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Sea Girls: Brixton Academy, London – live review

Sea Girls’ twice-postponed tour in support of debut album Open Up Your Head finally reaches London’s Brixton Academy. Nils van der Linden finds the fans are more than ready.

The post Sea Girls: Brixton Academy, London – live review appeared first on Louder Than War.

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Sea Girls

Sea Girls
Brixton Academy
15th October 2021

Sea Girls’ twice-postponed tour in support of debut album Open Up Your Head finally reaches London’s Brixton Academy. Nils van der Linden finds the fans are more than ready.

Sea Girls’ social feeds are awash with groups of young people either beaming with their homemade banners, dancing energetically without a care in the world, or raising their hands in unison as they cheer.

They’re all clearly having such a good time that their photos could be used as marketing materials for a youth culture brand promising to make dreams come true. And yet, 30 seconds into Sea Girls’ sold-out Brixton Academy gig, it’s clear that the pictures completely undersell the experience.

But that’s to be expected. Anticipation has been building since long before opening act Coach Party take the stage with their punchy, punky anthems and inspired hip hop-flavoured take on Nirvana’s In Bloom. The tour, originally set for November 2020 in support of Sea Girls’ debut album, has been rescheduled twice. The wait is finally over for the London fans. They’re more than ready.

Coach PartyThey’ve seemingly spent the long year since Open Up Your Head’s release memorising all 49 minutes and 48 seconds of it. They don’t just know all the lyrics, they’ve internalised Henry Camamile’s vocal nuances and even some of Rory Young’s guitar lines. If drummer Oli Khan had solos, it’s likely the fans would be able to recreate those too.

This mass engagement is clearly what the band want. Their arena-sized, Radio 1-ready indie anthems are instantly memorable, the kind of song intended to become the soundtrack to your life, to be shouted out loud from your friend’s shoulders in a muddy festival field.

In a venue the size of Brixton Academy, the effect can be positively overwhelming. From the first words of jubilant set opener Call Me Out, Camamile threatens to be drowned out by the voices from the floor. And when the band stop for a few seconds before kicking into the chorus one last time, the response is, unexpectedly, not one of hushed reverence.

Sea GirlsIt’s an enthusiasm, not aggression, that barely relents as the four-piece (especially the endlessly twirling Young) match the fans’ energy levels and deliver one crowd-pleaser after another. There’s the eager Closer (with its “woo woo” refrain), sweeping Forever (think U2 at their most panoramic), and driving Damage Done (custom-made for pogoing despite its refrain of “I don’t really want to dance”).

There’s the open-hearted modern love story All I Want To Hear You Say, and the deceptive duo of Lie To Me and Do You Really Wanna Know, which overtly pair the band’s bounciest tunes with themes of mental health.

And, stripped of some of their studio sheen so that they’re little more than vocals, guitars, bass, and drums, the celebratory Violet sounds sunnier, the despairing Transplant feels darker, and Moving On, sung from the barrier, connects like it doesn’t on record.

Sea Girls Even the two new songs from forthcoming album Homesick are greeted like the hits they’re destined to be. The propulsive Hometown, built on chiming guitars and Andrew Dawson’s rumbling bass, prompts more deafening cheers but obviously no singalong (yet). That’s rectified on Lonely, with Camamile teaching the audience the chorus beforehand. Of course, they rise to the challenge.

The intensity (if not volume) lowers during a brief but impassioned guitar-and-vocals cover of Adele’s Someone Like You (cue a sea of mobile phones) and Camamile’s solo rendition of You Over Anyone, which name checks Brixton and is introduced by the front man as “your song”.

The truth is, every song the band play tonight belongs to the fans. When they join in on the triumphant show closer Sick, they’re singing about themselves. And that’s really why everyone’s here tonight. Sure, the huge choruses and huge hooks help, But the actual reason for Sea Girls’ success is that they know what it’s like to be young in 2021.

Sea Girls

You can find Sea Girls on their website as well as FacebookInstagram, and Twitter.

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Words by Nils van der Linden. You can visit his author profile for Louder Than War here. He tweets as @nilsvdlinden.

Photos by Naomi Dryden-Smith – Louder Than War | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | portfolio

Please note: Use of these images in any form without permission is illegal. If you wish to use/purchase or license any images please contact Naomi Dryden-Smith at naomidrydensmith@gmail.com

Source: louderthanwar.com

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