| Fear of Music (photo: Ged Camera) |
By the time the venue has discharged the listeners into Chorlton in the early hours of Sunday morning, we had been treated to some of the showcase of talent that’s bubbling away around Manchester. A few of us also learnt a new dance, the ‘Dosie Doe’ (cheers Zoe), and continued the night with a few more ‘afters’ (cheers Danny). When the fuzz clears and memories flash back, stand out images will be a storming set by Fear of Music closing Friday night’s instalment, and the attention grabbing performance by the Polytechnics on Saturday. Prior to stepping on stage and eschewing the debauched traditional image of the rock'n'roll lifestyle, the Fear of Music frontman Joe Rose is to be found sitting next to the stage reading a book. The band are in a relaxed mood, preparing for the maelstrom they will shortly produce.
| Fear of Music (photo: Ged Camera) |
As the crowd immediately start to move towards the stage to view this hotly-tipped young band they are halted in their stride by an unnamed young woman who proceeds to claim the floor space and commence to carry out a series of balletic moves and gestures, or as someone commented, she appears to be going through her Kate Bush phase. Some of the bands seem uncertain of how to deal with these goings on, but for Rose, he is thriving on the unintended visual complement of the band’s aural delivery. So much so, in fact, that if she wants to appear in one of their videos, just let them know. Playing a set that draws heavily their eponymous titled mini album, FoM have a rawness and intensity that appears at odds with their off stage behaviour.
| Polytechnic (photo: Ged Camera) |
On the Saturday night, hemmed in the middle of the playing order, the Polytechnics quietly take to the stage then capture the attention of the by now boisterous punters with an ecstatically received set. Their initially abrasive sound gets the ‘who do they remind me of" game going. Is the voice reminiscent of Neil Peart from Rush or Muse? Eventually, everyone just settles for enjoying the music for its own sake. Genuine bemusement at the rapturous applause they receive crosses the band members’ faces as they depart the stage, and cries for "More" are met with the only encore of the event.
To focus on only two bands is perhaps unfair on the other, excellent acts on show, but it's nice to know that the quality control at Blowout is still pretty high. |