The Charlatans / Rock City / Nottingham
For fans of the 90’s indie era, tonight was a show not to miss, as The Charlatans hit town on their 30th Anniversary Best of Tour.
A big crowd at Rock City were in the house as Martin Carr and What Future took the stage. You may remember Martin from the Boo Radleys. As you’d expect from someone with such a rich history of songwriting, the craftmanship on display tonight was outstanding throughout. Highlights of the half hour set were Mainstream and the excellent The Santa Fe Skyway. Overall a great opening for the night.
Set List
Fingertip Saint
The Santa Fe Skyway
Damocles
Mainstream
Gold Lift
3 Studies of the Male Back
Lazarus
The stage set, Tim Burgess took to the stage to huge cheers from the large crowd. With bleached blonde hair, and green sweatshirt it was hard to remember so many years had passed since The Charlatans first hit the scene, although the smartphone in hand, filming as he sang is more modern.
Interestingly after the show, many fans speculated the green sweatshirt was a homage to Brian Clough, on the day that Forest took on Sheffield United in the Play Offs. So much so that Tim took to Twitter to say "Some people thought my sweatshirt was a nod to Cloughie at our Nottingham gig. Wasn’t intentional but let’s call it a subconscious one."
With thirteen studio albums under their belts and twenty-two top forty singles, they have an impressive body of work from which to select tonight's set.
The songs are selected from across their thirty year career. Early tracks, such as The Only One I Know and Then, both from their debut album “Some Friendly” (1990), possess the same basic strands of DNA in them as more recent material such as the excellent Different Days that take their place mid-set.
The crowd were on the whole more mature, but it was great to see some younger, new fans along for the ride too, and they were loving it, every song greeted with cheers and dancing.
The set flows well, and changes throughout, from the mighty One To Another, with it’s huge riffs still sounding massive all these years later, to the elegant woozy feel A Man Needs To Be Told (with great drum and bass ending). There’s a rockier edge to others, such as I Never Want An Easy Life, which is then outdone by North Country Boy, before the main set culminates in a blizzard of noise in one of my favourite tracks, How High.
The encore starts with the hugely underrated Blackened Blue Eyes, driven by its house piano riff, which is an excellent track, followed by Trouble Understanding which is less well known but fits the overall feel of the set. Finally, we know the night is over as perennial set closer Sproston Green rings out. This one wasn’t that commercially successful but has finished off pretty much every show . Although predictable, it’s kind of a nice tradition now, and somehow it wouldn’t feel right now if they ended on anything else.
A really enjoyable set. Tim Burgess rolling back the years and still looking good for it.
Set List
Forever
Weirdo
Can’t Get Out of Bed
Then
So Oh
You’re So Pretty
Sleepy Little Sunshine Boy
Just When
One to Another
Different Days
Ian Rankin spoken word
Plastic
I Never Want an Easy Life
A Man Needs to be Told
Blind Stagger
The Only One I Know
North Country Boy
How High
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Blackened Blue Eyes
Trouble Understanding
Sproston Green