BREVIEW: Band of Horses @ O2 Institute 20.02.18

BREVIEW: Band of Horses @ O2 Institute 20.02.18 / Reuben Penny - Birmingham Review

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Words by Damien Russell / Pics by Reuben Penny

I’d largely forgotten what it was like to be so focused on a band that you let your pint get warm. Especially at what is rapidly approaching six quid a time.Birmingham Review

I walked into the Band of Horses gig with an open mind, having decided to take my friend whose birthday it was not knowing that she loved Band of Horses. A happy accident, but one that left with a 40-minute drive and a lot of waxing lyrical about how good they are. I try not to believe any kind of hype and make my own mind up; not having seen Band of Horses before, I nodded and smiled in all the right places but would leave it to the band to do the real talking.

The evening seemed a bit flat on the run up to the main event; slow to get people in, quite a subdued support band, sedate lighting. So when Band of Horses came on and launched into a slow number, I wasn’t holding out much hope.

Sometimes it’s good to be wrong.

Band of Horses finished the first half of what turned out to be called ‘Dull Times/The Moon’ (you got me guys) and then launched into the second half which opened the set proper. And it was a launch. They hit the audience with song after song for 30 minutes plus, without even stopping to let a full round of applause ring out and with the instrument changes they throw in. That’s no mean feat.

BREVIEW: Band of Horses @ O2 Institute 20.02.18 / Reuben Penny - Birmingham ReviewI was impressed. You may be able to tell. That level of polish and co-ordination takes a lot of work and a lot of gigs to get right; it’s clear that while Band of Horses might not be making leaps in innovation musically, they are a professional and dedicated outfit.

They also have a new album to promote, Why Are You OK, but interspersed the set well with classics; all the new material was consolidated into the first half of the set, leaving the second half for crowd pleasers. A reward for being patient with the new material. And I don’t feel like we needed it. I think Why Are You OK has some strong songs on it the band playing them fresh on this tour, and the few gigs they did last year, did them proud.

The first half of the set had some great dynamic shifts too, with the straight through approach feeling more like a stage show than a race to the end. We had ‘Solemn Oath’, ‘Casual Party’, ‘Country Teen’ and ‘Throw My Mess’ off the new record, side by side with ‘The Great Salt Lake’, ‘Marry Song’, ‘Laredo’ and more from the back catalogue. I couldn’t help feeling it drop off a bit about halfway though.

BREVIEW: Band of Horses @ O2 Institute 20.02.18 / Reuben Penny - Birmingham ReviewBy the time ‘In A Drawer’ was performed, the last song they played off the new album, things had settled down a bit and lost a little momentum. Still high quality material, just that compared to the grand entrance the peak had passed and what I would normally expect to be a big build up to the real big crowd pleasers, was more of a stroll.

But the crowd pleasers are just that and left everyone on a high, with the live rendition of ‘Is There A Ghost’ being especially good. I had heard rumours Band of Horses were not doing encores for some of the gigs on this tour and I wondered if they would for us. But they didn’t disappoint; ‘The Funeral’ ended the set, and with a roaring applause the evening.

They look like truckers, they play like rockers and they put a setlist together well. But the lull in the middle was shame and if I’m honest, they’ve stayed true to form and kept to their own brand of Southern Rock without too much change or re-invention.

Overall, Band of Horses came over as a relaxed group who put on a good show; I would absolutely recommend seeing them if you ever get the chance.

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For more on Band of Horses, visit www.bandofhorses.com

For more from the O2 Institute, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2institutebirmingham

For more from SJM Concerts/Gigs and Tours, visit www.gigsandtours.com

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BPREVIEW: Band of Horses @ O2 Institute 20.02.18

BPREVIEW: Band of Horses @ O2 Institute 20.02.18

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Words by Damien Russell

On the 20th of February, Band of Horses will be performing at the O2 Institute – playing in Birmingham as part of 7 UK/Ireland dates on their international tour.Birm_Prev-logo-MAIN

Doors will be opening at 19:00 and tickets are £25.75 (plus booking fees) as presented by SJM Concerts. For direct gig info, including venue details and online ticket sales, click here.

For those of you not already familiar with Band of Horses there’s a fair amount of catching up to do. The band formed in 2004 and in their 13 years have had 6 studio albums and 1 Grammy nomination. They have also had 8 line-up changes, although band leader Ben Bridwell has remained constant throughout.

BPREVIEW: Band of Horses @ O2 Institute 20.02.18Band of Horses hit the ground running with their first album Everything All The Time, a minor hit that charted internationally – even in Scandinavia, where it found the lower reaches of both Sweden and Norway’s national album charts. The band’s debut single, ‘The Funeral’, has been used in numerous television series, films, video games, and advertisements.

Their successes continued and their third album, Infinite Arms, was nominated for a Grammy Award in the Best Alternative Album category. The LP also and featured in the Best Albums of 2010 lists from Q Magazine (#21), NPR Listeners (#15), Filter Magazine (#10) and Paste Magazine (#14). The song ‘Laredo’ was placed at No28 in Rolling Stone Magazine’s top 50 songs of 2010.

Band of Horses’ sixth and latest album, Why Are You OK,  was released in June 2016 and brings the band back to a fuller sound. In an interview with Gigwise.com, Ben Bridwell said; “I wanted to pore over it and explore some more sincere themes, instead of speaking in riddles so no one knows what I’m talking about. That was fuelling the fire and that takes time.”

For a pre-gig taster, check out Band of Horses’ latest single, ‘Solemn Oath’ – released on June 10th 2016.

Band of Horses perform at the O2 Institute on Monday 20th February, as presented SJM Concerts. For direct gig info and online tickets sales, click here.

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For more on Band of Horses, visit www.bandofhorses.com

For more from the O2 Institute, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2institutebirmingham

For more from SJM Concerts/Gigs and Tours, visit www.gigsandtours.com

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THE GALLERY: The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17

THE GALLERY: The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

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Pics by Rob Hadley

On Friday 20th January, The Pretty Reckless performed at the O2 Institute – as presented by SJM Concerts/Gig & Tours.

On a global tour promoting their third studio album, Who You Selling For – out through Razor & Tie Recordings from October last year, The Pretty Reckless were in Birmingham for one of a handful (one for each finger & thumb) of UK dates. Next stops: mainland Europe, Russia, South, Central and North America. We did say global.

Fronted by Taylor Momsen, with Jamie Perkins, Ben Phillips and Mark Damon having been ‘the band’ since their debut LP, The Pretty Reckless are vocally strong and obviously Rock. But with Kato Khandwala (Paramore, My Chemical Romance, Papa Roach, Blondie) as producer for their three studio albums, this is what you’d want and expect. Something the gig ticket buying public seems pretty (no pun) happy with too, as The Pretty Reckless sold out their entire UK tour with reassuringly green tinged ease. I wish I was a little bit taller, I wish I was a baller…

Rob Haldey was at the O2 Institute for Birmingham Review – shooting an extended photo feature to go into THE GALLERY. See a selection of Rob’s shots below or click here for the full Flickr of Pics (or on the link above). There’s some on the Birmingham Review Instagram page too.

The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17 / Rob Hadley

THE GALLERY: The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

THE GALLERY: The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

THE GALLERY: The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

THE GALLERY: The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

THE GALLERY: The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

THE GALLERY: The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

Who You Selling For – the third studio album from The Pretty Reckless, is out now on Razor & Tie Recordings. For more on The Pretty Reckless, including full tour dates and online sales, visit www.theprettyreckless.com

For more from the O2 Institute, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2institutebirmingham

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For more from Razor & Tie Recordings, visit www.razorandtie.com

For more from SJM Concerts / Gigs & Tours, visit www.gigsandtours.com

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BPREVIEW: The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17

BPREVIEW: The Pretty Reckless @ O2 Institute 20.01.17

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Words by Ed King

On Friday 20th January, The Pretty Reckless perform at the O2 Institute – coming to Birmingham on the second date of a five show UK tour.Birmingham Preview

Doors open at 7pm with an 11pm curfew. Tickets are priced at £23.75, as presented by SJM Concerts/Gigs & Tours. For direct gig info, including venue detail and onlie tickets sales click here.

N.B. At the time of writing, each UK date is presented as SOLD OUT through The Pretty Reckless website – check with a repeatable ticket outlet, or the individual venues, for returns/extras.

What do you get if you cross a creative polymath, two bands, a trademark dispute and a support tour with The Veronicas..? A bit of a clusterfu*k, to begin with anyway. But at least one that ended with a better name.

Who You Selling For / The Pretty RecklessAnd from the flames of God-only-knows-what-happened, The Pretty Reckless were born. Again, and again – releasing their debut LP, Light Me Up, through Interscope Records in August 2010. Produced by Rock God Behind Soundproof Glass, Kato Khandwala (Paramore, My Chemical Romance, Papa Roach, Blondie), the ten track debut was a touch ‘generic’, according to some, but damn well delivered. And those vocals…

Four years passed until The Pretty Reckless let the studio doors fly open again, jumping to Razor & Tie Records to release their sophomore LP. But when they did twelve tracks of unashamed ROCK were unleashed on the world – complete with pounding rhythms, powerful vocals, a song about shotguns and a soundbyte of someone about to cum. And it was called Going to Hell… so there’s that.

Two years passed and The Pretty Reckless were at it once more, with their third studio album, Who You Selling For, released again through Razor & Tie Records in October 2016. Punchy, fresh, melodic (there’s even a piano in there) the third time round the studio sun showed just what The Pretty Reckless can achieve.

Now they’re on the global road to persuade us to buy a copy (not the world’s worst idea) coming to Birmingham as part of a five date UK tour – before heading over to mainland Europe, Russia, then South, Central and North America respectively.

But if you don’t hang on my every written word as if they were the POST-IT-NOTES-OF-GOD, then check out ‘Take Me Down’ – the lead single from Who You Selling For. Free will… what a jip.

‘Take Me Down’ – The Pretty Reckless

The Pretty Reckless perform at the O2 Institute on Friday 20th January, as presented SJM Concerts/Gigs & Tours. For direct gig info and online tickets sales, click here.Gigs and Tours - trans

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For more on The Pretty Reckless, visit www.theprettyreckless.com

For more from the O2 Institute, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2institutebirmingham

For more from SJM Concerts / Gigs & Tours, visit www.gigsandtours.com

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BREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16

BREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

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Words by Ed King / Pics by Rob Hadley

Not everyone will get this, but it feels like I’m back in The Hummingbird.birm_rev-logo-main

It’s a cold, cold, COLD November night. It’s a Sunday. I’m standing in the O2 Institute, on the same dance floor where I’ve dropped a Bez sized batch of pills at Club Andromeda in the mid 90’s, watching Bo Ningen ROCK THE FUCK OUT. As support act for Primal Scream you’re always going to be singing from the shadows, but this Japanese ‘four piece noise rockers’ are throwing themselves into the room. Literally, at one point.

It’s all a little stadium for my liking, and the solos seem to be an extended masturbation without any real input to the songs, but after about four unflinchingly high energy tracks I BREVIEW: Bo Ningen – supporting Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Reviewam probably the only one not transfixed. Although that could be the silver flares. But if you want to see something outrageous and committed, check out Bo Ningen.

The room fills out and starts clapping the sound technician, as the poor bastard flits on and off stage with an air of addled urgency. Primal Scream have been on tour since the end of the festival season – with dates in each month, before the main crunch came in November. They’ve been to Japan, they’ve been to Canada. They’ve been to North and South America. Now they’re in Birmingham, just over half way through a nineteen date UK tour. And it’s a Sunday.

But the crowd wants blood, some of whom perhaps literally; the four middle aged, fat skin heads behind me start throwing plastic glasses at the tall, scarf waving glam rocker at the front. The mum-dad-daughter to my right start twitching into their beer and orange juice, whilst the people sat down on the balcony start to lean over and stare precariously around the stage. Tension, builds.BREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review

Then, to the soundtrack of a more confident cheer, Primal Scream take the stage; the room foot stamps so hard I wander if the Kate Tempest gig downstairs can hear it. Without any need of introduction, the guitar riff and keys from ‘Movin’ On Up’ sweep across the hall. Bobby Gillespie grabs the mic, perches one foot one the wall of monitors at the front of the stage and croons out into the crowd. Suited and booted a pink polka dot shirt.

Beat, beat, beat goes the backing track, and we move from ghost of LPs past to the lead single from Primal Scream’s latest album – the fast paced, techno pop rock ‘Where the Light Gets In’. As far as I can see (there was a big speaker stack making me both blind and deaf) Gillespie is the only vocalist, with no Sky Ferreira stand in on stage.

Without pause we go back to the back catalogue, as the bluesy drawl and strut of ‘Jailbird’ swaggers around the room, giving the crowd a chance to play along. ‘I’m Yours, Your Mine’ echos through the O2 Institute in a rare show BREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Reviewof Birmingham crowd participation. Reminiscent to the sampled beginning of a popular Primal Scream track, people are clearly here to ‘have a good time’; by the time the first guitar solo of ‘Accelerator’ kicks in, most of the beer is now on the floor.

The set jumps across Primal Scream’s significant portfolio, Gillespie jumps across the stage – bouncing from Innes to Butler and back over the monitors. And apart from a small shout out to the founding members of Jackbites, all that comes off stage is music.

The band look fueled, but tired; it’s been months on the road, across many far flung territories. Bobby Gillespie looks like… well, Bobby Gillespie. On a Sunday. His vocals painfully weak at points – especially in the down tempo blues ballad ‘Cry Myself Blind’, which sounds more like a 3am wedding reception karaoke attempt. As a child of Screamadelica I keep my fingers crossed they don’t play ‘Damaged’.

But the energy is ferocious; the whole room, from balcony to bar, is alive and focused. Even the fat skinheads are dancing – elbow jostling in a circle, like a race hate hen party on Broad Street. And I still can’t work out which side of the mum-dad-daughter triptych is the reason they’re here, and whose been dragged along because ‘I bet you’ll enjoyBREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review it’. But it’s not often you get to see a family dance it out at a rock concert so who the fuck cares. Even the much older couple at the back of the balcony are now dancing arm in arm, wrapped around each other in metronome unison with broad grins on their faces. I think the pills have kicked in.

Standout moments come from ‘100% Or Nothing’ – the last single from Chaosmosis – and the bass slapping relentless mess fest (and government health warning) ‘Shoot Speed Kill Light’, as Butler points her axe to the sky and leads a demonic grin charge into the crowd. Eventually the continued (and somewhat obvious) heckles to ‘PLAY LOADED’ are finally answered, and by the time Peter Fonda stammers out his call to arms the room is already lost; Gillespie left to do nothing more than watch over his flock and shake those maracas.

BREVIEW: Primal Scream @ O2 Institute 04.12.16 / Rob Hadley © Birmingham Review‘Country Girl’ brings the main set to a close, with a somewhat messy start – that “shows we’re not true professionals” – and the most enthusiastic moment of audience participation Birmingham has probably seen in a while. The house lights stay down so we know there’s an encore, but for much longer than it takes to wring out a shirt and rack up.

I begin to wonder if this really is it and edge my way to the back of the room – not to get out early, but in case there’s a mini riot. Mercifully the slow sample start and electro riffs of ‘Kill All Hippies’ comes rolling off stage, before the pillar shaking finále of ‘Rocks’ throw this Sunday service crashing into the walls of fuck you.

Then it hits me. I remember standing in this and other venues as a drug rinsed, precocious teenager asking ‘you reckon on day we’ll all be old but still coming and raving, like they do at tea dances and stuff?’

The answer is yes.

It’s tonight.

We still party hard.

And if Gillespie wants it, and can smooth out them Sunday vocals, there’s still a place for a front man.

For more on Primal Scream, visit www.primalscream.net

For more on Bo Ningen, visit www.boningen.info

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For more from the O2 Institute, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.academymusicgroup.com/o2institutebirmingham

For more from Gigs and Tours, including full event listing and online ticket sales, visit www.gigsandtours.com

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