and the brutality of ‘Playing Dumb’. Lead singer PP throws herself into the set with such energy that it’s impossible not to be drawn into it. The whole band comes together wonderful, with their guitars, drums and keyboards all getting their chance to shine, without ever sounding too choreographed. By the time we reach our conclusion with the fantastic ‘Trained’, the entire crowd have been won over.
All in all it was a very enjoyable night, and everyone there did seem to have a good time. Now, in case you think I’m just hyping up something I had a vested interest in, here’s another review from Forty Shades Of Noise. They even have some tiny pictures, unlike me, because I didn’t think to take any.
MP3 Royal Treatment Plant – You Don’t Need Me (expired)
MP3 Royal Treatment Plant – Trained (expired)
MP3 Talk Taxis – Publicity (expired)
MP3 Talk Taxis – Mother’s Eyes (expired)
Bands: Royal Treatment Plant || Talk Taxis || Thomas Tantrum || Captain Phoenix
Thu 1 March: Royal Treatment Plant, Talk Taxis and more in London!
0
There are a number and probably quite boring reasons that have resulted in me telling you about this without a great deal of notice. Next week though, Another Form of Relief will be presenting another gig, in association with the good folks of the Life:Temper:Riot club night. Full details of the night are on the poster above, but if for some bizarre reason you can’t see it or something, here are the basics:
What? Another Form of Relief at Life:Temper:Riot.
Who? Royal Treatment Plant, Talk Taxis, Thomas Tantrum, Captain Phoenix.
When? Thursday 1 March (that’s next week!) at 8pm.
Where? The Horse & Groom, which can be located at 26 Curtain Road, Shoreditch. Which is in London.
So you get four excellent bands, in London, and it’ll only cost you a mere £3.99 to enter. You can’t really go wrong with that, can you? If you need further convincing, allow me to tell you about our bands:

Full of driving guitars and some fantastic passive-agressive vocals sung with an urgency that doesn’t often seem to crop up from female fronted British bands, Royal Treatment Plant are one of my surprise favourites from last year. It seems that the mainstream music outlets are catching on to them too with plays on Radio 1, 6Music and XFM in recent months. I didn’t expect to enjoy their CD when it dropped into my post box, but I found myself enjoying as much as some of my favourite albums. Which is a pretty impressive feat when it’s only a three track single. I enjoyed every song on there though, and exploring the songs that were available online turned out to be most fruitful. From the gentle builds to the full on riffs that seem to punctuate every song, Royal Treatment always seem to make for an often surprising, always satisfying listen.
MP3 Royal Treatment Plant – You Don’t Need Me (expired)
MP3 Royal Treatment Plant – Trained (expired)
Royal Treatment Plant: Website || Myspace

Talk Taxis are currently touring the UK in support of The Maccabees to sold out venues, attracting a lot of attention in the process. This is largely thanks to their daring sound, a wonderful combination of opposing influences. You’ll hear elements of funk, punk and dance mixed in with a more familiar indie rock sound, a move that should be destined to failure. Talk Taxis pull it off with such finesse that they sound like old pros, when in reality they only got together two years ago “with a shared enthusiasm for music and badgering inept tutors”. And if you don’t find a band that uses a stylophone “in Rolf Harris inspired moments” appealing, you obviously have no soul.
MP3 Talk Taxis – Publicity (expired)
MP3 Talk Taxis – Mother’s Eyes (expired)
Talk Taxis: Myspace

More female fronted rock goodness comes in the form of Southampton four-piece Thomas Tantrum. While you may not initially hear anything new in their music, as soon as the vocals kick in, you know you’re listening to something unique. It’s hard to put my finger on exactly what makes them so appealing, as lead singer Mega Thomas (seriously) has the kind of voice that sounds like it would be out of place in rock and/or roll. The able support of her band though means we’re left with songs that manage to get themselves stuck into your head without you even noticing.
Thomas Tantrum: Website || Myspace

Captain Phoenix are the kind of band that you know are going to be on the cover of NME sooner or later. Their sound seems to arrive already fully formed, expertly crafted songs that are already far better than the majority of things within that very magazine. After playing in excess of 100 gigs around their home town of Winchester, they are now doing much the same around London and the UK as a whole, bringing their sound to the unsuspecting masses.
Captain Phoenix: Website || Myspace
Convinced now? Excellent. We look forward to seeing you there.
































































































































































































































































































