Gold Class
Mere Women
Newtown
Social Club, Newtown
Friday 27
May 2016
$17
Golden Oldies
The bald and the beautiful |
Music and football are my two great loves and just
lately they seem to be intersecting. Last Friday night I left the MCG after
watching Hawthorn and went straight to 170 Russell to see The Drones. This week
after watching the Swans play North Melbourne I found myself rushing from the
Sydney Cricket Ground to the Newtown Social Club where Gold Class were playing. seriously, I only have two things going on in my life, you’d think I could
arrange it so they weren’t happening simultaneously.
This blog ostensibly documents live music in
Melbourne, but I was in Sydney to see Anohni at the Sydney Opera House for the Vivid
festival. When planning the trip I noticed that Gold Class were playing in
Newtown the night before, so having missed out on tickets to their Melbourne
show, I picked up a couple for John and I to see their Sydney performance. It
is easier, it seems, to go to Sydney to see Melbourne’s latest ‘it’ band.
When we subsequently noticed that there was a top of
the table clash clash at the SCG on the same night, we thought, ‘well, when in
Sydney…’ and endeavoured to see both. Unfortunately the Newtown Social Club is
not as convenient to the SCG as 170 Russell is to the MCG, and our taxi driver
seemed more intent on reading his text messages than getting us to the gig. So unfortunately
we only saw half of their set.
The band room at the Newtown Social Club is a small
space with the stage set up in the rear corner. Being late we just stood at the
back, so all we could see was the bobbing bald heads of the band members. I
couldn’t see what instruments they were playing, but the sound was strong and
the energy in the room was pulsing.
Nor could I name the first couple of songs I heard,
although one of them was from their excellent debut abum, It’s You. The closing four songs of their set were also from the
album and were all delivered with a rollicking intensity that had the audience
whooping and pogoing, at least for Life
as a Gun, Furlong and Athena. They closed with Shingles, a quiet song with keyboard
accompaniment and the only slow number in their repertoire. It concludes with a
plea to ‘stay awhile’ and it’s a shame they didn’t heed their own advice and
return for an encore.
The name ‘Gold Class’ may be synonymous with an
overpriced and underwhelming cinema experience, but the band is a dynamic and
exciting live act. There is a hint of raw early Joy Divivison, circa Still era, about their sound with its throbbing
rhythm section, searing, scratchy guitar and the deep resonant vocals of Adam
Curley, whose voice would add drama and gravitas to a recitation of the bar
snacks menu at the Newtown Social Club.
The gig was a double bill with Mere Women,
celebrating a joint seven-inch release by the two bands. We missed Mere Women
but I did buy a copy of the single and their side Numb is every bit as good as Gold Class’ Standing at the Fault.
At a time when the lame synth pop of the 80s is being
revived, it is some consolation at least that the classic post punk strains of
the same era also has new outlets.
Setlist
(part thereof)
?
?
Life as a Gun
Furlong
Athena
Shingles (Stay a While)
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