After three years away, last weekend (May 12 â 14), The Great Escape returned to Brighton for a bumper celebration of live music and sun-scorched antics from some of the most exciting emerging acts the planet has to offer. For many artists and bands who worked tirelessly to launch their careers throughout lockdown, the multi-venue festival provided a brilliant opportunity for them to play to thousands of new music fans and industry figures alike.
NME spent three days running across the seafront, catching plenty of exciting and intimate sets â and we’ve rounded up the best acts we saw below. See you down the front again next year?
ArrDee
Delivered with real feeling and vitality, the Brighton-born rapperâs triumphant homecoming show left hearts and ears pounding: his rapid-fire, carefree set was an antidote to TikTokâs ubiquitous commercial branding at the video-sharing appâs Saturday night showcase. In a hyperactive energy rush of a performance, Top 10 hits such as âFlowers (Say My Name)â and âCome & Goâ were remixed and reloaded, as ArrDee paced around the stage without compromise to the gloriously unsanitised fury and charisma of his music. He high-fived and posed for selfies with front-row fans in the midst of a sweltering rave, capturing the moment as this special festival closed for another year. (Sophie Williams)
Cassyette
At this yearâs event, The Great Escapeâs spirit of intimacy and unpredictable adventure remained lustrous, perfectly encapsulated in Cassyetteâs set. She clearly arrived with subversion in mind, and battered her heavy rock sound into feral thrashes while challenging a rapt audience to keep up with her bursts of jumping and head-banging. âShow me your big pit energy!â, she enthused before the snarling guitar lines of debut single âDear Gothâ burst into explosive life, providing sweat and spectacle in equal measure. Â (SW)
CVC
As the six members of South Walesâ CVC lined the stage in a mishmash of tasselled leather jackets, printed shirts and cowboy hats, looking like a vintage jumble saleâs musical outing, youâd be forgiven for thinking that they had all arrived from different bands. The harmony can instead be found in the music: vintage, slick, low-key psych rock stuffed with chirpy guitars and rumbling drum patterns. With only one single to their name â the brilliantly shaggy âDocking The Payâ â the band used their debut appearance at The Great Escape to test plenty of unreleased material, and what we heard sounded groovy AF. (SW)
Dora Jar
Speaking to NME over the weekend, US artist Dora Jar said that her recent support slot with Billie Eilish at New Yorkâs Madison Square Garden shows that no matter how big the venues are, âyou can feel their [the crowds] energy.â Her midnight show on Friday at the Brighthelm Center showed a glimpse of those lessons: sheâs engaged and energetic, throwing out threads of her songs to an (admittedly smaller) audience, hoping that they reach for one and hold on tight. During âScab Songâ, she spurns the head-banging rock breakdown and instead makes it a delicate acoustic number, showing the full-side of her artistry; the threads have been tied into a most magnificent bow. (Thomas Smith)
Dréya Mac
Invoking her endlessly charismatic online persona â the west London artistâs larger-than-life dance routines have won her over 1.4 million TikTok fans â DrĂ©ya Macâs performance at the seafrontâs Concorde 2 featured bold choreography and brilliantly dramatised facial expressions. Joined on stage by her close pal and collaborator Felixthe1st, she wheeled out viral drill smasher âOwn Brand Freestyleâ to scenes of thumping chaos, with overzealous gun fingers aplenty. In doing so, Mac reinforced her position as an unstoppable entity on the brink of another new, exciting chapter. (SW)
HighSchool
Performing to a packed Komedia Basement at midday on Thursday, the Melbourne trioâs emotive, distorted live vocals transported a crowd of eager new music fans, industry heads and day drinkers to the rich narrative worlds they craft in their music videos. Theyâre masters of both the minimal and the maximal: the bandâs gently synthesised, New Order-esque tunes were elevated by heavy club lighting, as they aired both new material and the majority of their stellar âForever At Lastâ EP. NME even spotted HighSchoolâs fellow Aussie indie upstarts The Lazy Eyes singing along to rousing closer âSirensâ, which made for a moment of mega-wholesome vibes. (SW)
Joe and The Shitboys
The Faroe Islands punksâ opening two sets of The Great Escape were a total roadblock where a one-in, one-out system wasnât even working, because why on earth would you leave and miss out? Their Green Door Store set on Friday was equally chaotic: diatribes about veganism (âIf You Believe In Eating Meat Start With Your Dogâ), machismo (âMacho Man Randy Savageâ) and a Rage Against The Machine cover delivered from the shoulders of a punter. (TS)
Rose Gray
It takes some serious guts to cover Donna Summerâs âI Feel Loveâ, let alone in front of an audience of your peers and industry folk, and yet, for Rose Gray it felt inevitable. Since her debut EP, 2019’s âBlue, Latelyâ, the London-based artist has moved from baggy blissed-out psych-pop into a full on disco diva; her latest songs ‘Synchronicityâ and âLast Songâ are darker, and more club-ready than anything before. That Donna Summer cover starts to make more and more sense⊠(TS)
Piri and Tommy Villiers
TikTok had its fingerprints all over this weekendâs acts, and few more so than the dance duo Piri and Tommy Villiers â their breakout song âSoft Spotâ went viral on the app, and confirmed their place in Gen Zâs mash-loving cohort. Their set at the TikTok showcase was spritely, showcasing the banging bedroom drumânâbass beats that made their name, but hints at a future that takes in house music, techno and more. You sense that a massive leap is just a moment away⊠(TS)
- Read More â Piri and Tommy Villiers live at The Great Escape: banging bedroom beats from a couple in perfect harmony
Priya Ragu
Another artist whose success has largely come in the isolated COVID times is Tamil-Swiss artist Priya Ragu â but that didnât show. During the performance at the festivalâs beach-straddling stage, Ragu had the confidence of a performer who has been honing her craft live on stage for years. She may sing about the lockdowns (on, er, âLockdown’), but does so with a tenacity and festival-ready beats, you wonder if she had this precise moment of a packed-out crowd of hundreds of fans in mind when doing so. (TS)
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