Musically, Sunday starts slowly, but then perhaps Sundays
always should. Wallflower are a sonically muscular emoid bunch, let down by some
kidney-rippingly bad vocals; Fox Chapel
make pleasant enough pop, that might have forgettably inaugurated some T4
all-dayer a few years ago; Safe To Swim
are rhythmically very strong, all rubbery goth indie that closely resembles
Placebo, which is fine so long as you don’t mind things that sound like
Placebo. To stave off boredom we invent
the game Gaffer Tape Vs. Jaffa Cake, the rules to which we sadly can’t tell you
until you get a special tattoo and give us your house.
So, it’s back to the reliable Gorwelion Horizons stage,
who keep delivering strong acts on Saturday, although they seem to have cheated
and sneaked a few non-Welsh musicians in, such as London-based Ugandan Haula. She has an outstanding
contemporary soul voice and a commanding but not over-egged stage presence,
which makes her set a pleasure.
Musically she leans on R ‘n’ B, both in its contemporary sense, and the
original coinage: there’s a tasty moment when the band drop into a Chickenshack
type blues glide that really suits her delivery. Sometimes the backing gets sterile and
sessiony, and the lyrics tend towards the platitudinous, but it’s a strong
showing all the same. Closing song “Freedom”
gets a glorious main stage singalong reaction from the crowd (apparently she
has a following in Wantage, somewhat oddly).
According to our notebook we listen to Decovo at this point, but it clearly
makes no impact on us. Allusondrugs, however, are a different
proposition. Their messy potage of
Mudhoney riffs, twitchy Biffy Clyro vocals, windswept guitar lines and
half-inched Blur tunes is fun, but we love the fact that at any one point one
of them is going off on a freakout, but at no point all of them are. They’re simply intriguing. “I like herpes more than I like Irn Bru”,
they announce unexpectedly, which is a thousand times more worth saying than,
“Truck fest, how ya doing?”, you have to admit.
Walking past the Veterans stage (no Virgins left after
the first day, which is how all good festivals should be), we intend to skip The Shapes, but are drawn in by the
magnetic power of their classic pop, which is grown up without being washed
out. We then go and see The Magic Gang just in case they sound
like The Magic Band, which is the sort of logic you end up with having decided
to skip lunch due to queues and fall back on beer. They don’t.
In fact, they sound like The Housemartins, Weezer and very, very
well-behaved young men. We rather enjoy
it, but they’re hardly kicking out the jams; in fact, they’d probably be
considered limp by the WI who made the jams.
Veterans Flowers
Of Hell endear themselves to us immediately by being notably relaxed and
sounding like The Velvet Underground with extra fiddle and trumpet, and then
they prove us right by playing a really great cover of “Heroin” with extra
fiddle and trumpet. And then they honour
Czech dissident freaks Plastic People Of The Universe, which should happen more
often. And, all this whilst the engineer
has left a vintage soul CD playing on the PA throughout. They probably thought it was messages from
the ether.
Yet again Gorwelion comes up trumps, with
ultra-super-mega-perky indie pop outfit Seazoo,
who are blessed with an infections sense of fun, a knowledge of how catchy
tunes work, relentlessly bouncy basslines, and a synth made out of a doll’s
head that goes whoodly-wheep in a seemingly random fashion. They do a song
which sounds like Free’s “Alright Now” played by excited Care Bears. They are
superb. Oxford promoters Swiss Concrete
should be brought back for one night, just to book this colour-saturated joy of
a band, where they could raise many a flagon of speed-laced Tizer; hell, play
them loud enough, they could raise the spectre of John Peel, his Ooberman
T-shirt barely creased by the afterlife.
After this food beckons.
Having tried to support the ethical vegetarian hippy stall, we get
frustrated by their inability to actually have any food (“You could come back
in about an hour”), so we visit the Dalicious stall, which we work out is named
after the fact that it sells some rather tasty lentil dal, and not because it
sells floppy pastrami clocks or lobster and telephone stew (note to self: set
up business to sell floppy pastrami clocks or lobster and telephone stew).
Hoping to strike gold twice, we return to Gorwelion for Violet Skies. She shares some ground with Haula, not least
an impressive larynx, but her electronic torch songs are just too studio-smooth
and her onstage drama the stuff of Eurovision heats. If she stopped trying so desperately to
affect, she could be someone to watch, though.
It’s funny to think of Alphabet Backwards being classed as Veterans, because they still
act like naughty kids, leaping around the stage and trying to get people to
wind up the security guy. This is pop,
not as youthful rebellion, but as childish fun, like The Red Hand Gang getting
hopped up on tartrazine. All this, and
their playing is inch perfect too, never missing the opportunity for maximum
bounciness. The keyboards are a wee bit
too quiet, but this is balanced by Steph’s flowing Sandie Shaw dress. They are ten times more fun than Summer Camp, whom we’d just watched
briefly, not to mention summerier and camper.
“Who likes Saint Raymond?” asks the visibly refreshed
singer of soft-centred hardcore Leeds lads Brawlers. “I mean, we’ve never heard of them, and we
only ask because we just stole their fucking beer”. He then proceeds to share said bevvies with
the crowd. Now accessories to the crime,
we have no choice but to give up and enjoy the band, which despite being
musclier and much louder and far far more tattoed is actually a good analogue
to Alphabet Backwards: they are working very hard for you to have a good time,
and are not worried a wet fart about anything else. Pop music, in other words.
Peasants King
finish off the Gorwelion stage.
Shouldn’t there be an apostrophe in that name somewhere? Hell, don’t bother answering, we gave up
after finding no fewer than 19 errors on the first page of the Truck programme
alone. Plus the cover looks like it
could be the 1985 catalogue from Clockhouse at C&A, so it’s best left under
lock and key. Peasants King make a
decent Britrock sound, but it all feels a bit old hat, from the guy playing a
separate floor tom - so 2008 - on
up. Perhaps at the other end of the festival
we’d have got more from them, but on the home straight we need more to grab us.
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