Skip to main content

tom-hickman
12th June 2012

Live: New Sounds of the North @ Quay House

This evening just did not work. From start to finish, mistakes littered the show’s entirety.
Categories:
TLDR

New Sounds of the North
Quay House
May 18th
1 and a half stars

Before anything else, let this be heard first: Now Wave are doing a brilliant job on the Manchester music scene, introducing great new acts, and providing the baying public – students and music lovers alike – with ample opportunity to unearth some of the hottest musical talent. They rarely put on a bad band. I love them. There I’ve said it. But now I’ve said it, I must say that this evening they got it all wrong.

On paper, the whole night had real potential; PINS had been growing in popularity in recent months and receiving a lot of hype, No Ceremony were bringing their ethereal first-time show to Manchester, and the city’s own Money were sure to impress.

It promised to be a real showcase of the ‘New Sounds of the North’. To top it off, there was the mystery and potential brilliance of a disused office block as the venue. The only downside was surely going to be the sheer volume of peaked-cap wearing morons cluttering up the place. That was the only downside, until the music started.

Sound quality was poor throughout, as sets were littered with feedback and sound errors; whilst if you were anywhere further back than the first ten rows, you were more likely to hear the most minute details of some of the bollocks being spouted from the mouths of the majority of guests, than any of the music. PINS were chosen to play at the most illogically unsociable time of 6:15, whereas Money’s performance suggested an ironical name choice from the band, as I fear that is precisely what this quartet will not be making, if their haphazard, offensive performances continue in the same vein. To top it all off, the elongated wait between No Ceremony and Money was delightfully accompanied by the ten-minute cry of the fire alarm, as only a hoodie draped over the wailing siren served to partially silence the din.

The only saving grace was the headline act. Post fire alarm, Alt-J provided the quality-starved customers with a watertight set crammed with energy and well-sculpted falsetto harmonies. Deciding to forgo the encore for a full-blooded lurch into ‘Fitzpleasure’, Quay House was shaken to its foundations, as the beautiful vocal lines flowed over smoothly disjointed guitar and keyboard shapes to bring the masses together in unified realisation that something listenable still does actually exist.

As I said, this isn’t an attack on Now Wave, or any of the bands playing (apart from Money, that is). This evening just did not work. From start to finish, mistakes littered the show’s entirety. Alt-J were good though.

Tom Hickman

Tom Hickman

Music Editor.

More Coverage

Sloucho’s Debut Album, ‘NPC’: Bouncy, wobbly, and dreamy

Sloucho’s debut album transforms you into an NPC as he leads you through an adventure of stunning styles and sonics – a breaking of boundaries the UK electronic scene needed

Olivia Dean live in Manchester: A joyful “warm hug” in performance

Performing songs from her debut album and beyond, Olivia Dean wowed Manchester’s Saturday-night crowd with a mix of joyful performance and stunning vocals

Post-Punk: Why it needs to die, and what’s next

Having dominated the focus of alternative radio for several years, Post-Punk has reached peak saturation and must make way for something new

Tate McRae live in Manchester: A pop megastar in the making

At just 20 years old, pop sensation Tate McRae delivers an incredible live performance in Manchester for her THINK LATER world tour