A dual purpose gig, this; I was due
to meet up with my esteemed gig buddy Howard, whom I met and became fast
friends with on the momentous occasion of my 60th Birthday Gang Of
Four Forum gig (gig 1,393), to catch splendid R.E.M tribute band Stipe last
month in his native Leamington. Unfortunately family commitments on his part precluded
against that, but the man suggested a few other forthcoming gigs he was heading
to, this one included, so I checked out the band in question and ultimately
booked for this. So I get to check out an intriguing new lot in Bristol’s Home
Counties, who on repeated listens to their sophomore 2025 album “Humdrum”
overlay a melting pot of post-punk angular art rock and loose limbed, 80’s New
Order-esque proto indie dance with lyrics reflecting the mundanity of
directionless young adulthood in this fucked up world, and I also get to meet
up with my friend. Sounds like a win-win…!
So I hit the road mid-afternoon for a sunny drive up the M40, picking Howard up then driving on to Kings Heath, street parking a short walk from the venue itself. Had a catch up with the man over an absolutely splendid Chicken Tikka Ceylon in Nauka 42, before we wandered around to this evocative and rambling old corner ale house venue, meeting up on the street benches outside with Howard’s nephew Jason, who works as a performance coach for the British American Football Association! Much chat about American sports subsequently ensued, before we wandered in and upstairs to the venue at 8 p.m., just as openers Fuzz Council were kicking into their set. Initially plying an echoey and hard-hitting mix of stomping glam and 60’s psych rock, they then upped the tempo with some mid-set ragged garage indie/punk, including a fine hooky “Subscribe”. A later “Genocide Smile” was my set highlight, recalling Bauhaus’ version of “Third Uncle” with its’ dark, pounding metronomics, and the thrashy punk closer “Talk It Out” even reminded these old ears of The Dickies! Overall, a decent if embryonic opening set…
Took a wander forward in this dark, dingy and evocative upstairs room (which for me resembled Bristol Louisiana’s upstairs hotbox in size, orientation and temperature!), pitching up a couple of rows back from the front, house right, as the young 6-piece Home Counties took the stage to an echoey backing track. Ebullient co-vocalist Will Harrison immediately led the charge into new album opener “Take You Back”, its’ clattering dance beat overlaid by dual call-and-response vocals from Harrison and fellow co-singer Lois Kelly. Oldie “Bethnal Green” followed, a more upbeat and angular post-punk track, featuring some toy organ embellishment and an impassioned vocal from the wide-eyed Harrison, detailing the humdrum (sic) nature of a night out in Bethnal, and fellow first album track “Exactly How It Seems” kept up a ferocious initial pace with an itchy, insistent 80’s funk vibe recalling the likes of Hue and Cry for me!
This was a splendid performance
from this young and promising band, showcasing all aspects of their musical oeuvre,
from the herky jerky esoteric Gang Of Four new wave-isms of earlier tracks such
as “Dad Bod”, to the much looser-limbed and dancey new material such as an
early title track “Humdrum”, the squashy synth intro subsumed by a frantic cowbell
dance beat and a memorable combative choral hook from Kelly. And the enthusiasm
with which this set was delivered was simply infectious, the dual vocalists
regularly jumping in time with the front row dancers, and even getting this old
cynic to move along with the rhythm! “Meet Me In The Flat Roof”, a critique on
gentrification, was a funky mid-set fave with a staccato one-note synth riff; “You
Break It, You Bought It” was a tinny and wiry chant-along; and an acerbic and propulsive
oldie in “Back To the 70s” rounded off a hectic and fun set, the band briefly
diving offstage before returning with a taut yet bubbling, New FADS/ Paris
Angels-esque encore of “Uptight”.
Lois kindly sorted me with a list before chats with the merch-stand bound band, particularly a lengthy chat about influences, the West Country and curry (!) with gregarious bassist/ keyboardist Bill. Farewell to Jason before Howard and I hit the road, then I dropped the man off before an inky but unencumbered Fosse Way dash got me home just after midnight, way earlier than feared. So, a great catch up with a good friend in Howard, a splendid gent whom I’ve only met twice but already feel like I’ve known for years. And a feisty, frantic and fun gig from a very promising lot in Home Counties; I’m not normally a big “indie dance” person but I couldn’t help but be converted by their tunes, hooks and enthusiasm. Great work folks!




