1,450 – Supp. BOWLING FOR SOUP, FRANK TURNER AND THE SLEEPING SOULS, Cardiff Castle, Saturday 4th July 2026, driving with Logan
1,451
– AHF headlining with support DON’T PANIC, Birmingham O2 Institute, Tuesday 7th
July 2026, driving on my own
1.452
– AHF headlining with support DON’T PANIC, London Islington Academy, Thursday 9th
July 2026, driving with Tim Owen
A rare (and last-minute)
triple-header but no surprise really, given the hosts…As stated above, “We’re
Fucking Back!” was the self-explanatory strapline for the breathtaking news
that Boston’s own powerpop ruffians (and hosts of my favourite ever
Reading Festy set in their devastating 2001 tent slot, gig 526) American Hi-Fi
were breaking a 12 year hiatus and muddying the shores of the UK once again.
Initially they were added as openers for the already mega Bowling For Soup/
Frank Turner “Bowl My Bones” double-header Summer open-air tour, which was
awkward news – Rach and Logan had booked for the Cardiff Castle leg, but I’d
opted out to be on daughter taxi duty that day. However, just as I was
exploring the possibility of going to another of the BFS/FT shows, more
agreeable news of 3 Hi-Fi solo headlining shows broke, so I quickly jumped on
the pre-sales for both Birmingham and London (I know, I know, I’m retired on less
money, so I’m trying to go to fewer gigs and no duplicates, but it’s the Hi-Fi,
right?). However, two became three on the morning of the Cardiff gig, as Rach,
who’d taken Jami to theatre shows in Oxford and Bristol the 2 nights before,
decided she was too tired to complete a triple-header of her own, so,
supportive husband that I am, I graciously offered to take Logan to Cardiff for
a pretty much nailed-on dream line-up for my 19 year old son. And, 3 in 3 for
me for the Hi-Fi? You bet!
So, Chapter 1 was said jaunt to Cardiff; noting (alleged) global pop megastar Pitbull was playing Blackweir Fields, North of the Castle (and scene of my birthday Cure gig, gig 1,448), we avoided that area altogether, parking in a pre-booked spot opposite the CIA at 3, South East of the city centre, following a quick run to the ‘diff and crawl to the car park! Met local friend Mel, Swindon FT fan Jo plus other folks at the Queen’s Vault for a sunny pint, chat and pisstake of the Pitbull fans, uniformly dressed in white shirt, black ties and bald skullcaps! Eventually hit the North Entrance, queueing up just before 5 pm doors then grabbing a barrier spot in this North facing enclosed open-air venue (c.10K capacity, so some way short of Blackweir!) passing the time chatting to punters as gig MC Jon Mahon did pop-punk pop quizzes of the front rows!
Eventually our MC did his job and took to the stage, revving up the crowd and inviting American Hi-Fi onstage at 6.30. Observant guitarist and old Boston buddy Jamie Arentzen noticed Logan and myself straight away, and, following the usual, “whats up! We’re American Hi-Fi, we’re a rock’n’roll band from Boston Massachusetts,” intro and lead into the ringing riff of titanic traditional opener “Surround”, so did vocalist Stacy, greeting us midway through the first verse with a, “hey man!” We of course went for it from note one, dancing and singing along to every word (props to Logan here, who’d only initially heard some of the material on the drive down!), and following the buoyant yet dismissive snark of “The Breakup Song”, Stacy commented on our shirts with, “Pixies, Modern Lovers, you guys are representing down there!”
Needless to say, American Hi-Fi were utterly brilliant, delivering a titanic, rampaging and frankly incendiary half hour of pure escapist anthemic singalong rock’n’roll of the highest order which simply hurtled by, and this despite being only ½ of the usual line-up, with experienced hands in drummer Neal Daniels and former Bosstones man Lawrence Katz filling in seamlessly for Messrs. Nolan and Parsons. “The one slow dance of the night,” the swayalong anthem “Another Perfect Day” drew an exceptional Bowie-esque middle 8 riff from Jamie; the cut-and-paste new wave homage “Art Of Losing” was hurtling and breathtaking, seeing me hold my phone (emblazoned with a vintage AFH “Hello I Am A Loser” sticker) aloft; and, following a turn from BFS drummer Gary Wiseman on “The Geeks Get The Girls”, Stacy recalled their last UK tour (in 2005 with BFS, gig 683), then thanked all and sundry before challenging us to sing along to closer “Flavor Of The Weak”, the band delivering a soaring and quite brilliant version of their classic to close out the set, Jamie unhooking a list for me at its’ close. Result!
“Right, that’s it, I’m going home
now!” was my tongue-in-cheek comment to all and sundry as we headed out,
eventually settling halfway back, house left for Frank Turner And The Sleeping
Souls’ 7.20 entrance, Logan leaving me for the moshpit at this point. Frank’s opener
“I Still Believe” immediately got the faithful singing along, propping up his
own slightly strained vocals, before he challenged us to, “get this party
moving” with the frantic, furious hoedown of “Try This At Home”, then welcoming
us to “show 3,164!” and initiating the first of several circle pits for the
amped up, punked up “Girl From The Record Shop”, teasing the faithful with, “they
made big ones in Scotland, England… even [last night in] North Wales!”
At this point I noticed the Hi-Fi wandering past on the cobbled walkway so I doorstepped Jamie for a hug, chat and catch-up on our family situation, to a sympathetic response from my old Boston friend. Back in at the end of “No Thank You For The Music”, Frank initiating a “wall of hugs” in the mosh, before a plaintive and rather lovely set highlight “Wessex Boy”. In fact, for all Frank’s usual punk rock shenanigans, requests to park our cool and jump along (“if you bought a ticket for me and BFS, the cool train left the station a long time ago!”) and general messages of inclusiveness and positivity, for me he was most effective tonight with the volume turned down; “Wessex Boy” was followed by an equally lovely solo “Way I Tend To Be” and a superb singalong to “Ballad Of Me And My Friends”, while a later, moody and brooding “Polaroid Picture”, particularly the acapella outro, ran “Wessex Boy” close for my set highlight tonight.
“I know you’ve come to see… me and only me (!), but I bumped into 3 guys from Dallas [earlier today]…” Frank deadpanned before introducing BFS vocalist Jaret Reddick onstage to sing the final verse of “Prufrock”, Jaret’s reedier tones suffering badly in comparison to Frank’s authoritative roar (even given his strained tones!); then a punk rock double of “Get Better” and “Four Simple Words”, Frank crowdsurfing early doors then leading ballet twirls in the slower mid-section (!), rounded off a ragged yet typically excellent Frank Festy set, my son finally emerging elated from the pit. We then sought a seating spot to rest my barking heel, as dusk wrapped a hazy shroud around the arena (some early rain spots thankfully coming to naught), but then took a spot at the back for Bowling For Soup’s entry at 9.05 to a typically cartoonish film backdrop. “This isn’t the first, but it is the most badass castle we’ve played at!” announced Jaret before leading the now-3 piece Soup into “Almost”, then playing a cheesy yet crowd-pleasing medley before a more upbeat “High School Never Ends” and a splendid early “Ohio” bringing back memories for Logan (see gig 974!), Jaret also gaining favour with the Welsh crowd with a subsequent “oggy oggy oggy” chant.
Frankly (sic) however, following the pure rock brilliance of The Hi-Fi and Frank, Bowling For Soup were fun but less substantial fayre, the cartoon antics wearing a little thin on me (although delighting much of the young and female contingent in the crowd, particularly the girls behind Logan and myself) and the copious between-song banter feeling a little forced, lacking the previous scatological spontaneity between Jaret and the now-retired and much-missed big Chris Burney. Bringing a dragon onstage during “Punk Rock 101” was a nice touch for the locals, but after a straight cover of “Stacy’s Mom” I suggested to Logan I was ready to go anytime thereafter. He actually felt the same (suggesting BFS were a band he’d loved as a kid but had now grown out of somewhat), so we headed off about 10 to 10, back to the car for 10 and home just after 11.30 after a swift run, late kebab tea in tow. Overall, though, a very successful Chapter 1!
Chapter 2 was a trip up to Birmingham
for the first Hi-Fi UK headlining show since that 100 Club gig in May 2014 (gig
915). I’d booked VIP tickets for this one and a call to the venue suggested that
started at 6.15; nonetheless I set off mid-afternoon in case it was earlier.
Good thing too, as stationary traffic around the new Birdlip turned me into a
screaming stressed mess in the car and added nearly an hour (!) to my journey;
nevertheless I parked up in a pre-booked space around the corner at 5.30 and
joined the queue on the baking hot pavement outside. The VIP meet was at 6.30,
and amazingly it was just 2 of us, myself and a chap named Bruno, who’d flown
over from Paris for the gig – respect! There was a third VIP booked, apparently;
they just didn’t show! So we got plenty of face time with the band, and I got
to catch up again with Stacy and Jamie, meet Lawrence and Neal, show them all vintage
pix from our first Hi-Fi gig back in 2000 (gig 446!) and share the story of our
previous meeting with Lawrence (before the Bleu Boston gig in 2001, gig 511!). Pix,
free teeshirts and guaranteed setlists too -result! Eventually rounded things
up with the band and hit the compact and bijou 600 capacity venue, grabbing
barrier house right, eventually being joined by our queue friends plus Gary, a
Don’t Panic fan from Monmouth and his family, for pre-gig chat.
Don’t Panic came on at 8 so I let Gary’s kids borrow my barrier spot; this Pennsylvania 4-piece kicked into opener “Conscience” which initially gave me Jimmy Eat World “Sweetness” vibes, “Lifetime Away” was jumpier and more trad pop-punk, and the harder-edged, punkier “Long Way” was preceded by vocalist Ted Felicetti giving props to tonight’s headliners with, “I first saw [AHF] in 2002, there was another ban, Rival Schools, playing [as well]!” Overall a slightly generic but upbeat and tuneful guitar-propelled opening set, with the snaking riffery and singalong hook of closer “Fall Of 99” a highlight.
A quick panic loo trip still saw me back at my spot, as time ticked on and the familiar figure of Saturday’s MC Joe Mahon (a Brummie native, apparently), gave a hyped-up intro to the Hi-Fi by challenging the crowd to, “bring that Ozzy energy!”. The boys then bounded onstage, hooking up and Stacy giving the usual welcome, but opener “Surround” however initially sounded a little understated, the bass low in the mix and Stacy’s higher register vocals a little echoey. However the boys attacked the track, particularly the speeded up outro, with their usual gusto and chutzpah, and it all sounded sorted in short order. Hooray!
Sound hiccup dispensed with,
American Hi-Fi proceeded to tear the O2 Institute a new one, delivering a
trademark performance replete with kinetic energy, dynamism and verve, feeding
off the energy of us front-row devotees who were rocking out from word one,
fist-pumping the air to the big hooky choruses, and generally immersing
ourselves in one of the best “live” rock’n’roll bands its’ been my pleasure to
see. Twelve years away? P’fah! “You guys – holy shit!” Stacy exclaimed after
the descending hook of “Scar”, clearly feeling it too, before sipping on his
drink with, “I’ve switched from Coors Light to Sancerre!” A rampaging “Bigger
Mood” preceded Stacy remarking, “fun fact – that riff was the first thing I
wrote for this band!”; the brilliantly slow-burn and anthemic “Another Perfect
Day”, probably my set highlight, preceded a surprisingly haunting and affecting
“Acetate”, and “Geeks” saw Stacy again thank the crowd for coming back after 25
years; “and we’re planning on coming back next year!” We’ll hold you to that,
dude…!
Set closer “Heavy” saw some almost heavy hair metal riffing, Stacy requisitioning one of Neal’s drumsticks for said purpose (!), then a breathless and swift 1 hr 10 performance closed out with encore “Flavor Of The Weak”, Stacy holding his guitar aloft in salute. Bruno and I were given our promised set-lists and I took a quick loo break, emerging to a surprisingly deserted venue! Into the lobby which was tumbleweed quiet as well – honestly I’ve never seen a venue that size clear that fast without a fire alarm activation! So I got some fresh air, found the backstage load-in and decided to wait, persistence being rewarded with a post-gig chat with the boys. Back to the car at 11.20 for a confusing run out of Digbeth and a blast down the M5 listening to World Cup footy, Birdlip happily clearer for a 1 a.m. arrival home!
So to Chapter 3; Tim had car logistics issues so I picked him up at 3.30, parking at Hayes and Harlington for the Lizzie line in. I’d mentioned to Tim that this was the quicker route, so of course TFL proceeded to prove me wrong, power failure on the line adding ½ hour to the journey. Bah! Still, in the O2 priority queue at ¼ to 7 and quickly in, grabbing a barrier spot house left and chatting to fellow early comers, including a bloke who’d flown over from Italy for this gig and had actually flown over to Madrid in 2024 to see The Gigolo Aunts (I did Barcelona of course, gig 1,348!)! Don’t Panic, again on promptly at 8, were again a decent support without being mind-blowingly original; “Long Way” was again a punky early highlight, “It’s Over” more heartfelt and emotive on second listen, and a later “Sound Engineer” gave me heartland emo Menzingers vibes. I’m damning them with faint praise, really… I’ve seen a whole lot worse supports!
Some splendid PA tracks (Fanclub, Redd Kross – surely the Hi-Fi’s playlist) took us to 9, the sinister tones of Sonic Youth’s “Death Valley 69” welcoming the band onstage. No sound issues this time; it sounded superb straight from the off, “Surround” hard and heavy and “Scar” even better, rambunctious and rocking. “It’s been far too long!” announced Stacy, Fantasy Band Camp perma-grin slapped as ever clear across his features, already promising to return next year with, “more shows and new music!” This led into probably the best performance of the 3, certainly the loudest and most dynamic, much of that honestly thanks to the temporary battery of the rock solid Lawrence and strong-armed, hard hitting Neal, providing the solid base for the Hi-Fi’s irresistibly catchy singalong tuneage. Nary a pause for breath either, as the band whipped through the set with scarily impressive commitment. “Another Perfect Day”’s anthemic ringing guitar riff again shone; similarly virtuoso fretwork from Jamie powered an impressive “I’m A Fool”; and following a heartfelt speech from Stacy about the UK being, “the first place that really “got” us,” “Art Of Losing” probably won the day for me, the deluge of terrace-chant hooks in the chorus ringing around the venue.
“Happy” rounded off the set again, before
encore “Flavor Of The Weak” unsurprisingly saw the biggest singalong of the
night, a fitting way to end another incendiary show. Lawrence unhooked a list
for me – result! – and we mooched around, also chatting to a watching Tim
Wheeler of Ash. Nice! Chats with the Hi Fi boys too after they emerged elated
and thankful, ultimately tearing ourselves away with Stacy’s kind “blessings to
the family” final words ringing in my ears. An easier exit out of London then saw
me home at 1 am after dropping Tim off. Aching for a couple of days afterwards
but worth it, for an incredible triple-header in the presence of one of the consistently
greatest, most incendiary and immersive “live” bands I’ve ever seen. Top Live
Band of 2026? It’s no contest, it’s American Hi-Fi!




