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Franz Ferdinand, Palace Theatre, Melbourne

Traveling all the way to the other side of the world only to end up going to see a band from your hometown, may seem a bit mental to some. But when it’s a band as joyous to watch as Franz Ferdinand, you can’t argue. Not to mention the tickets coming all the way from Lapland.

Franz Ferdinand, Palace Theatre Melbourne, 5th Jan 2009

Dissapointingly there was no Scotland/Glesga shout out for us to take advantage of, although the upside of not being in Glasgow was that the crowd about a third of the size it would have been at the SECC. The Palace Theatre in Melbourne (NOT the Palais…lucky someone double checked the address) is in the same ball park as Camden’s KOKO, stretched a bit longways so maybe a tad more capacity, but at the same time managing to feel that smidgin more intimate.

Opening the set with a new song (Bite Hard, according to latest info on Setlist.fm)  can often be a bold/arrogant move, but when the album’s been ‘coming soon’ for longer than most can remember, it’s almost a bit of a relief. Most of the new stuff sounds fairly familiar, due to catching them a couple of times at the festivals last year, including the 30-minute piledriver of a surprise set at Glastonbury.

A short way into the set we’re blessed with the enticing drum intro of The Dark of The Matinee, a part of the song which oddly I’d never taken much notice of until that very moment, despite it being a personal favourite. Coincidentally, a few days earlier listening to same song in the car, it occurred to me that 2004’s Franz Ferdinand is just about as solid a debut album as most bands could hope for. Appetite for Destruction or even Definitely Maybe it mightn’t be, but that’s really nothing to be ashamed of, and track-by-track there’s very little to complain about.

Franz Ferdinand

At pre-encore time, my mind met with the familiar ‘but there’s so many they haven’t played yet, there’s just not time for all of them’ panic. Kind of like the way you feel after the first song of a White Stripes show. This in turn got me pondering where Franz Ferdinand in fact lie in the grand scheme of things. They have a little bit of everything – the tunes, the charm, the performance – maybe the local connection comes into it somewhere too. Now asking anyone to name a favourite band is madness. Even if there is an answer, it’s still a shitty question. A top three would be a challenge for most. But as Franz restarted the party with Michael, I had a tiny suspicion they’d be in with a shout for the Top Ten. I’m still not sure, ask me again in a few years.

Led Zeppelin @ The O2, London

 

Led Zeppelin

Full review to follow – just trying to bump up the traffic on my photos (not that it isn’t through the roof already mind you ;)

Badly Drawn Boy, Shepherd’s Bush Empire, 16th February 2007

You’ve gotta love eBay. A week before the gig, with all the standing tickets sold out, I noticed that the support act was none other than Malcolm Middleton. Maybe worth the effort after all, I thought. Luckily there’s always some poor bugger who cant get rid of his tickets, and has to flog them for half face value. Cha ching!

Malcy’s short set goes down quite well, but without a full band it struggles to carry the same liveliness of Into The Woods. New album sounds good though.
The thing about the Damon Gough live experience™ is his ability to reinvent his songs such that you give that bop of recognition to a new song you’ve never heard before, yet go for a wizz just as he starts playing a ska rendition of your favourite b-side. But the crowd has no such trouble with his solo intermission of Once Around The Block, The Shining and probably my favourite BDB track A Minor Incident. Of course I stand corrected during the encore when the piano breaks into my actual favourite ‘You Were Right’, tonights obituary verse namechecking Steve Irwin and Richard Whiteley.

All in all a superb (and lengthy – 2+ hours!) performance from the badly drawn one, and the best tenner I’ve spent in a long time!

Dananananaykroyd, 93 Feet East, 28th January 2007

Wow, that was a kick in the balls I didn’t expect! And it only cost me six quid.

I was only there through the curiosity of whether a band with such a ridiculous (but brilliant) name were actually any good.

Man these guys make a lot of noise. Mainly down to the 2 (yes, two) drummers. This is handy at times, because it leaves one of them free to go for a jaunt through the audience mid-song.

Buy their records if you must, but just make sure you see this band play live. Soon, before they inevitably implode under the weight of their own ferocity.

Noel Gallagher, Union Chapel, 26th November 2006

With this gig taking place in a church (a real one, there was a mass this morning at 11), I could write a full review littered with religious puns, but instead I’ll just give you the few important details. Tonight consisted mainly of Noel Gallagher, an acoustic guitar, a seat in the front row, and me.