Dry Cleaningâs 2021 debut album âNew Long Legâ saw the south London band come into their own as the bold, brilliant black sheep of the post-punk scene. While the likes of Fontaines D.C., Yard Act and IDLES all write the kind of high-energy, angular anthems to create carnage amongst the audience, Dry Cleaning are more deliberate in their attack. Instead of barked lyrics and catchy slogans, Florence Shaw half-whispers everyday observations, surrealist imagery and hard-earned life advice over slabs of expansive, urgent guitar-driven noise. Itâs sprechgesang, but not as we know it.
Tonight, the four-piece take to the Southbank Centreâs Queen Elizabeth Hall as part of the Grace Jones-curated Meltdown Festival. Sure, other bands from their scene might be scared of the imposing, all-seated room â but Dry Cleaning take it in their stride. âThis is an unusual venue for us,â grins Shaw, making herself right at home onstage.
Opening track âLeafyâ has been beefed up, with the band doused in shadow and strobes to give the normally-swaying track a hard, industrial edge. The squealing guitar of âUnsmart Ladyâ quickly follows, giddy, playful but collected while the folksy twang of âHer Hippoâ is warm and rich. On record, Shawâs vocals are kept at a polite distance from the raucous wall of noise the rest of the band create but tonight, everyone comfortably gives it their all. Bassist Lewis Maynard plays like heâs auditioning for Metallica while guitarist Tom Dowse is having such a great time he literally skips about the stage.
Shaw never has to shout over the noise, her tumbling vocals powerful enough to cut through the scuzzy breakdowns, but she does play the tambourine so hard that tiny cymbals end up scattered about the stage. Backed by an impressive, ever-shifting light show, Dry Cleaning have grown into a ferocious live force and donât need to rely onmosh pits or call-and-response lyrics to enthral. Here is a band who unafraid to try something new or different.
And that ambition shows no signs of slowing down, either. New song âDonât Press Meâ, taken from upcoming second album âStumpworkâ (âyou can look that up laterâ invites Shaw), is a jangly anthem that pulls from The Cure, Joy Division and Iggy Pop but this band â of course â twist it into something fresh and colourful. Itâs a promising two-minute glimpse into the future that sees Dry Cleaning refuse to follow the expected path.
Dry Cleaning played:
âLeafyâ
âUnsmart Ladyâ
âStrong Feelingsâ
âHer Hippoâ
âDonât Press Meâ
âSit Down Mealâ
âViking Hairâ
âMore Big Birdsâ
âTraditional Fishâ
âNew Long Legâ
âMagic Of Meghanâ
âTony Speaksâ
âScratchcard Lanyardâ
âConversationsâ
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