Review: Field Music - Edinburgh Picturehouse
Nearly seven years after their debut album was released, Sunderland’s Field Music hardly qualify for the Next Big Thing title of this package gig from venue sponsors HMV – an idiosyncrasy pointed out by the band’s Peter Brewis with his assertion that they’ve been about for “a million years”.
As a group with an enduring following and the currency of a new album entitled Plumb out next week, however, they at least acted as a lightning rod for the genuine newbies on the bill, including local outfits Bwani Junction and Laki Mera. Their vintage notwithstanding, there’s still a pleasing youth and vitality to Field Music’s style, which is all the more impressive considering the band’s membership has been reshuffled more than once around the core of Brewis and his brother David. Fighting an uphill struggle against the cavernous reaches of a sparsely-attended Picture House and the relative torpor of a Monday night crowd (“This is a lot bigger than Sneaky Pete’s,” noted one of the brothers wryly), the quartet won a response the hard way, by grinding away with a sound which deftly incorporates angular post-punk revivalism and the skilful touch of classic pop tunesmiths.
Among the show’s highlights, Let’s Write a Book combined jagged guitars with a lightweight, looping funk, If Only the Moon Were Up echoed bright 1960s beat pop and Something Familiar created the uncanny effect of sounding like Hall and Oates playing in separate rooms.
“We’re kind of hoping that if Scotland gets independence you’ll take us too,” joked one of the Brewis brothers – by (I Keep Thinking About) A New Thing’s irresistible finale, we would have been happy to oblige.
Rating: ***
- Family mourn death of Glasgow ‘fight’ schoolboy
- Rangers takeover: Duff & Phelps threaten legal action against BBC
- Today’s youth not fit to be employed, says car firm Arnold Clark
- Rangers administration: Fans fear Duff & Phelps claims could scare off Green
- Rangers takeover: triple penalty punishment enough, says Johnston
- Alistair Darling leads ‘No to independence’ fight over tea and biscuits
- Scottish independence: SNP flip-flops over Nato
- Scottish Independence: SNP ‘won’t be Yes campaign’s only voice’
- Today’s youth not fit to be employed, says car firm Arnold Clark
- Scottish independence: ‘People here are best qualified to run Scotland’
Looking for...
Featured advertisers
Jobs
Search for a job
Motors
Search for a car
Property
Search for a house
Weather for Edinburgh
Saturday 26 May 2012
Today
Sunny
Temperature: 9 C to 20 C
Wind Speed: 16 mph
Wind direction: North east
Tomorrow
Sunny
Temperature: 12 C to 22 C
Wind Speed: 10 mph
Wind direction: North east


Your view
Please sign in to be able to comment on this story.