It is also nice seeing a band starting out. And here I liked the fact that there was almost no audience (well we were in the 20-30 range) and good lighting so I could get some very decent photos, and chat to the lead singer before the start
I caught the drummer in a quiet moment. Always difficult with shooting drummers - they are at the back and if actually playing they look great in person but my photos just come out as a blur. And if you catch them in a quite moment, well you can get them looking bored.....
I also liked it where the lead singer switched from electric to acoustic guitar. Just that added bit of variation.
Actually hardest to capture was the bass guitarist, although he was nearest to me, because at this angle he got bleached out by the powerful light just behind his head. Of course I could have solved this by wandering around like other photographers and getting the best angle (unfortunately for Highstone there was plenty of space in the audience!). But I am not a photographer. I actually want to listen to the band. Just like the memento of photos and using them to illustrate my reviews. So I find my spot and stay there.
While I love weekends like the last one with two all day bills of indie music, I do find the acts slightly blur into each other. And inevitably my reviews are rather brief as there are so many acts to cover. So nice here to have just the one band to concentrate upon.
After the gig I did take the lead singer "to task" in not name checking his band, by which I meant only as an aside at the end mentioning their name. I mean, its really tedious listening to some bands promote themselves, but there is the other extreme too! But he did say to me (but not the audience as a whole!) that they were playing the Elephants Head on 27th. And lo I am free that evening. Well not any more. That's a date!
I have to listen to them rather more to work out whether I actually rate their songs as opposed to just their music. There is a difference. Writing catchy songs is the genuinely hard bit.
So after all that I headed home to watch the football. Obviously it was going to be a rubbish game as no one cares about third place, the French are definitely a step above England and Tuchel was playing the reserves.
And then Rice scores inside three minutes. The French were also playing a reserve side, well apart from Mbappe who clearly wanted the Golden Boot. And by half time we were 4-0 up, and good value for it. Saka and Rashford were looking really dangerous every time we got forward,. There was space. England were running at defenders and playing accurate first time passes. We were contemplating biggest ever England world cup finals win (6-1). Agincourt. Waterloo.
Then second half France started with four substitutions and a different attitude. It was soon 4-3 and we looked totally on the ropes. Only a matter of time before France scored an equaliser. Mbappe was looking unplayable. And yet, unlike against Argentina, we had capacity to break. And Spence duly got into the penalty area running at pace and the defender slid in. Clear penalty. Not the slightest protest from anyone. Saka kept his nerve to complete his hat-trick. Surely at 5-3 we would hold on. France did look like that knocked the wind out of their sails.
Deep into added time, 5-4. Surely not? And then the maestro himself, substitute St Jude, breaks clear with strength and skill to make it an extraordinary 6-4. The final is going to be such an anti-climax!
So how did this game that no-one seemed to want to have to play, end up being so brilliant? Well, because it almost felt like a friendly, it was really open. And in particular the French in the first half didn't seem to feel the need to close anyone down. We got a clear run at their full backs, and we had a will to run at them rather than pass back inside and keep possession as in many previous games. No safety first.
But one also has to appreciate that there are two teams playing, or not playing. So while in the first half England looked brilliant, a major factor was how bad France played. Which became evident in the second half when they played really well, and suddenly England looked in real trouble. But we also kept actually playing when we could, and breaking fast. Which is why we got the two further goals. We have players who can make a great pass and run with the ball. Jude Bellingham is absolutely top quality.
And while the game started as if the sides were not really interested, with the main prize gone, by the end you could see both teams really wanted to win this one. They had got caught up in the drama which they were enacting. The reason so many big matches are stultifyingly boring is the pressure to make sure that no mistakes are made; no one is given an inch. Take the pressure off and the skill and talent can come to the fore in an entertaining way - not just in one brilliant move and then try and shut up shop.
My double bill of Highstone and World Cup bronze match was a triumph! Today the Lightning Seeds and the World Cup Final. They have a lot to live up to.