Sunday, 13 October 2013

The Wedding Present, L'Aeronef, Lille

I'm not very tall. Five eight is what I claim, although some of my nearest and dearest dispute this.  Still, it's not often I get to go to a gig and can see over the heads of most of the audience.  But I managed it at this Wedding Present gig, which was put on at L'Aeronef in Lille at a time when some musicians would only just be getting out of bed. It must be every rock star's dream. Get your audience while they're young and they'll grow up with you, buying your records throughout your career. The Wedding Present went one further, playing an afternoon matinee of seven songs to an audience of children ranging in age from 2 to 10, plus their mums and dads.  The guitars weren't turned up to 11, the lyrics were altered ('sex was all you needed' in set opener Interstate 5 became 'fun was all you needed') and there was no mosh pit, but this was still a gig, albeit with pint sized patrons. Mainman David Gedge still threw his rock star poses, a seven year old stood up and filmed a whole song on his mum's iPhone and Freres Jacques didn't make it into the set. Even better, no one tried to impress their girlfriend by talking all the way or managed to start a fight by spilling their pint over their neighbour. Instead the audience of school age children was treated to California, Ringway to Seatac and Montreal, with a gorgeously understated My Favourite Dress to finish.  The band appeared to be having fun, with Gedge exchanging grins with drummer Charlie Layton, and there were no tantrums on or off stage, although one young audience member did have to be carried out to use the toilet halfway through the second number.  'Hope to see you again one day,' said David to his new young fans, a clutch of whom were gathered around the monitors at the front of the stage.  If this is the future of rock and roll, it has a long life ahead.

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