Showing posts with label Norwich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norwich. Show all posts

Friday, July 4, 2025

Stiff Little Fingers w/The MEFFS @Epic Studios - July 1, 2025

 

Second time seeing SLF, and another fun feel-good show with a seasoned, happy crowd.
 
I've now seen a few shows in Norwich, but this was my 1st visit to the 850-capacity Epic Studios. Decent venue, and due to the experienced fans, no crush down the front even during the fan-favourite tracks. The bar service was a tad slow and drinks not cheap, but they were happy to fill my water bottle. And miraculously, no queue for the loos at the end of the evening! 
I survived the night having only one beer splashed on me, courtesy of a younger couple who came down front midway through the SLF set carrying full cups. Saw that coming a mile away. Again, the seasoned crowd finished their cups long before the band kicked off, much to my gratitude. 
 
The Meffs at Epic Studios
The MEFFS, an energetic and fun two-piece younger punk band, did their job really well, warming up the older crowd and getting anyone in a MEFFS t-shirt to come down the middle and move. 
 
I enjoyed their whole set, but stand-outs were "Broken Britain, Broken Brains", "No Future" and "Stand up, Speak Out"  with Lily Meff getting the crowd to chant along.
 
 
Stiff Little Fingers onstage at Epic Studios
SLF came on at quarter past the hour, after FIVE! Abba tracks "warmed up" the audience. 
 
Unlike the 1st time I saw them, the old legendary tracks came later in the set. Other than 3rd song, Wasted Life, it wasn't until the 13th song that they gave us a triple hit of my early album faves: Nobody's Hero, Tin Soldiers and Suspect Device. And they finished the encore with Alternative Ulster.
 
Jake had some good banter ahead of some tracks, particularly Strummerville, talking about how much Joe means to him. The tour name "Flame in the Heart" is a nod to the enduring fire Strummer ignited in the band's and fans heart, and SLF's way to keep his influence alive.
 
Political chat by him and bassist, Ali, referenced mainly the resurgence of racism and the poisonous Trump influence. Jake talked about Trump's mother Mary being an illegal immigrant before their new track, hilariously titled "Mary's Boy Child". 
 
We expected a comment on the current Kneecap controversy, given they are both from Belfast, but no.
 
Their sound was clean and clear which helped me enjoy unfamiliar tracks, like My Dark Places, about Jake's midlife depression; with an important message given the crowd makeup: talk to someone.
 
SLF is a great night out. I had fun jumping around and dancing to much-loved tracks. My Garmin even tracked a heart rate high of 185bpm. That sorts me out for Cardio for this week. :P 

Setlist:
Roots, Radicals, Rockers and Reggae
At the Edge
Wasted Life
Won't Be Told
Strummerville
Mary's Boy Child
Straw Dogs
Piccadilly Circus
Just Fade Away
Each Dollar a Bullet
Harp
My Dark Places
Nobody's Hero
Tin Soldiers
Suspect Device
Gotta Gettaway
Encore:
Barbed Wire Love
Alternative Ulster 

Saturday, May 18, 2019

The Undertones @ OPEN Norwich - May 16, 2019

The Undertones, May 16, 2019
Review to come...

Neville Staple Band opened

Setlist: (partial)
Jimmy Jimmy
My Perfect Cousin
Teenage Kicks
You've Got My Number (Why Don't You Use It!)
Her Comes the Summer
Get Over You
It's Going to Happen


Monday, April 15, 2019

Sleaford Mods @ UEA Waterfront, Norwich - April 13, 2019

Sleaford Mods April 13, 2019
As per, I'd checked out openers LIINES before the show and thought they were okay, a bit shouty-droney but basically a good punk sound, so we showed up in plenty of time to catch their set.

And damn, am I glad. They were so fucking tight! I was really, really impressed. If you get a chance to see this threesome live, go!

more review to come...










Setlist: (approximate)
Into the Payzone
Flipside
Subtraction
Stick In A Five and Go
Kebab Spider
Policy Cream
TCR
B.H.S.
Top It Up
Just Like We Do
Bang Someone Out
Setlist: 
Jolly Fucker
Jobseeker
Tied Up in Nottz
Tarantula Deadly Cargo
Discourse

Monday, April 16, 2018

Cabbage @ Norwich Arts Centre - April 13, 2018

Cabbage at Norwich Arts Center April 12, 2018
I really enjoyed this show. To my amateur ear, Cabbage's performance was tight and the sound was really clean and good. While I love the energy and rawness of their music, I really wasn't expecting this level of quality from such a young band.

The two frontmen, Lee Broadbent and Joe Martin, looked comfortable on stage and were both compelling to watch as they traded vocal duties back and forth. Broadbent seemed bolstered by some liquid courage, but without detracting from his performance. Eoghan Clifford on guitar shared the limelight during Perdurabo, a song I have a new appreciation for after hearing it live. Stephen Evans and Asa Morley on bass and drums respectively were solid while blending into the background.

I'd read that Cabbage usually start their shows with an explosion of energy and end up shirtless, sweaty and crowd surfing. So, when they kicked off with the slow Reptiles State Funeral I puzzled over the choice and think it would have fit in better later in their set. They followed it up with the agressively energetic Uber Capitalist Death Trade, so all was forgiven. Unfortunately, during the show anyone attempting to crowd surf was manhandled down by an over-watchful bouncer, so it's not surprising the energy didn't peak as it could have, and the boys in the band never reached that point themselves. A jacket or two came off, and Broadbent came down to our level and enthusiastically sang to us from his side of the barricade, but that was it. No encore was forthcoming but I don't think they do them as a rule.

Being Norwich, and this being a punk(ish) gig, there was a fair number of older punters in attendance. They all stood around the edges, while the mostly younger fans formed a circle pit having a fun old time. It was a good vibe and no one was being an asshole that I could tell.

Before the show, just after we arrived, I had a brief chat with Joe Martin in the front lobby when I asked him when they were on. He was wearing a beret and a buttoned-up short trenchcoat, which makes sense when you find out he did performance poetry before the band formed. He said he liked my Sleaford Mods shirt in a low-key Northern accent, and I found out he has an aunt who lives near where I'm from in Canada.

Setlist
Reptiles State Funeral
Uber Capitalist Death Trade
Arms of Pleonexia
Preach to the Converted
Molotov Alcopop
Disinfect Us
Terrorist Synthesizer
Gibraltar Ape
Exhibit A
Dinner Lady
Perdurabo
Postmodernist Caligula
Necroflat In The Palace


Friday, December 1, 2017

Skinny Lister / Beans on Toast @ Norwich Waterfront - November 30, 2017

Double Trouble Tour 2017
This show was part of the Double Trouble Tour: Beans on Toast and then Skinny Lister. Beans on Toast served up a big chunk of his almost stream-of-consciousness rap/sung folk songs. I get the feeling he is extremely prolific and just dumps his stuff on the audience. I couldn't help feeling that he might instead slow down and more carefully craft what he does, but maybe I'm missing the point of his output. It was certainly entertaining though, and he is engaging and fun, as he veers between the political and the personal. He had 4 musicians backing him up, which I understand isn't normal for him. I enjoyed his introduction of the violin player: she used to play with Lord of the Dance but quit when they wouldn't let her skip their performance for Donald Trump. Many cheers for that story.

Skinny Lister is a new discovery for me. They are about to release their fourth album (springtime?) and tour unrelentingly. It shows. Their set is tight and crazy fun. All the band members are natural entertainers and provide a great night of jumping around and singing along. But I have to single out the indefatigable Lorna Thomas, singer and whirling ball of energy. She is flanked by her husband on guitar and sharing singing duties, and her brother, on accordian, who along with the rest of the band all have spotlight moments that richochet between band members. They share their energy and essence, and delight the crowd as one cohesive, and churning engine delivering (what they call) Shanty Punk. I'd love to see them live again, and will wait impatiently for the next album.

Skinny Lister November 30, 2017


Setlist:
Tragedy in A Minor
Christmas Calls
Cathy
My Life, My Architecture
Geordie Lad
The Devil in Me
John Kanaka
Rollin' Over
Trouble on Oxford Street
Bonny Away
Wanted
This is War
Hamburg Drunk
Encore:
Beat It From the Chest
This Christmas (with Beans on Toast)

-Setlist is approximate. They might have played Thing Like That and George's Glass among others.

Friday, November 10, 2017

Sleaford Mods @ UEA, Norwich - November 8, 2017

Sleaford Mods, UEA Norwich, The LCR
Janey turned me onto TCR about a year ago and I was immediately hooked. I don't get crazy excited about many bands these days, but I am so impressed and obsessed with Sleaford Mods. They are proof music can still deeply effect me. It seems fitting that the duo are about my age, and so was a large part of the crowd at tonight's show. But this isn't sad old people music. This is punk and vibrant and angry as fuck. Even if Jason Williamson denies being punk; this is the very definition in 2017.

Openers Nachthexen are a female quartet with a keyboard replacing the guitar in the usual expected line-up. They don't have a full album released yet, just a couple of EPs (if that's what they're still called). Their sound is very reminiscent of X-Ray Spex, particularly the female screamy lyrics. I'm sure their sound will grow and diversify before much longer, but what they have right now is still pretty good and appealing. All four have a disinterested stage presence; too cool or too focused on their instruments to do much else.

Jason Williamson
Jason Williamson has the polar opposite of a disinterested stage presence! He is mesmerizing to watch. His physicality is irrepressible, full of posturing, twitching, and tics and marching around with the mic stand. The lighting set up and plain backdrop silhouettes clouds of dispersing spit as he raps his vitriolic lyrics. Andrew Fearn, the music producer as it were, seemed to be loving the night, frequently grinning as he vigourously bops his head along to the beats he's created.

The setlist is very English Tapas heavy. My pre-show research showed that they don't vary the setlist, so I knew not to expect some of my favourite tracks from their earlier albums. But, as this is my first time seeing them, I didn't mind at all. It helps that I love just about everything they do. Out of the 15 songs pre-encore, the SMs played 11 of the 12 tracks on their recent album. We got TCR mid-set which fired everyone up, and then an absolute cracker of an encore, which a group of young men couldn't resist, rushing down front to start up a moshpit. Perfect.

As fits the age of the band and the crowd, the volume wasn't deafening and the sound was incredibly clean and clear. The only tiny downside was the lights on the crowd that messed with taking a decent photo, but I did my best. Next time they play nearby, I'm going! With their current output of new material, it shouldn't be long before they're on the road with a new batch of songs. Top!

Sleaford Mods, 08/11/17


Setlist:
I Feel So Wrong
Army Nights
Just Like We Do
Snout
Moptop
Dull
Carlton Touts
I Can Tell
TCR
Time Sands
Routine Dean
Jolly Fucker
Drayton Manored
Cuddly
BHS
Encore:
Jobseeker
Tied Up in Nottz
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Thursday, December 8, 2016

Levellers @ UEA, Norwich - December 7, 2016

This was the 25th Anniversary tour for the Levelling the Land album. I saw that original tour in Toronto in 1992, after having LOVED that album and listened to it over and over. So when my concert pal invited me, I had to go.

We tried to get there to see the opener Gaz Brookfield, as I'd seen him in a pub in Camden after a London Faith No More Gig and he was very impressive. Unfortunately we only caught one song, but it was nice to see something more of his. He seemed full of energy and audience interaction, and I will try and see him again. The second openers, Ferocious Dog, I didn't know, but seemed suited to the slot, being folk punk with a touch of hippie (dreads galore).

The Levellers played their album in track order and I found myself singing along with almost all of it, transported back 25 years. Damn if those songs don't hold up! Still such a good album. The band were full of energy and gave their all. Following up the album were a bunch of songs that I'm unfamiliar with, having not kept up with their music. Glad I didn't miss this one.

Setlist:
One Way
The Game
Fifteen Years
The Boatman
Liberty Song
Far From Home
Sell Out
Another Man's Cause
The Road
The Riverflow
Battle of the Beanfield

This Garden
Men-an-Tol
Truth Is
Carry Me
The Cholera Well

Encore:
Julie
Beautiful Day

2nd Encore:
What You Know (with Ferocious Dog members)



Sunday, January 31, 2016

Peter and the Test Tube Babies @ The Owl Sanctuary, Norwich - January 30, 2016

Peter and the Test Tube Babies, Owl Sanctuary 2016
Old school British punk in a great small punk venue. So much fun.

When I heard that The Owl Sanctuary was losing it's current lease, I decided I had to check it out before it closed (it's now relocated thank goodness). My concert pal, Janey, has told me lots of great things about this place, and we decided to check out the last live show there.

I was never a big Peter and the Test Tube Babies, but remembered the awesome Banned From the Pubs from the punk complilation Punk and Disorderly.

Partial Setlist:
Moped Lads
The Jinx
Elvis Is Dead
Up Yer Bum
Transvestite
Banned From the Pubs
Keep Britain Untidy