I was sort of drawn to this gig on false pretences. I bought a ticket on the basis that Sweet Unrest were headlining it, but on my last visit to see them at the Camden Eye, Tom told me they were no longer performing. But he said Pedestrian Band were good, so I thought I would give it a go anyway, not least as I like the George Tavern. It's in a horrible neighbourhood, the nearest station being Shadwell on the DLR and I always feel a sense of achievement if I get back unharmed. But the pub itself is a beautiful Victorian boozer inside, complete with amazing quality tilework behind the bar.
Being a pub gig the loss of the headliners did not give rise to an offer of a refund. It didn't even result in them finding a new headline act. The main support simply moved up the bill and a new main support was inserted. As I had heard of none of them it really didn't matter.
To give you a feel for the status of the opening act, on the website the evening was billed as "Pedestrian Band, Scarsdale Fats, Cherry i and more"
So Chainman were the "more". You have heard the expression "less is more"? Well this was a case of "more is less". They were a duo and not to mince one's words, a bit of a shambles. And at the beginning of their set the audience matched the band numbers one to one. In fact the other bloke was a friend of the lead guitarist, so arguably the audience was just me! (Although to be fair people soon appeared out of the beer garden to get to about a dozen.)
A fair bit of the set was taken up by them tuning a guitar in the middle as the guitarist and drummer switched places midway for a couple of songs and then switched back. Given the bloke was a better guitarist and singer, and the girl a better drummer this didn't seem a worthwhile exercise.
By the way, if you are wondering at the reddish hue of all these photos, its the crap lighting at the George. Its not quite as bad in real life as on the photos, but why they seem to think that bands look best bathed in the light of an Amsterdam brothel I am not sure!
Anyway, next on were a band called Cherry i. Needless to say after the first act my hopes were not high. Also, I have a gender split prejudice on indie acts, based on a lot of experience. My heart sinks when I see a young man come on solo with an acoustic guitar, or a young woman leading out vocals in an indie band. Young men on acoustics always bore me. If its a young woman then often I find there is a terrific voice which carries the act through (see Lucca Mae for example). Converse works with indie bands. The women vocalists tend to be horribly shouty to get heard over the guitar noise.
And I say this all to lead into the opposite with this band! Which is why stereotypes are just that. They are not universally true. The young lady singing with Cherry i had a wonderful distinctive voice, and the band were not too loud. It all just worked. I spent a fair while trying to place where I had heard vocals similar, and eventually it clicked - Beth Orton of Portishead. Anyway, this was a joy, all the more so for being unexpected. And also nice to see a rarity - a band with even gender split rather than just a token female vocalist.
So the new act inserted to the bill was Scarsdale Fats. With a name like that I expected at least one obese band member. But no. They were very decent, listenable. You are waiting for a but. Well the only but would be, not extraordinary in any way. I mean you can't expect really extraordinary, but at least a little distinctive. I like indie guitar bands so this was fine. But not enough to make me want to go out of my way to see them again, as opposed to being perfectly happy if they popped up on another bill.
Anyway, this lot are definitely worth checking out. Very solid vocals (singer said he had been struggling with them tonight, but honestly I didn't notice), good musicians, the drummer was drenched in sweat - he really gave his all. Also they had the confidence to include one instrumental - confident enough that their guitar and drums could be interesting enough not to need a song over the top. And they were right. Just very likeable