With acts pulling on hip-hop, R&B, dance music and more, All Points Eastâs array of harmonious and soul-nourishing sounds was the perfect warm-up for Jungleâs headline set. Their latest album âVolcanoâ Â is just as eclectic; inspired by soul-sampling hip-hop producer legends Madlib and J Dilla, the bandâs new music champions a feel-good hedonistic nature â and we get lashing of it at this yearâs Saturday festivities.
By the time Jungle hit the main stage, most are still revelling in the euphoric experience provided by the queen of neo-soul Erykah Badu, whose mind-whirling high notes and brief alien seances headlined Main Stage West. Gabrielsâ frontman Jacob Lusk recreates the exalted yells heard on their debut âAngels & Queensâ. Other acts like R&B innovators Dylan Sinclair, Ragz Originale and Mercury Prize-nominated RAYE also shared their woozy, catchy tracks, sending us out of space.
Posed behind their respective instruments, Jungleâs leading men â Josh Lloyd-Watson and Tom McFarland â bring out an ecstatic jam session. The set design isnât extravagant, even Nia Archivesâ Cupra Tent set, with her lurid and futuristic animation, was more aesthetically pleasing. Flicking between burning amber and bright white, the stage lights are the only pizzazz in terms of Jungleâs set-up, though Dreamville rapper Bas virtually appears when they play the uplifting and jubilant âRomeoâ.
Each song is able to recreate the magic on record, and often takes it to even higher levels even better. The added flair to their live show, including sirens, wobbling echoed notes and static, is an elevated touch between the tracks. The best segue of them all is before âCherryâ where they drop a gem from the 2006 film Rocky Balboa: âThen the time comes for you to be your own man and take on the world, and you did. But somewhere along the line, you changed.â Then the party resumes at full force.
Earlier this month, Josh Lloyd-Watson told NME, âPeople come to Jungle because they want to have a good time.â Mission accomplished, then. Ending on an encore of their super hits, youâre in awe of the sheer musical talents of the band.
Jungle played
‘Candle Flame’
‘Dominoes’
‘The Heat’
‘Heavy, California’
‘Beat 54 (All Good Now)’
‘PROBLEMZ’
‘I’ve Been in Love’
‘Back on 74’
‘Casio’
‘Romeo’
‘Bonnie Hill’
‘Cherry’
‘Happy Man’
‘You Ain’t No Celebrity’
‘Coming Back’
‘Don’t Play’
‘All of the Time’
‘Holding On’
‘GOOD TIMES’
‘Keep Moving’
‘Fire’
‘What D’You Know About Me’
‘Time’
‘Busy Earnin’
The post Jungle live in London: an array of soul-nourishing grooves appeared first on NME.