Posts Tagged ‘red’

Dec
08/09
Live Review: We Are The Ocean, Brighton, 30th November
Last Updated on Tuesday, 8 December 2009 10:20
Written by Alison Aird
Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

We Are The Ocean with support from All Forgotten, The Amity Affliction and Flood of Red; Brighton Concorde 2, 30th November 2009

Its a damp, windy, possibly sub zero Monday night and the angry cowboy of Concorde 2 is shouting at everyone again. This isn’t the ideal start to my night at We Are The Ocean’s headline show, and as the audience begins to filter in this mood seems to be common place in the crowd.

All Forgotten take to the stage first tonight to the weather worn audience. Their set manages to get a few of the kids up front excited, and the audience show signs of appreciation by moving forward when asked to, but otherwise the effort is wasted. The band put on a good show, but lack that something that makes them memorable. Perhaps it’s the audience’s disinterest, but these guys just don’t grab me.

Next up is Australia’s The Amity Affliction. If you’ve read my review of their album “Severed Ties” then you’ll know I love their sound and expect them to be the next big thing. Their set tonight doesn’t disappoint and they convince some of the largely underage audience to move their feet. Their performance is tight and it’s obviously this band are frequenters of the live circuit back home, but the jet lag and English weather is obviously getting them down. As a fan of theirs, I wish their set had been longer and hopefully they can return next year on a tour further up the bill so they can turn an audience in their favour and get into their stride.

Scotland’s Flood Of Red take to the stage and turn out to be an electronic dance band with a slightly samey, but interesting sound. Occasionally their songs will strike me as something great, but they never seem to come to a conclusion. At some points I get vibes of Taking Back Sunday but other than the keyboard player drinking bottles of wine and the great vocal abilities of their singer, I’m once again not really taken by this band. I would like to see them again though, perhaps to a home town crowd or on a headline show, where I reckon they could grab my attention more successfully.

We Are The Ocean have caused quite a buzz in this last year and this excitement filters into the Concorde 2 as they start up. They manage to mix their old songs with the new from their eagerly anticipated debut album “Cutting Our Teeth” (out in January next year) and keep old and new fans alike pleased. With some songs being performed by screamer Dan Brown from inside the pit, and vocalist Liam Cromby showing off some exquisite abilities even I manage to sing along to some of tracks I’ve never heard before and find myself eagerly anticipating what’s coming next, despite not being that familiar with them. The entire band’s participation and interaction with the audience keeps everyone alive and kicking for the entirety of their set and it’s evident they’ve perfected riling up an audience in their previous tours. These guys will hopefully return to a bigger crowd, in better weather once their album is released and they begin to gain the credit they deserve.

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Nov
24/09
Bring Me The Horizon, A Day To Remember & August Burns Red Live Review
Last Updated on Wednesday, 25 November 2009 11:54
Written by Alison Aird
Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Bring Me The Horizon, A Day To Remember & August Burns Red: Portsmouth Pyramids Centre, 19th November 2009

I’m a late comer to Bring Me The Horizon. Late as in, appallingly late, not fashionably. I only started listening to them in July of this year after boycotting them for no real reason save the negative publicity they received from many, and the fact I thought Oli Sykes was a daft tart for having so many tattoos so young.

Having actually listened to Suicide Season, I took everything I ever said against them back (particularly the tattoo comment, I am definitely a bit of a hypocrite on that front). The album blew my mind into the windscreen of my car when I first heard it. Subsequently some of the epic riffs on several of their older and new tracks bring an actual tear to my eye if I listen to them when particularly fragile on a Saturday morning. However, as converted I was I remained tentative about seeing them live. Would there be an average age of 16? Would they all be female? Would there be enough liquid eyeliner & hairdye to paint the moon black?

Fortunately enough in Portsmouth, there wasn’t. Or at least I steered clear of the front of the queue and the venue for the entire evening to avoid such sights. If anything, there were a lot of mid twenties there. A lot of guys. What I would have hoped and expected from a BMTH show, rather than a savage crush of teenage girls going spare over some great hair on some skinny dude from Sheffield.

The show openers August Burns Red set the tone for the rest of the night very early on. If you weren’t going to move, get a bit rowdy and maybe smack your best friend in the face for giggles, this wasn’t the place to be. August Burns Red have always impressed me, but their live show was something to behold. Before every awe inspiring breakdown they would hit this particular note that would actually send the venue and your skull vibrating. I love that, I can’t think of anyone who doesn’t – including my course mate, who used this show as  a case study for her research project on crowd behaviour, needless to say she now loves hardcore shows. They played such a solid set that you could guarantee a good time if you saw them opening, headlining, playing festivals, whatever. Go and see August Burns Red if you want a good time, they will definitely provide it.

Next up was A Day To Remember. A german buddy of mine, having seen this tour a few weeks earlier, said that vocalist Jeremy McKinnon was a bit ropey. Well he managed to pull it out the bag at this show, and the audience was actually lapping it up. I have never in my life seen so many dudes bro-ing out to a band. They loved it, the pit was huge and the singalongs were so precise McKinnon could probably have not sang for the whole set. As a testament to their set, some of the audience actually left. Obviously A Day To Remember’s headline tour of the UK in March is going to be quite something to behold.

Finally headliners Bring Me The Horizon took to the stage, opening with Chelsea Smile. I was pretty much gone from them onwards, spending the entire show as one of four girls in the most intense pit I have been part of in 4 years. The band’s set was fantastic, mixing old tracks with new and even featuring some of the new cut up album snippets in as well. Their performance was tight and vocalist Sykes was so communicative with the crowd throughout that it made the show feel dramatically smaller than it actually was. As a live band, BMTH have to actually be one of my favourites and I am slightly devastated that this was my last opportunity to see them before a 7 month hiatus to write and record a new record.

That aside, I would strongly recommend that next time BMTH tour your town, you go and you see it. If you’re a fan of the music, but not the majority of the fanbase, then their live shows is the environment that separates the fans into the younger girls screaming up front, and the music fans further back. At no point do you come into conflict and you can both enjoy a great live show from one of the most successful UK bands around right now.

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