“They
tried to send us to an early grave,
I’m not immortal, but I can be saved”
The set gained momentum
with each song, as the previously released “After Dark” went down particularly
well, where Matt dealt with the topic of lust prior to a
one night stand in his own inimitable way. ‘Wake up’ closed
a promising set from these likable Londoners who have recently
toured with British Sea Power, and surely will be headlining
their own tour very soon.
A warm reception
was given to local band ‘The Stands’,
as fellow musicians John Mullins (The Basement) and Dave
McCabe (The Zutons) were in the crowd to lend support. However,
the band struggled to live up to the warm welcome as after
the openers ‘I Need You’ and ‘When This
River Rolls Over You’, which sound like a mix between
Simon & Garfunkel, The Beach Boys and The Thrills. The
Stands had a stagnant sound to them and failed to raise things
to another level. Although, ‘The Way She Does’ towards
the end was more upbeat and had a good instrumental aspect
to it.
The Melbourne band
Jet started off in the same fashion as “The Stands” in their own words, with two
slow songs. The opener being an acoustic number ‘Cold
Hard Bitch’ which contained “The Who” like
vocals and was a nice soft introduction to “Jet”.
After this they took off into heavy guitar riffed and Mick
Jaegger mixed with Dolfe De Datsun style vocals tracks like ‘Get
What You Need’, ‘Hey Kids’ and the popular ‘Take
It Or Leave it’, which went down the best.
Jet have an extra dimension than
the other New Rock Revolution bands around today, with
the aforementioned acoustic numbers,
but whether this is enough to make 2003 their year, as NME
in its’ wisdom predicts is another matter. The set
ended with a blasting version of Elvis’s ‘That’s
Allright Mama’ and a big cheer from the 400 or so strong
crowd. The amicable antipodeans may have passed the first
stage, but can they carry their thing off in bigger venues?
David Adair
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