Friday 15 April 2022

1,219 THE WAR ON DRUGS, Lo Moon, Birmingham Academy, Monday 11th April 2022

 



The first time in over 7 years – November 2014, gig 930, on their “Lost In The Dream” tour, in fact! – that I’ve crossed swords with Americana/alt-rock collective War On Drugs and their idiosyncratic and slightly flakey main-man Adam Granduciel… said rather splendid album was followed up in 2017 with a good-but-not-great one in “A Deeper Understanding”, accompanied by an elevation to much bigger, almost arena-sized venues, so I gave that tour cycle a miss, and subsequently approached last year’s release, “I Don’t Live Here Anymore” with a degree of caution. My mistake. A proper return to form in my eyes and one of my favourite albums of last year, this one, their trademark hazy sun-dappled melody, lyrical references to dreamy memories, recollections and regrets, and occasional krautrock metronomic workouts being given a greater degree of clarity and melancholy, making for an understated yet enticing listen. Also, some excellent, best-of-career vocals from Adam himself; as if Tom Waits and Bob Dylan could actually sing in tune! So I was well up for seeing how this would come across “live”. Shame that a longhaul up to Birmingham was the nearest gig to the ‘don, but hey ho…

 My eldest lad Evan came down to visit for a couple of days, so I picked him up from the station then abandoned him with his younger siblings (bad dad!), heading off at 5 and hoping for street parking near the venue. Clearly I underestimated the draw of this band, as all nearby streets were choc-a-bloc, so I ended up dumping the motor on the top floor of the adjacent Horsefair car park, and wandering down the grassy knoll to join the massive queue. Hooray for the O2 priority lady then, who shuffled me forward into that priority queue, bumping into erstwhile Raze*Rebuild drummer Jamie and his dad there! Got a spot house right near the front, enjoying some rock chat with a pair of fellow solo flyers, a lady from Nottingham and a bloke from Chiseldon, no less! Support, LA’s Lo Moon, squeezed onto the front of the stage at 7.40 – I’d picked up their new album beforehand so was looking forward to them, and opener “Carried Away” set the tone well with a slow burn early verse building to a sleigh bell jingle crescendo, overlaid with some high-pitched, gossamer vocals from Matt Lowell (recalling for me Dean Wareham’s work with Galaxie 500) and some fine intricate fretwork from guitarist Sam Stewart – son of Eurythmics’ Dave and Bananarama’s Siobhan Fahey, no less. The boy’s learned well… “Thanks for coming out early to watch us!” announced the gregarious Matt before my favourite number, “Expectations”, an understated verse line ceding to a soaring, pulsing and almost early U2-esque choral hook! “Raincoats” returned to the previous quiet-loud structure with a widescreen Sigur Ros atmosphere morphing into an angular jagged guitar workout, Matt then quipping “I feel like the Grateful Dead! This [tuning] is taking forever!” The “Groovy Kind Of Love” melody line of a haunting “Dream Never Dies” and the almost Simple Minds guitar flourishes of “Loveless” crowned a varied and impressive vignette from an intriguing and intelligent new band. Fine start!

 


Then suddenly our front spot got very busy… and very hot! The 7-piece War On Drugs joined us after an uncomfortable wait at 5 to 9, Adam shooing off the roadies and greeting us with a, “hello, hello, how’s everybody doing?” and the stately, windswept opener “Old Skin”. Thereafter we were treated to a superbly chosen set of their melting pot of stately, understated Americana balladry, occasional Springsteen-like heartland storytelling and undulating, keyboard powered rollercoaster rides, all played with impressive balance and clarity (a later, unplanned and rather muddied grunge workout through Neil Young’s “Like A Hurricane” notwithstanding). The potent steamhammer of “An Ocean Between The Waves” was preceded by brief details of keyboardist Robbie Bennett’s “wild night” in Birmingham (“jellybeans, 7-11s…!”), “Victim” was a tense, taut change-of-pace with Adam’s vocals veering between strident and conversational, the verse lyrics tumbling out like discarded marbles, and an early “Red Eyes” was possibly my set highlight, a careering thrill-ride with Adam shredding vigorously over an extended denouement. “Arms Like Boulders”, a new entry to the set, was for, “a 7 foot one bloke who’s going to attack us if we don’t play it!”, “Harmonia’s Dream” featured some discordant cheesegrater synth, then after a fragile, hushed and yearning “Rings Around My Father’s Eyes”, we even had a good-natured moshpit for a later, meandering and lugubrious “Under The Pressure”. Well, largely good natured, but there’s always one dickhead…

 


Said dickhead, a large and visibly over-refreshed curly haired chap propped up by his tiny girlfriend, whacked into the back of us – fine, no worries, occupational hazard, not my first rodeo etc. etc. – but I drew the line at him trying to barge past us like an entitled “5 to 3”-er into an already crowded stage front. You can fuck right off pal, where’ve you been for the last hour and a half! A word with the steward in the pit thankfully put paid to his antics, so I was back in the room for the aforementioned squall of “Like A Hurricane” and an almost curfew-busting “Occasional Rain”, Adam (who’d been fulsome in his praise for the engaged crowd throughout) quipping, “it’s £10,000 if we play one second past 11 [so] we’ll play it fast!” and even turning his digital clock around at 10.59!

 So, a splendid but hard-on-the-knees 2 hour set; grabbed a list then endured a difficult journey home… half an hour to get into and out of the car park (some bozo was holding up the only exit for ages because of some card payment problem), then the Quinton Expressway was closed causing an interminable diversion through Stourbridge, then, after ranting it down the M5, another diversion through Cirencester thanks to another road closure saw me home at a red-eyed 10 past 1! Bloody hell! Still, hopefully I’ll look back on this one and remember a couple of fine sets from a couple of superb US alt-rock bands, rather than the difficult journey or the moshpit dickhead…!

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