Thursday, 20 January 2011

The Walkmen @ Oran Mor 19/1/11


The Walkmen are now into their second decade as a band and after years of consistently quality releases they are finally getting the spotlight they have earned. Tonight they play a packed Oran Mor in this Celtic Connections showcase, and although they don’t really fit in the traditional mould for the festival not one person is complaining.

Support this evening comes from Glasgow’s own Laki Mera, who performs a charming set of indie electronica that easily caught the ears of a few new fans tonight.

Tennessee’s Mona is some thing different altogether, the classic rock four piece has been hyped ridiculously at the start of this year. On first impressions they clearly think they’re better than they are and that impression sadly doesn’t let up.

They give that ‘we want to be stadium rockers’ vibe and I’m sure would be more at home supporting Bon Jovi, as they try to encourage the crowd to sing-along it becomes all too cringe worthy for my liking so I have to wander off.

Looking around the crowd tonight it’s clearly not cool to like The Walkmen, there’s not a scenster in sight instead a more mature audience fills the venue, surely a positive impression on the quality of the band if anything.

From the second the band hit into oldie ‘Everyone Who Pretended To Like Me Is Gone’ heads start a nodding and they pretty much don’t stop the entire set. Frontman Hamilton Leithauser snarls into the mike with entrancingly heartfelt enthusiasm throughout the early point of the set, which includes ‘In The New Year’ and newbie ‘Angela Surf City’.

Leithauser’s electrifying presence is easily the most enticing thing about The Walkmen’s live show, as you feel he means every word he sings. Announcing they are going to sing a song about a Harlem street where they all stayed together the set takes a more chilled turn, ‘138th Street’ is followed by arguably new album standout ‘Blue As Your Blood’.

‘Victory’ sees the pace boosted again, before Leithauser tells us a girl had told him “this place is very good for sex/drugs parties”, Oran Mor doesn’t seem the likely place but a guy in the crowd replies “some room in back” keeping up the illusion.

‘Juveniles’ closes the set before the band reemerge to perform a rip roaring rendition of possibly their most well known song ‘The Rat’ and ending on the heartfelt bliss of ‘We’ve Been Had’.

The Walkmen may not be the most euphoric live experience but they have that charm that has seem them build a loyal fanbase over the last decade and now, after all their consistency, they are just starting to see the fruits of their labour.

Photo: Ingrid Mur

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