THE WOMBATS SETLIST
CLUBHOUSE SETLIST
WOMBATS TOUR DATES
FEB 07 Cannery Ballroom Nashville, TN
FEB 08 Buckhead Theatre Atlanta, GA FEB 10 House of Blues Houston, TX FEB 11 Emos Austin, TX FEB 12 House of Blues Dallas, TX FEB 14 Ogden Theatre Denver, CO FEB 15 Union Event Center Salt Lake City, UT FEB 17 The Showbox Seattle, WA FEB 19 Revolution Hall Portland, OR FEB 21 The Regency Ballroom San Francisco, CA FEB 22 Observatory Santa Ana, CA FEB 25 The Wiltern Los Angeles, CA MAR 20 Lollapalooza Buenos Aires, Argentina MAR 25-27 Lollapalooza São Paulo, Brazil APR 14 First Direct Arena Leeds, UK APR 15 The O2 London, UK APR 16 Motorpoint Arena Cardiff, UK APR 18 Barrowland Ballroom Glasgow, UK APR 19 Barrowland Ballroom Glasgow, UK APR 21 Liverpool Guild of Students Liverpool, UK APR 22 Liverpool Guild of Students Liverpool, UK APR 23 Liverpool Guild of Students Liverpool, UK APR 29 La Machine du Moulin Rouge Paris, France MAY 01 Carlswerk Victoria Köln, Germany MAY 02 Uebel & Gefährlich Hamburg, Germany MAY 04 Slaktkyrkan Stockholm, Sweden MAY 05 Rockefeller Oslo, Norway MAY 07 HUXLEY'S NEUE WELT Berlin, Germany MAY 09 Gasometer Wien, Austria MAY 10 Backstage Werk München, Germany MAY 12 Estragon Bologna, Italy MAY 13 Fabrique Milan, Italy MAY 14 Komplex 457 Zurich, Switzerland MAY 16 DE ROMA Borgerhout, Belgium MAY 18 De Oosterpoort Da Groningen, NL MAY 26 Scarborough Open Air Theatre Scarborough, UK JUN 05 HBF Stadium Mt Claremont, Australia JUN 07 Town Hall Hobart, Australia JUN 15 UC Refectory Bruce, Australia JUN 17 Riverstage Brisbane, Australia JUL 22-24 Tramlines 2022 Hillsborough Park Sheffield, UK JULY 28-31 Kendal Calling 2022 Penrith, UK (Clubhouse opening all US dates) Read More
|
Their new album has been described as “a self-help manual for the domesticated malcontent” and the live show featured a trumpet-playing marsupial…!?
The Wombats returned to Kansas City, to play a very sold-out Truman in the heart of downtown on a chilly winter night, in front of some very loyal fans.
The evening opened with an easygoing thirty-five-minute set from Clubhouse, a young indie pop band from Columbus, OH (now LA-based) in support of its new seven-song EP, Are We Going Too Slow? (on AWAL Recordings), which they managed to write and record amid chemotherapy treatments, multiple surgeries, and a global pandemic.
Vocalist/rhythm guitarist Max Reichert has had to battle cancerous tumors in his leg and lungs, but he and the band have emerged in a happier place, evident in their performance as the set progressed and the crowd soaked up the good feelings.
An early set MGMT cover stopped any errant crowd conversations to pay attention and the EP’s title comes from a statement the band reflects on itself that Reichert sings on the title song’s chorus, “Another day spent in your head/You're taking life too slow”. Any opener that gets applause when they come back out to dismantle their own gear, is clearly gaining fans and becomes one to watch.
We told you so--
Originally hailing from Liverpool, The Wombats have been on our radar for over fifteen years and are now enjoying their biggest success to date with the January release of fifth studio album Fix Yourself, Not the World (on AWAL Recordings), their very first to Top the UK Album charts after going Top Five previously.
As a result of the ongoing pandemic and the band being in different corners of the world (singer/guitarist Murph – LA; bassist Tord Øverland Knudsen – Oslo; drummer Dan Haggis- London), the album was created remotely and handed to several noteworthy producers, with obviously successful end results. Their ninety-minute headlining set was the chance to hear the culmination of those efforts, as well as revisit older favorites.
The set opened as the new album does, with the fever dream funk punk of “Flip Me Upside Down” and Murph singing, “You flip me upside down, I'm kind of getting into it” followed by the helplessness of humanity embodied in an automated vehicle in “This Car Drives All By Itself”. Knudsen’s energetic bass note drop to help start “Moving to New York” sent the sold-out mass in group motion and the sound of 1200 people clapping in unison helped propel 2011’s “Techno Fan”.
The new “Ready for the High’ brought out an actual trumpet-playing marsupial (ok, a guy in a furry wombat costume with a plastic toy instrument) that decided he needed to be center stage for his solo before losing his headpiece and being chased off by Murph and Tord as the song finished. The costumed wombats would later return in the set, multiplying into two, as a couple members of Clubhouse were determined to suit up and have some fun themselves.
Even though he’s re-located to sunny LA, it’s encouraging that Murph can still write a UK-dreary song like “Everything I Love is Going to Die”, a Cure/New Order homage made upbeat by its lyrical determination to live life to its fullest and the song’s own snappy rhythms. Fans knew all the words to 2007’s “Kill the Director” and Murph’s lemons-as-futility theme continued on 2018’s “Lemon to Knife Fight”, one of many songs inspired in part by his wife.
Murph taught everyone the chorus of the new “Wildfire” and the electro-pop of the obsessive “If You Ever Leave, I'm Coming With You,” lyrically makes it their “Every Breath You Take”. 2010’s “Tokyo (Vampires & Wolves)” is admittedly the most “disco-y” song in their catalog which was a perfect excuse to dance, and the main set ended with 2015’s “Greek Tragedy”, given a huge second life as an Oliver Nelson remix went massively viral on TikTok (over 600,000 videos featuring the song!), resulting in an even bigger audience for the band.
The encore began with the fuzz throb of “Method To The Madness” set in Barcelona during Murph’s honeymoon when he made a cathartic breakthrough to let go of worry and forge his own way. The jangling intro of 2007’s “Let’s Dance to Joy Division” encouraged chants of “so happy!” and pogo-ing in place and the endearing chaos of 2018’s “Turn” and Murph singing, “Maybe it's the crazy that I'd miss, it won't get better than this” would end the evening.
“I don't wanna lose myself in someone else's game” is the lyric on the title track of The Wombats new Fix Yourself, Not the World, and after almost two decades of blazing their own trail and forging their own path to the success of a new Number One album, it’s clear that their musical uniqueness remains well-loved and best work may be yet to come.
(click on any image to enlarge and see in full)
The Wombats returned to Kansas City, to play a very sold-out Truman in the heart of downtown on a chilly winter night, in front of some very loyal fans.
The evening opened with an easygoing thirty-five-minute set from Clubhouse, a young indie pop band from Columbus, OH (now LA-based) in support of its new seven-song EP, Are We Going Too Slow? (on AWAL Recordings), which they managed to write and record amid chemotherapy treatments, multiple surgeries, and a global pandemic.
Vocalist/rhythm guitarist Max Reichert has had to battle cancerous tumors in his leg and lungs, but he and the band have emerged in a happier place, evident in their performance as the set progressed and the crowd soaked up the good feelings.
An early set MGMT cover stopped any errant crowd conversations to pay attention and the EP’s title comes from a statement the band reflects on itself that Reichert sings on the title song’s chorus, “Another day spent in your head/You're taking life too slow”. Any opener that gets applause when they come back out to dismantle their own gear, is clearly gaining fans and becomes one to watch.
We told you so--
Originally hailing from Liverpool, The Wombats have been on our radar for over fifteen years and are now enjoying their biggest success to date with the January release of fifth studio album Fix Yourself, Not the World (on AWAL Recordings), their very first to Top the UK Album charts after going Top Five previously.
As a result of the ongoing pandemic and the band being in different corners of the world (singer/guitarist Murph – LA; bassist Tord Øverland Knudsen – Oslo; drummer Dan Haggis- London), the album was created remotely and handed to several noteworthy producers, with obviously successful end results. Their ninety-minute headlining set was the chance to hear the culmination of those efforts, as well as revisit older favorites.
The set opened as the new album does, with the fever dream funk punk of “Flip Me Upside Down” and Murph singing, “You flip me upside down, I'm kind of getting into it” followed by the helplessness of humanity embodied in an automated vehicle in “This Car Drives All By Itself”. Knudsen’s energetic bass note drop to help start “Moving to New York” sent the sold-out mass in group motion and the sound of 1200 people clapping in unison helped propel 2011’s “Techno Fan”.
The new “Ready for the High’ brought out an actual trumpet-playing marsupial (ok, a guy in a furry wombat costume with a plastic toy instrument) that decided he needed to be center stage for his solo before losing his headpiece and being chased off by Murph and Tord as the song finished. The costumed wombats would later return in the set, multiplying into two, as a couple members of Clubhouse were determined to suit up and have some fun themselves.
Even though he’s re-located to sunny LA, it’s encouraging that Murph can still write a UK-dreary song like “Everything I Love is Going to Die”, a Cure/New Order homage made upbeat by its lyrical determination to live life to its fullest and the song’s own snappy rhythms. Fans knew all the words to 2007’s “Kill the Director” and Murph’s lemons-as-futility theme continued on 2018’s “Lemon to Knife Fight”, one of many songs inspired in part by his wife.
Murph taught everyone the chorus of the new “Wildfire” and the electro-pop of the obsessive “If You Ever Leave, I'm Coming With You,” lyrically makes it their “Every Breath You Take”. 2010’s “Tokyo (Vampires & Wolves)” is admittedly the most “disco-y” song in their catalog which was a perfect excuse to dance, and the main set ended with 2015’s “Greek Tragedy”, given a huge second life as an Oliver Nelson remix went massively viral on TikTok (over 600,000 videos featuring the song!), resulting in an even bigger audience for the band.
The encore began with the fuzz throb of “Method To The Madness” set in Barcelona during Murph’s honeymoon when he made a cathartic breakthrough to let go of worry and forge his own way. The jangling intro of 2007’s “Let’s Dance to Joy Division” encouraged chants of “so happy!” and pogo-ing in place and the endearing chaos of 2018’s “Turn” and Murph singing, “Maybe it's the crazy that I'd miss, it won't get better than this” would end the evening.
“I don't wanna lose myself in someone else's game” is the lyric on the title track of The Wombats new Fix Yourself, Not the World, and after almost two decades of blazing their own trail and forging their own path to the success of a new Number One album, it’s clear that their musical uniqueness remains well-loved and best work may be yet to come.
(click on any image to enlarge and see in full)
CLUBHOUSE |
Max Reichert
|
Dan Haggis
|
Tord Knudsen
|
Murph
|
The Wombats at The Truman, Kansas City, MO (2022-02-05) |
john ([email protected]) ♥ weheartmusic.com ♥ twitter.com |
Recent Comments