Monday, 9 December 2019

White Lies at Brixton Academy

This was superb gig. For several reasons. First the company. There were three of us, myself, a newly created partner at my firm and a friend's 14 year old son. So a very wide age disparity - old, middle and young. And we all got on famously. Although as we were two males to one female, I insisted on democratic grounds to stand on the left front edge of the stage (with close proximity to the gents) rather than the right (with access to the ladies). These things matter.😊

And that age disparity went for the audience as a whole. We got chatting to a family who had flown over from Jersey for the gig, a couple with their teenage daughters. Just a very pleasant friendly atmosphere altogether.

Now one might hope for a great support act too. But perhaps too much to ask for. They played my sort of indie, but Boniface, from Canada, were just not very good. Apart from anything else, they really tried to hard. The guitarists were certainly animated, but instead of being entertaining to watch, they just distracted one from the music. And the lead singer's motion was on the boundary of where dancing stops and epileptic fits start. Actually, if anything, on the wrong side of that boundary.









Ok so much for the support. On come White Lies for a mega set. The inspiration/excuse for this tour was to mark the tenth anniversary of their first, and best, album, To Lose My Life. So they started by playing that album in full and in sequence, and then followed with a sort of "best of" from their subsequent albums, and finished with the traditional encore, of more of the same. In all a 20 track set, and that is long as a lot of their songs are quite expansive.

And they started with a bang - black confetti shooting out of cannons on the opening of Death.






Now a few words on White  Lies. First I like their style. All wearing black. No stage histrionics. And stripped down largely monochrome lighting.

Secondly, lead singer Harry McVeigh just has the most superb voice for this type of music, a heavy guitar sound. A lesser man would be drowned out, but he is perfect.

And they are the very top end of guitar bands, as my young friend (who plays guitar) assured me. As someone who never got beyond playing the triangle in infants school, I can't properly appreciate the skill of guitar-work. Young Luka however does, and was quite awestruck, which I take as a good sign. (And I am not proud, well-pleased to be taught things by a 14 year old. Why not?)

I was a little concerned at the balance of this gig. Normally you start a gig with a popular number, often your current single, and then leave your best to last, constructing a varied set, up and down in tempo and familiarity, in between. But because they were playing their best album in order, I felt their best song actually came second, the title track of To Lose My Life. Which left a lot of downhill to go. But actually it was all good. And neatly showcased their work, with the first album feeling slightly darker, rockier, almost Goth inspired, and the rest edging to a lighter pop style (all things are comparative - this is very much a rock, not pop band).


























 Multi-coloured lights only really came into play towards end of second half with the pop-py "Tokyo".




And going out with a mighty bang in the encore with "Bigger Than Us" accompanied by copious amounts of white confetti plus beach ball type balloons, some of which people took home with them on the Tube afterwards.






It was quite euphoric ending. very well judged. And then they ad to do it all again the following night as they had a two night residency at the Academy. A much underrated band.

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