How is it that I always see the
Cure at a big outdoor gig on the hottest day of the year? After some umming and
aahing, I’d booked to see 70’s taut new wavers turned eyeliner-sporting goth/pop
crossover giants The Cure at Cardiff’s 35,000 capacity Blackweir Fields for two
reasons really; firstly, it had been awhile since I last saw them (2018’s “BST”
Hyde Park show, gig 1,095) and I wasn’t sure how much stamina veteran vocalist
Robert Smith would have in the future for their usual 2 ½ hour extravaganza
sets, and secondly, it’s my birthday! OK, it’s not as auspicious as last year (my
60th of course, celebrated with a brilliant Gang Of Four show in
London, gig 1,393), but should be a fun thing to do on the big day, right?
This however didn’t take into account another heatwave hitting the UK, so, like that scorched 2018 gig (when I took my shirt off on entry and didn’t put it back on until I got back to the car!) and my previous Cure “live” experience (1993’s equally hot “Great Xpectations”, waaay back at gig 244), high temperatures were expected with reports of 35 degrees at 5 p.m. doors! So, once again anticipating sharing a big field with hordes of grumpy and melting Goths, I set off for gig friend Robynne’s at 230. Robynne had kindly offered me a spare seat in their hired chauffeured car (no parking shenanigans? I’m up for that!), so, along with her son Kai and his 2 mates, I hopped in for a happily air-conditioned run down a baking hot M4, hitting traffic at the Newport “traffic event horizon” and crawling in the rest of the way! Our driver dropped us off at a garage 10 minutes North of the arena entrance so we wandered down, seeking shade wherever possible, getting in just after 5.30 into the large North-facing arena, just as openers The Joy Formidable kicked off their set. We went our separate directions and I headed down the front, house right, in the shade of the stage (!) as TJF vocalist “Ritzy” Bryan rounded off pacey 2nd number “Cradle” and introduced the band, “from Yr Wyddgrug – Mold!” Hmmm, know it well, unfortunately…! The subsequent “Whirring” was a fine and pacey backbeat indie banger featuring a dynamic soaring chorus and an eerie and dissonant saw solo (!), but was sadly the only number for me to stand out from an otherwise quite average power-chord driven grungy set, most numbers also feeling overlong and outstaying their welcome somewhat.
By this time my Bowie shirt was unbuttoned, and the simple act of walking to the gig in the 35 degree heat had made me sweat profusely – so much, that rivulets had run down my chest and onto my shorts, making me look like I’d pissed myself! Blimey! Took a walk to the back, finding my favourite thing of the day – a revolving water spray cannon! Ace! So I took a couple of cooling blasts before heading back in for Robert Smith’s “pet” support band, Scots The Twilight Sad, next up. Opener “Dead Flowers” set the tone with a gloomy, slow burn intro leading into a goth rock march, and 3rd number “VTr” (dedicated to their art guy, “a proud Welshman”!) featured a snappy drumbeat opening similar to Joy Division’s “She’s Lost Control”, ceding to a more hypnotic post-punk groove propelled by a hard hitting performance from impressive former Honeyblood drummer Cat Myers. In fact, the propulsive and kinetic Myers was the best thing about this intense and dramatic set which, whilst evoking a real mood of heavy menace, was a little short on real tunes for me, although I enjoyed “VTr” and closer “Waiting For The Phone Call”, a growling beast with a Killing Joke “Pssyche” groove and the most impassioned vocal of the set from frontman James Graham.
By then I’d run into occasional gig
buddy Guy for a quick chat, and took another wander to bump into other folks.
Unfortunately, despite normally being pretty good at this, and there being a
whole horde of folks I knew present (Tim and siblings, Simon from Gloucester,
Kate, Steffen, old school friend Andrew, and even Thea from the comic shop!) I
completely struck out! I was however asked for a pic of my shirt by a chap for
his Bowie-mad young niece which was nice, whilst the PA was also playing “Life
On Mars”!
So, back to my house right spot about a dozen rows back as the clock ticked over to 10 past 8 and the taped noise of thunder and rain (which would actually have been welcome today!) heralded The Cure onstage. Robert Smith, black-clad, make up smeared and with a slight touch of recession in his unkempt back-combed mane, emerged last and wandered the full length of the stage, the goth King surveying his kingdom, as the band eased into elegiac, icy opener “Plainsong”, it suddenly feeling refreshingly cooler in the crowd! The eerie, stark and languid “Pictures Of You” followed, Smith delivering a fine vocal in his distinctive higher register pleading tones, before thanking the audience with, “Diolch!”
Objectively speaking, The Cure were utterly superb tonight. A real connoisseurs’ set delivered with clear-as-a-bell sound mix and pinpoint precision from a band clearly in top form after an acclaimed IOW Festy headliner set last week, augmented by startling backdrop visuals which, whilst not as retina-scalding as Devo’s last time out, were perfect accompaniment to the mood and vibe weaved by the band. But subjectively…? Well, I’m not a massive Cure fan by any means, loving their early taut, pacey New Wave material but losing them around the goth pop mid-late 80s and phasing in and out thereafter. So, whilst the early set was largely lapped up by the devoted (and rightly so), it seemed to settle into a well-played but mid-paced and monotone vibe for my casual ears, an early “In Your House” (“something we don’t play much,” according to Smith) even sounding like The Bunnymen’s “The Puppet” played at a slower speed!
The lengthy instrumental opening to “The Push”, thereafter featuring Smith’s most impassioned vocal thus far, was a bit livelier, but then the gig broke out good and proper for me with “In Between Days” and a frankly joyful “Just Like Heaven”, which, despite a slight lyric ricket from Smith (“a combination of heat and environment – sometimes I forget I’m the one singing!”) was the first real essential track of the night. “Burn” featured some impressive tribal beats and jungle sounds and a wooden whistle solo from Smith, but “A Forest”, next up, was the set highlight by far, haunting, spooky and delivered with delicious insouciant and underlying menace. The suffocating and claustrophobic “Prayer For Rain” was the penultimate number of the set so I took a loo break, pitching up further right but closer for the lengthy encore.
Said 10 song encore (!) focussed mainly on that 80’s “goth pop” era, so I enjoyed the likes of the rather ironic “Hot Hot Hot” with it’s blaring funky synth hook and the clattering proto indie dance of “The Walk”, whilst totally blanking on the more throwaway “Close To Me” and frankly annoying “Lovecats”. However the pounding Iggy stomp of “Why Can’t I Be You” led into brilliant, yearning closer “Boys Don’t Cry”, Smith thanking us for “coming along and putting up with this day,” taking a lengthy ovation before doubtless heading for a cold shower! As for me, I’d taken a hike in search of water during the encore, feeling a little light-headed in the heat, and with my heel and knee both barking at me thanks to 5 hours straight standing up, I wandered slowly back, meeting my folks at the Blackweir Tavern afterwards and our driver in the same garage – apparently he’d slipped the owner a tenner to stay there! So a flyer out of the city got us home in a shade over 1 hour and 20, despite a couple of roadworks on the way. Thanks Robynne for the lift, which made the day immeasurably easier, and thanks to The Cure for an overall superb set and a fine way to spend my birthday. Maybe next time I’ll book to see them in Antarctica, though, because, as with my other 2 Cure “live” experiences, this one was Hot Hot Hot!


