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At first, the livestreams were an entertaining novelty â and a welcome respite from the tedium of lockdown. But it didnât take lock for screen fatigue to set in (the glitchy connections! The terrible lighting!) and with normal gigs the reserve of idiots (and Smash Mouth fans) in our Covid-ravaged era, IRL connection has been the order of day for some time now. Enter hometown hero Sam Fender, who graces Newcastleâs drizzly Gosforth Park for this socially distanced celebration at the 2,500-capacity the Virgin Money Unity Arena.
Fans watch in groups of five from 500 individual platforms set metres apart â the venue has been specially created to bring a bit of joy back into our lives â as opener Heidi Curtis, a local singer songwriter, manoeuvres through her melancholic brand of rock. It’s on brand that she throws in a cover of Stevie Nicksâ melodramatic classic âEdge of Seventeenâ for good measure.
And then the lights dim and the outdoor arena fills with the dearly missed familiar buzz of shrieking music fans. Fender played here on Tuesday, the countryâs first major socially distance show (The Libertines, Two Door Cinema Club and Supergrass will follow suit at the venue over the summer), and seems in confident spirits as he bursts onto the stage, accompanied by four Newcastle United football top-wearing trumpeters.
The Geordie singer-songwriterâs debut album âHypersonic Missilesâ rocketed to Number One last year, picking up critical plaudits along the way, and the opening riff of its Springsteen-style pop-rock gem âWill We Talk?â immediately cuts through the fear that the socially distanced pods will prevent a sense of connection tonight. Itâs as if this yearâs hardships have only strengthened the audienceâs love of live music, slice-of-life fan favourite âThe Bordersâ inciting a mass singalong that brings an endearing smile to Fenderâs face.
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The brooding âPlay Godâ and recent non-album single âHold Outâ, with its wonky â90s alt-rock chorus and schmaltzcore verse, proves the 26-year-oldâs versatility. The stunning âDead Boysâ, whose lyrics tackle the devastating impact of male suicide, loses none of it intimacy and emotional potency in this strangest of settings. And he teases new material with heavy new song âThe Kitchenâ, suggesting that 2020 might not be so bad after all.
His encore features explosive renditions of âPoundshop Kardashiansâ and âThat Soundâ, and he concludes with the epic âHypersonic Missilesâ. In the aftermath, the proud Geordie gazes out at the crowd in awe as a chant of “Toon Toon Toon!” fills the arena in his honour, seeming as humble as he was when he started out, despite his sky-rocketing fame. Ambitious, hard-working and always remembering his roots, Sam Fender encompasses everything it means to be from the North East.
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Sam Fender played
âWill We Talk?â
âMillennialâ
âAll Is on My Sideâ
âThe Bordersâ
â17 Going Underâ
âHold Outâ
âDead Boysâ
âSpiceâ
âPlay Godâ
âLeave Fastâ
âPoundshop Kardashiansâ
âSaturdayâ
âThe Kitchenâ
âThat Soundâ
âHypersonic Missilesâ
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