With multi-instrumentalist Lightburn leading the way from the front (beginning the set with a stylophone, closing the evening by a megaphone's ongoing siren), the band cast new light on lesser album tracks. Although lacking the album's Mariachi-style pomp and swagger, '22: The Death of All the Romance', a duet between Lightburn and keyboardist Natalia Yanchak, easily retains its charm. Together the pair wryly take turns in describing where love 'went wrong' ("I was 22, I had my share of views, I just can't steal that happiness from you") while the rest of the band escalate the drama until the song spews forth in an overblown, yet charmingly sweet finale. There's also an added bonus of two new tracks unveiled in the set's centre, both jauntier affairs than the tower estate disposition of 'No Cities Left', proving that the band should easily escape the genre pigeonholes many critics have lazily tossed them in.
Worringly though, it's when The Dears try to use all their sonic weaponry that it falls apart. Whereas album highlights such as 'We Can Have It' benefit from livewire stage treatments, other tracks seem strangely buried in walls of feedback, not to mention Lightburn's aforementioned set closing siren abuse. Simpler settings would probably do the band's mini-epics greater justice, but that is a decision for Lightburn and colleagues to make if they're to achieve the wider success their music deserves.
No finer example of this comes in the form of first single 'Lost in the
Plot', which remains The Dears' not-so-secret weapon. With Lightburn's yearning,
heart-on-sleeve cries, and backed by the band's close knit sound and structured
harmonies, hearing it on a Sunday afternoon at Glastonbury's Pyramid stage doesn't
seem out of place. Are you reading this Mr Eavis?
The Dears
The support band "pure reason revoultion" were also a major high at the ICA.
Re: The Dears
The Dears