The capacity crowd seems under capacity to me, theres more space than usual at the back of the hall, although its a bit of a crush at the barrier in front of the band. The lights dim and bulbs flash inside reflectors like those one bar electric fires but white instead of orange as the band announce their arrival to a cheer and break into So Here We Are and the crowd are up for it, in the main though there are a lot of fans stood stock still amongst those enthusiastically spasm about. Clearly most of them have the debut album Silent Alarm as they accompany frontman Kele Okereke on Positive Tension and the fantastic Banquet.
Now what is it with the university kids of today but they cant dance! They just errr bounce and wiggle a bit and the two in front of us amuse us with puppet dancing as though connected to strings hanging from the extra speaker stacks wired in for tonights performance hanging above us. These certainly add to the sound which is great quality tonight you can hear Keles distinctive vocal style, every fill and pattern of Matt Tongs drumming, stripped to the waist and hes my new favourite drummer with frenetic drum patterns which are rich and adrenaline fuelled.
Kele informs us hes never been to this town before, town? Well I know Exeters small but were technically a city and he seems less boisterous than usual tonight. Russell Lissack on guitar gets to work with tight riffs and effects pedals and bassist Gordon Moakes begins to climb about the stage as the light screen behind them pulses blue light and later a face and space invaders to Blue Light, The Marshals Are Dead, She's Hearing Voices, Luno and the fragile emotionally tinged, This Modern Love. This indie/rock crossover stuff is great, it has depth and though their performance has a little less passion, Kele isnt grinning like crazy like he was at Glastonbury, they are accomplished musicians who perform breathless, edgy and mature rock an upbeat Radiohead. Their abilities are nothing short of masterful.
Its either the fact that their music is good not only to dance to but also to listen to or that the crowd are losing interest but things slow down a little after Like Eating Glass and by Little Thoughts Im starting to question why venues like this dont serve alcohol through gigs anymore. Everytime I come here the crowd is flat, for some artists I understand it but not tonight. The crowd started off so well, all energy and bounce but even the rousing classic of Helicopter which brings the lights up, doesnt quite bring the crowd around me back to life and the band applaud a quiet audience.
Now maybe its me getting old, but I remember when crowds would be furious, sweaty and wild and fuelled on beer, for this kind of music deserves celebration, despite it being cerebral enough to have the crowd transfixed. Maybe crowds at other venues on their tour are more abandoned but here Exeters labelled sweater wearing four fifths of the crowd havent even removed their expensive outer garments and this despite it being a much younger audience than usually graces this venue. Bearing in mind it sold out long before Bloc Partys latest chart topping single. I dont know whether the band notice, cos its still frenetic for the tightly knit throng in front of them but behind that its incredibly subdued between the heady applause.
This reviewer finds it hard not to succumb to the sobriety and is trying to fight the tide of indifference of those happily chatting once breakneck Two More Years has finally breached the apathy and livened everyone up, clearly it being in the charts has helped. Certainly the final trio of songs Price Of Gas, Tulips and The Pioneers should have everyone revelling in the glorious Bloc Party and their debut album of classics but instead the lights come up and we all just amble out. Me, Im far too sober for my own good.
Im amazed to see the pirates are out in force, and for the first time in years, Northern accents bark out the cheap prices for knock off T-shirts and posters for sale outside the venue. A clear sign that Bloc Party are the biggest thing to grace our town for sometime, as usually these merchants dont find it economically viable to peddle their wares this far into the South West. The crowd are quiet and not full of the usual exuberance you used to find after gigs.
The Bloc may have come to Exeter but we didnt give them a Party atmosphere, I blame the lack of booze I mean how good is a party with no alcohol? I really dont understand why they dont allow alcohol into the arena and close the bar the moment the band takes to the stage. Mind you it seems that students today are a different breed to the fuel guzzling partygoers of a decade ago. Maybe their student loans mean they cant afford it. Although I suspect its a case of Dinner Party going down better here tonight.
Give them their due though at least they applauded heartily and gave acknowledgement to a band that is on top form at the moment and perhaps standing stock still and gazing blankly at the stage is how audiences have always been and Ive been at the front for too long to have noticed. But for me Bloc Party have again been terrific, I wonder if the new PA at the venue is theirs as it certainly improved the sound. Not bad for a band with only a debut album under their belt, theyve clearly produced a greatest hits album first, itll be interesting to see whether they can sustain it for the next album. Im kind of glad my hairdresser missed them, hell catch them later on tour with a better crowd hopefully.
Set list:
So Here We Are
Positive Tension
Banquet.
Blue Light
She's Hearing Voices
The Marshals Are Dead
Lumo
This Modern Love
Like Eating Glass
Little Thoughts
Helicopter
encore
Two More Years
Price Of Gas
Tulips
The Pioneers
FUTURE GIGS
sorry, we currently have no gigs listed for this act.