Fontaines DC, Barrowland, Glasgow review - flowers and football terrace anthems from triumphant Dublin quintet | reviews, news & interviews
Fontaines DC, Barrowland, Glasgow review - flowers and football terrace anthems from triumphant Dublin quintet
Fontaines DC, Barrowland, Glasgow review - flowers and football terrace anthems from triumphant Dublin quintet
The Irish rockers deliver a fierce and furious set that sparked delirium
Upon emerging onstage at the Barrowland, Fontaines DC took time to pass flowers into the crowd. Aside from the occasional thank-you later on, that was the only genteel note struck in a thrilling, compelling and often bruising set. Their last visit to Glasgow back in 2019 had been hindered at times by some dubious sound, but there were no such issues here. Instead, this was a group in control throughout, pacing the set well and sounding rousingly triumphant by the night’s end.
A wider repertoire helped, too. The set was split nearly exactly between debut offering Dogrel and last year’s A Hero’s Death, a record released at the height of the pandemic when live performances seemed depressingly far away indeed, and material from it flourished in a live setting. The title track which opened the evening let singer Grian Chatten snarl ferociously, dressed in a tracksuit with the sleeves rolling over his hands. It gave the impression the outfit was too big for him, but as a band they themselves sounded larger, even beefier than before, with drummer Tom Coll offering a consistently totemic backbeat.
That muscular impression ran through several of the newer tracks, most notably on a truly spellbinding "A Televised Mind", which offered both coruscating noise and a flurry of dizzying lights. Shade was offered by the poppy 60s guitar humming throughout "I Was Not Born", and a woozy "You Said" that opened the encore in a dreamy manner, offsetting the virulent nature of the rest of the gig.
On record, the band’s sharp lyrics and thoughtful nature seep out, but in a live setting these are also songs that sound ripe for football terraces, an impression confirmed during the break for the encore when the crowd broke into a chant dedicated to the Scotland midfielder John McGinn. Yes, there is poetry and depth there, however they were coated with a far more celebratory sheen, and not just because it’s easy to sing that perennial crowd favourite “Here we, here we, here we fucking go” alongside the opening of some of them.
Material from Dogrel was greeted like the return of conquering heroes – the brisk bounce of "Sha Sha Sha", a "Hurricane Laughter" delivered with enough intensity to justify those Fall comparisons, the studied build-up to "Chequeless Reckless" that saw Coll grinning away behind his kit at the reaction generated and the Them-aping garage rock of "Boys in the Better Land".
As a frontman, Chatten seemed more assured than before, pacing and prowling the stage, catching an Irish tricolour flag tossed onstage and delivering his vocals with an almost brutal bark. In contrast, his bandmates mostly stayed as still as a slasher movie villain observing prey, letting noise waft over an increasingly sweaty crowd.
By that point Chatten had ditched the tracksuit top for a Lou Reed T-shirt. It is far too early to draw any comparisons with, say, a defining act like the Velvet Underground, but as the show-closing "Liberty Belle" provoked another lusty sing-a-long and communal hugs aplenty, there should be no doubt that Fontaines DC are that rare thing – a band to truly believe in, with mind and heart alike.
Subscribe to theartsdesk.com
Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.
To take a subscription now simply click here.
And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?
Add comment