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*** NEXT WEEK AND LAST WEEK'S SHOW ***

The next Indie Hour will now be on Tuesday 6th March 2012 with a returning DJ Stevlor. All at the usual time of 9-11pm on Sheffield Live (93.2FM).

The last show on Tuesday 21st February 2012 is currently available as a two-part MP3 downloadable podcast, along with prevous weeks, from the podcast archive.

In an Indie band? Demos and promos to The Indie Hour c/o Sheffield Live 93.2 FM, 15 Paternoster Row, Sheffield, S1 2BX.

Saturday 11 June 2011

Arctic Monkeys/Miles Kane/The Vaccines Review

Arctic Monkeys/Miles Kane/The Vaccines

It’s Arctic Monkey’s first home show since May 2009 and the sense of anticipation in the specially erected big top at Don Valley Bowl is tangible. As always the band do things on their own terms opting for two nights under canvas where over  20,000 people will get to see them, across the way from the more conventional surroundings of the Don Valley Arena.

The hand-picked bill includes local lads and Arctic’s buddies Dead Sons, who sadly we miss. The tent swells for The Vaccines though as they deliver a sharp and direct set of post-new wave tunes, unsurprisingly revolving around their acclaimed debut “What did you expect from”.  Providing excellent bed-partners for the Monkeys with a same ‘all about the music’ ethos, front-man Justin Young looks equally at ease with or without his guitar slung around him.  Big cheers greet debut single “Wreckin' Bar (Ra Ra Ra)” and the band’s signature tune, “Post-break-up sex”. The sentiments of their debut LP echo loud but that’s OK as the hanging base lines boom, surfeyscuzzing guitars slash in and out and Young’s 60’s inspired melodies float over the top. It’s hard to imagine that the London-based four piece embarked on their first tour as recently as September 2010.

Next up, main support Miles Kane cuts a familiar figure with his association with Alex Turner going right back to his Little Flames days and more recently Liverpool based trio The Rascals. He takes his band through a tight and compelling set that oozes confidence and makes it very clear just how much influence Kane has had on Alex Turner, their joint Last Shadow Puppets side project included. His retro-brand of 60s/psychedelic pop goes down a treat as he works the crowd well with his cheeky Scally swagger. Debut solo album “Colour of the trap” is given a good work-out; the garagey buzz of “Inhaler” gets the crowd moving, and “Quicksand” and it’s ‘ba ba ba's shows that retro doesn’t have to be about musical regression. “Kingcrawler” wouldn’t have been out of place on the aforementioned The Last Shadow Puppets album and the T-Rex-tinged stomp of “Come closer” also his the mark.

Tonight (and tomorrow), however, is all about the Monkeys. The intro tape hints that the band might be in playful mood: Hot Chocolate's “You Sexy Thing”, only tenuously linked to Sheffield via the “Full Monty” soundtrack.  Another, Turner’s donning of a T-shirt emblazoned with ‘Monkeys’ and the Sheffield council logo. They launch into a rip-roaring version of the frenetic and jerking “View From The Afternoon”, segwaying seamlessly into the circling guitar vortex of “Brainstorm”. It’s also clear that tonight Turner is going to take us for an almost nostalgic walk through the band’s whole back catalogue. So much so that it’s five tracks in before the acclaimed new album “Suck it and see” gets a look in in the shape of the double salvo of  “Don’t sit down cause I’ve moved your chair” and “Library pictures”. Based on the number of people shouting out the line “Going into business with a grizzly bear” on the former, the new LP has been doing brusque business since its release earlier in the week.

A taught and powerful version of “Teddy Picker” shows just why Matt Helders is touted as being one of the best drummers currently pounding the skins. “Crying Lightening” crawls out and raps itself round some of Turner’s finest and most opaque lyrics to date, belatedly giving that difficult third album a run out. A crowd assistedMardy Bum” (‘I've forgotten the words’ jokes Turner as emotional fans sing them back at him) and a crunching but compelling “I Bet You Look Good on the Dance Floor” whips the crowd into a frenzy.

Gone are the technical problems that dogged previous enormo-gigs (Reading/Leeds 2009) as the band despatch Monkey’s classic after classic. Jamie Cook and the still hairy Nick O’Malley attack their guitars with maximum efficiency and a minimum of fuss, as Turner effortlessly rides the wave of hometown goodwill. The organ-driven “Pretty visitors” briefly breaks the guitar monopoly before the band bring the set down to a gentle conclusion with “Do me a favour” and then “505”, Turner’s sparing partner Miles Kane joining the band to spread shards of psychedelic guitar over the song’s meandering atmospherics.

After nineteen songs Alex bids the crowd farewell, but of course there will be encores. And what encores they are. The final trio of “When the sun goes down”, “Fluorescent Adolescent” and the first performance of “A Certain Romance” since 2007 threatens to blow the roof off the tent. “Thank you ladies and gentlemen, it’s been a pleasure” coos Turner. The feeling's completely mutual and a fitting end to the almost fairytale rise of four local lads that used to practice down the road in their Neepsend rehearsal room to global stadium fillers.

Denzil RepoMen








Don Valley, Sheffield
Friday 10th June, 2011

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