Mostly Autumn - Lincoln Drill Hall, 7th June 2008
Monday, June 9th, 2008Fifth gig of the tour I’ve attended, and another new venue for me, the Drill Hall in Lincoln. It’s a old Victorian building which has been very extensively refurbished a couple of years ago; standing down the front, and tiered seating down them back.
This gig marked the welcome return of Jon Spence on the mixing desk, and it showed; this was probably the best sound mix I’ve heard so far on this tour; despite being directly in front of Bryan Josh, his guitar didn’t drown out the rest of the band, Anne-Marie Helder’s flute and Livvy Sparnenn’s backing vocals were noticeably more prominent in the mix, which is a good thing.
With the tour nearing the end, the lineup has well and truly gelled now; new drummer Henry Bourne is possibly the best man behind the drums they’ve had while I’ve been following them, and Anne-Marie has really fitted in well on multiple instuments; seeing her really going for it on the tambourine during ‘Never the Rainbow’ is proof she’s a very different personality than Angie Gordon. And as for Liam Davidson and Iain Jennings, it’s great to see both of them back. Iain’s Hammond organ pyrotechnics on ‘Never the Rainbow’ reminded us of what was missing last year. And Heather Findlay, now six months pregnant, just gets better and better on lead vocals.
The two-hour setlist is the same as the last few shows, with four songs from the new album “Glass Shadows”, and also drawing heavily from “Passengers”. Of the new songs, ‘Unoriginal Sin’ is turning into a incredibly powerful live number, Heather channelling all that anger and bitterness from the middle of last year, and is made all the stronger by mixing Anne Marie’s and Livvy’s harmony vocals much higher; very much the high spot of the first half of the set. ‘Tearing at the Faerytale’ is equally powerful and emotional live. And ‘Flowers For Guns’ has just got to be a single.
The oldies were equally good; I’ve never heard them play a bad version of ‘Evergreen’ and tonight’s was no exception; ‘Carpe Diem’, one of those songs that relies heavily on the sound man getting the balance between Bryan’s guitar and the vocals right, was magnificent, and ‘Heroes Never Die’ is finally making the hairs on back of my neck stand up again; Anne-Marie may have struggled with that flute part on the intro earlier on the tour, but tonight she nailed it.
Just two dates left on this tour now; at Leamington Spa on Thursday 12th, and Stocksbridge the following night. Catch them if you can, they’re worth it. After a couple of festival dates, the band take an extended break while their lead singer is on maternity leave.