It’s that time of year when leading Sydney tastemakers Volumes put together another crackingly wholesome party. These folks launched their annual festival in 2015, set across three inner-city venues, and have brought together the likes of Jack Ladder & The Dreamlanders, Nicholas Allbrook, MOSSY, Slum Sociable, Scott and Charlene’s Wedding, and an absolute hot pot of distinctive emerging artists that you had no clue you needed to have a clue about. Expertly curated for the last three years now, it’s an all-immersive dream for music lovers that hinges on the dynamics between music, art and technology.

The Oxford Art Factory, Cliff Dive and Brighton Up played host to this year’s extensive lineup, which saw the return of World Champion and Gold Class, and also featured Sunscreen, Body Type, Gauci, Hideous Sun Demon, Willaris K, The Ocean Party, Straight Arrows, Moaning Lisa, Publique, The Goods, Hatchie among many, many more.

The lineup may be packed but clashes are amazingly few and far between; getting from one venue to the next is a breeze. It’s honestly one of the most enjoyable festival experiences you’re likely to have. If you happened to miss out, Volumes also curates a bunch of other parties from time to time, including this year’s FREEDOM gigs – a four part series of free events to celebrate Oxford Art Factory’s 10th birthday. We suggest you get the heck around those.

For now, peep some of the action from the weekend.

>>Part II is over here with The Ocean Party, Gold Class, Gauci, Publique, The Goods, Willaris K and World Champion

Sunscreen

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Moaning Lisa

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Hatchie

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Hideous Sun Demon

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Body Type

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Straight Arrows

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Photos: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes

 

Adult Swim has announced it will be releasing 15 – yes, 15 – never-before-heard DOOM tracks over the next 15 weeks.

The tracks were allegedly received as a folder called “The Missing Notebook Rhymes”, and they consist of original tracks and upcoming songs that contain guest verses from metalface himself.

While no tracklist has been shared, we’re told to expect one track from Jay Electronica, and the first track to be released has been taken from the great Sean Price‘s forthcoming posthumous album iMPERIUS REX.

You heard that right. Listen to Sean Price’s Negus ft. DOOM right now. In short, it’s really, really, really good:

Adult Swim went on to say that “these missing notebooks were last seen at the METALFACE L.A. office when DOOM was denied entry into the US 7 years ago.” It also links to a website (which looks like a DOOM-specific music blog and merch store) to contact “if you have any information on the whereabouts of these notebooks”.

Whether this is just a bit of playful lore to accompany the release, or whether it’s actually true, is anyone’s guess, but it does put into question the ‘newness’ of the tracks. Given that we’d do just about anything for 15 new slices of DOOM, we don’t really care either way.

There’s something about Maggie Rogers. Perhaps it’s her incredible presence and the way she looks directly into your soul when she speaks to you. It could be how Pharrell Williams fought back tears when he heard her music for the first time. Or maybe it’s her fresh approach to songwriting and her humble folk-pop steeze that have made her an overnight success. Whatever it is, the girl has made one hell of an entrance and she’s brought the fire with her.

The Maryland native became a viral sensation when she played an early version of her song Alaska to Williams at a music masterclass in New York. He was visually moved and showered praise, “You’re doing your own thing… I’ve never heard anyone like you before and that’s a drug for me.” The session was recorded and uploaded to Reddit where it went viral. Rogers has since signed with Capitol and released an acclaimed EP, Now That the Light Is Fading.

After learning harp at a young age while listening to the likes of Vivaldi and Tchaikovsky, Rogers later brought pop, folk and even dance into her repertoire. She had a spiritual experience with electronica while studying abroad in France and, realising it’s elemental nature, she was inspired to combine folk imagery and harmony with the energy and backbone of dance music.

It’s this new direction that has the world fawning. “You have to be willing to seek, and you have to be willing to be real frank in your music and your choices,” says Williams, and to that end Rogers is creating something incomparable right here and right now.

We met up with her while she was in the country for Splendour in the Grass and had some fun down at Cat Alley.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PNWsW6c6t8g

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Photos: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes

If anyone had any doubt that LCD Soundsystem were still completely magical, they can rest in the knowledge that they have returned and they are still glittery as hell. The New York rockers finally made it to our shores for Splendour in the Grass and some sideshows this July. It’s their first time back since appearing at Big Day Out in 2011, after cancelling their reunion tour down under which was set for the end of last year.

The dance-punk group disbanded following their 2010 LP This Is Happening after throwing an enormous 3-hour farewell show at Madison Square Garden. Musically, they are universally acclaimed, in no small thanks to mastermind frontman James Murphy, and they are both revered by indie purists while becoming increasingly-known to the general masses. Their songs describe the emotional realities about becoming an adult and attempting to be a decent human being; they effortlessly express the fundamental and natural parts of being human.

In Sydney, the warehouse space of the Hordern Pavilion was jam-packed with die-hard fans, absolutely throbbing at the chance to see these oddball indie tastemakers work some pure magic right before their eyes.

 

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Photos: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes

Supersense Festival is the latest in Australian cultural events to flip the bird at major festivals and all-appealing lineups. It’s an event more focused on curating a full experience than just packing as much music and radio hits into a weekend. Rather than catering to a particular demographic or radio audience, it centres around a theme: the ecstatic.

Now in its second year (the maiden event took place in 2015), the Melbourne event takes place over three days in August. There’s a few very well known names, a few lesser so, and the point is to dive right in and experience an atmosphere, and a range of performances unlike anything else you’ll find at Australian music festivals.

There’s a whole lot more to explore, but here’s our five top musical picks for Supersense 2017.

The Ecstatic Music Of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda

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A masterful purveyor of beautiful, challenging, spiritual jazz, earlier this year saw the release of World Spirituality Classics 1: The Ecstatic Music of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda, released ten years after Alice Coltrane’s death, via David Byrne’s (Talking Heads) label Luaka Bop. The release is a compilation of recordings made during her time at the Sai Anantam Ashram in California, which Coltrane opened in 1983.

Now, for the first time, the music will be brought to life. Singers from the Sai Ananatam Ashram will premiere the live performance at Supersense, ahead of a select few other performances across the globe.

Spiritualized

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It’s Spiritualized. With an orchestra. Need I say more?

One of the most one-of-a-kind bands in history, their output is hypnotic, loose, bluesy and ambient, it can bring you to tears, and sheer joy, perhaps all at the same time. The band last visited Australia to perform at Splendour in the Grass back in 2015, and will once again be returning to Australia for one show only. This time they’re performing with the Australian Art Orchestra and Consort of Melbourne, and while it’s unclear whether they’ll be performing an album in full or a best of-type set, one thing’s for sure: this is going to be unmissable.

Nazoranai: Stephen O’Malley, Oren Ambarchi and Keiji Haino

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Even the most experimental-savvy fan would be forgiven for not having heard of Nazoranai, a force that can’t possibly be reckoned with. The trio first came together in 2011 in what can only be described as an extreme music supergroup: Stephen O’Malley of the great and powerful Sunn O))), Australia’s own Oren Ambarchi, who’s played with everyone from Sunn O))) and Boris to Robin Fox and Merzbow, and Keiji Haino, a grandmaster of Japanese noise, who cites everyone from Jim Morrison to Charlie Parker as influences, and has performed everything from Rolling Stones covers to John Zorn’s improvisatory freak-outs.

Bring an open mind. And good quality ear plugs.

Oliver Coates

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Though you may be unaware of the name Oliver Coates, you’ve most likely heard him play. The cellist, producer and film score composer has most famously collaborated with Radiohead (you know the immediately-iconic cello plucks on Burn The Witch? That’s him), as well as Jonny Greenwood, Massive Attack, DOOM and many more. We can most likely expect a taste of his explorative live experimentation, toying with electronic resonance, unexpected melodies, and all manner of challenging, illuminating musical surprises.

Overground: A Festival Within A festival

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This might just be the most challenging aspect of the event – one that doesn’t come to the fore too often, usually living in the shadows of the musical underworld. Overground is a four hour ‘festival within a festival’, featuring a huge range of live collaborations focused on highly experimental, improvised music. A press release explains Overground as an “opportunity [for] artists whose works operate at the threshold of what is and isn’t (experimental) music, who disturb the conventions, even of a practice that understands itself as essentially unconventional. We hold this maxim to be true: Truly experimental music should be performed against itself.” Even if this doesn’t sound like your usual thing, we highly recommend heading along for the ride.

Supersense: Festival Of The Ecstatic takes place from August 18-20 at the Melbourne Art Centre. Other performers include Pussy Riot, Kimbra, Blonde Redhead, Acid Mothers Temple, Dave Harrington Group and Stephen O’Malley.

Tickets start at $90, grab those and more information at the official website

At 24 years old, Chicago’s Vic Mensa has lived through what seems like several lifetimes. His debut album The Autobiography documents his entire tale to date, offering the kind of insight and understanding that even his closest friends wouldn’t usually be privy to. Tragedy at times, comedy at others, it’s like he’s just invited the entire world into his private therapy session.

From his childhood and school years through to street violence and murder, to his flirtation – and, later, addiction – with drugs, alcohol and partying as a way to escape his inner demons and struggles with mental health. He reflects with remarkable candour and honesty about moments of near-death and even nearer suicide, before seeking help and searching for inner peace, empathy and understanding. The record ultimately concludes on a hopeful tone, with a passionate promise for a freer future.

The no-holds-barred openness of The Autobiography should come as no surprise, given the pre-emptive ‘capsule’ release The Manuscript, and last year’s powerful EP There’s A Lot Going On, a harrowing take on America’s socio-political turmoil from police brutality to the Flint water crisis, on top of his own struggles with drugs, depression, relationships and suicide.

Born Victor Kwesi Mensa, today sees Vic coming into his own as an artist, a young black man, a Chicagoan, a human being. He’s learning to be comfortable in his own skin, to address and analyse his own internal struggles, and in turn to find empathy and comprehend the world around him. Along the way, he’s learnt to put those thoughts on paper, set to the wonderful tune of hook-laden, rock-infused production, all big beats, wailing guitars and soulful samples. Having assembled a dream team of guest artists and producers (Pharrell, No ID, The-Dream, Syd, Chief Keef and Weezer among others), the final result is a stellar debut, introducing the world – in his own words – to “Victor, not Vic Mensa, the one you never meet in a XXL issue.”

While driving through Los Angeles on a Sunday night, Vic had a chat with Howl & Echoes about the album, his personal journey, rock music and more.

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Earlier today you tweeted out that R Kelly should be imprisoned “for a long time”. You also recently said that it still surprises you that rappers tout abusing women. It’s ridiculous we’re still having these conversations today. 

It’s baffling, but I do think that as a culture – hip-hop culture, black culture – we let R Kelly go. I am completely also at fault, I remember defending R Kelly to somebody when I was like 18, but I was wrong. We know he’s been abusing underage girls for a long time. It’s a shame that it takes something like the information just released, new revelations to remember the past, but we gotta get rid of him. R Kelly needs to be locked up. He’s a paedophile and he’s a sexual predator.

The Autobiography is so intensely personal for you. Now that it’s out in the world, do you feel like a weight’s been lifted?

It definitely does feel like a bit of a weight off my shoulders. the actual process of writing the music was something that was really therapeutic and necessary for me.

It’s cathartic to see the really positive response to it too. For a long time I’ve known the calibre of artist and writer that I am, but I was going through a lot of things that were really keeping me from creating to my potential. I was in some pretty dark times. I felt like the music I was making wasn’t reflecting me as a person, the real me. And so it feels really good to have music that I really feel proud of, and that’s honestly representative of myself as a man. I feel like it’s a step towards being more understood and less misunderstood.

Rollin’ Like A Stoner really stands out to me. It’s so important that you realised you were using drugs, partying and all that as an escape from yourself and your inner demons. Where did you find that self-awareness? 

I was always aware that it was pretty escapist – that doesn’t mean it wasn’t fun though [laughs]. I’m in the middle of this shit, and at the same time cognisant that I’m running from something, but I’m also young and not realising the potential for hurting myself and others.

What I wasn’t fully aware of was that the buck stops. I didn’t know that eventually the drugs would stop working, that I would only get a comedown. I was doing molly so much, so fucking much, that even thinking about it right now makes my spine shiver. I got to a point where there was no serotonin left in my brain. I couldn’t get high anymore, I could only get that suicide Tuesday comedown.

After the high place comes a big crash, and the song is written from that high place. Coming off my first tour in Europe, I was pretty manic. I’d been taking antidepressants that I cut cold turkey, and I was drinking so much, and snorting Adderall all the time. I was in a manic state and a creative state – this is when I was working on the album I was making originally, Traffic, and I didn’t know I was gonna crash so hard, you know?

By the time it happened I just didn’t know what to do. I quickly slipped into a deep, dark, depressive place, but this was all happening at the same time as record labels offering me a million dollars. So I’m trying to blow up, but I also wanna blow my brains out.

That’s when I realised, I’m over my head and I don’t know what to do. It wasn’t really until I started to make this album, and I cut all the drugs out of my life, that I really was able to look back and be objective.

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You’ve spoken a lot of empathy and I wanted to ask about Heaven on Earth, [the first verse is a letter from Vic to Dare, Vic’s friend, Killa Cam, who was murdered in Chicago, the second is from Dare in heaven to Vic, and the third is a letter from the murderer to Dare himself], the third verse in particular, in terms of finding empathy for Dare’s murderer. 

I felt like I was just channeling that whole song from somewhere else.

After I wrote it I played it for one of Dare’s best friends, it was uncanny how close my imagined sequence of events was to the real sequence of events. I talk about a bottle of Hennessy, and his friend told me it wasn’t a bottle of Hennessy, it was a bottle of Jameson. And he did just leave the liquor store, he just didn’t go in the direction that I said. Once I realised I’d somehow tapped in, I felt like I was channeling something bigger than myself.

I was trying to be real about the situation in a way that could help me to move past it. For me to be holding hatred in my heart for the man that murdered my homie, that’s really only hurting me. Hate is an emotion that I really feel harms us more than the people we hate. That’s something I have to go to sleep with and wake up with.

I’ll probably never know the man that killed Dare, so it was necessary for me in my own personal journey to empathise, and turn his killer back into a human being, so I could let go of that pain and hatred.

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I wanted to talk to you about rock music: you’re obviously a fan, in Heaven on Earth you’ve got Dare hanging with Kurt Cobain, Weezer feature on the albumother songs reference Sid Vicious and Dead Kennedys, Prince, etc. When did you first get into rock? What are you listening to these days?

I was definitely into rock ‘n roll before I was into hip-hop. When I was a little kid it was more, well, corny pop-punk like Yellowcard and Green Day, and then I got into hair metal bands like ACDC, Guns N Roses was my favourite band – Sweet Child Of Mine is still one of my favourite songs of all time. Then I got into Nirvana, they became my favourite band in like, fifth grade. Then I got into bands like Weezer around the same time I started listening to hip-hop. From there I got more into punk, I really, really fell in love with The Clash and The Sex Pistols.

Then I started listening to David Bowie and Prince, he’s one of the best fucking guitarists and singers of all time. The Descendants. Right now there’s a band, hardcore/hip-hop group Ho99o9, they’re fucking sick as fuck.

I’m always listening to Prince. But really, I would say now, The Clash is just my favourite band. They’re the best one.

So it must have been amazing to get to get Weezer on Homewrecker

It was so dope, when I got into the studio with Rivers [Cuomo], he loved the song, he was just a really cool dude, he gave me his email and invited me to some of his shows.

It was dope for me, because I was really able to marry the two worlds of music that are my home base, and to bring some new ideas and sonics to hip-hop. I feel like ‘90s alternative rock is some shit that we haven’t really explored in hip-hop, and a lot of times those worlds are really close.

We’ve been a lot of places in hip-hop, but that’s definitely one place we haven’t spent much time in. I like pushing the envelope a bit and contributing to the culture with something fresh.

Given the personal nature of the album, did you spend much time considering how the audience would perceive or interpret it?

With this album I was not considering the people listening very much [laughs]. Not that I don’t appreciate it. I really gave a real window into some of my most personal experiences and emotions so if somebody listens to it and connects to it, that means the world to me, it’s not like it’s any random shit that I did, this is like, really, really big.

But in writing it, I was just trying to be as honest and accurate and thoughtful as possible, more than thinking about how it would be perceived or what a person listening would think. I was asking myself, did I get this concept right? Tthere are certain songs with a story I tried to tell multiple times and might have written three, four or five songs all about the same thing. I had to nail every concept. I had to bring it to its most foundational level, so that the narrative was complete.

Vic Mensa’s debut album The Autobiography is out now.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ug-04B_Iqs&feature=youtu.be

The word “ethereal” is such a commonly-used descriptor in music journalism that nowadays most decent writers avoid it at all costs. It’s one of those tropes used to separate amateur from professional, a term used all-too-often to describe any kind of light, airy, atmospheric music that might have an otherworldly (another word in the same category) feel to it. You’ll most often see it used to describe postrock and other music with ambient sensibilities. Sigur Rós basically invented otherworldly, ambient post rock, so here we are, describing them as they are: ethereal. Transcendent. Spatial. Spectacular.

There really is no band out there quite like Sigur Rós, and it’s unlikely there ever will be.

For 25 years, the Icelandic group have been crafting musical magic with their enriching melodies and full soundscapes, defined by their misty pastels, pleasingly phonetic language, Jonsi’s boyish falsetto, and using violin bows to play the guitar.

The group have released six albums, none of which have achieved less than critical acclaim, particularly the trilogy that illuminated the 2000s, Ágætis byrjun, ( ) and Takk.

Not many groups can embark on sold-out world tours having not released an album in more than four years, but Sigur Rós are not your average group. And so, they performed at Splendour in the Grass this month, alongside a national tour. Their Sydney leg saw them perform at the Hordern Pavilion, a perfectly-sized venue for their ethereal music and, perhaps of equal importance, their spellbinding light display, one of the most gorgeous, literally illuminating visual accompaniments to a live show I’ve ever seen.

The last time I saw the group perform live was five years ago at the wonderful, though ill-fated and short-lived Harvest Festival.

I’ve seen a lot of shows at the Hordern, but nothing quite like this. There was no opening act, the group instead opting for a 2+ hour live show split into two acts, divided, like theatre, with a 20-ish minute interlude. Sound and light came together as one in a carefully-constructed visceral display of sensory beauty, enveloping the hypnotised, glassy-eyed crowd with their captivating soundscapes.

They delivered an ethereal, dreamlike set, the kind where you could’ve walked in not knowing a single track from their entire catalogue, and still find yourself transported to another dimension. The set artfully darted to and fro between songs from throughout their entire career, in a way that almost felt like an ambient film soundtrack more than anything else. Each song swelled and soared, from early favourites like Glósóli and Sæglópur through to some of their latest music, including Kveikur from their latest album of the same name.

The striking accompanying light show was as elevating and enveloping as the music itself; the Pavilion was overtaken by striking shapes and enchanting shadows, dancing their way across the stage and out into the crowd, symbiotically swelling and reaching, a visual extension of the music itself. It’s difficult to describe just how beautiful it was, and we weren’t alone – there aren’t many shows where an entire audience of several thousand feel completely mesmerised, simply in awe of everything around them.

Two hours stretched out into what could’ve been far longer, but it was then over all too soon. As the crowd filed out, there was a feeling in the air that we had witnessed something rare and precious; something we won’t, and can’t, forget.

Birthday bashes are usually a helluva time, but they’re oh so irresistible when a whole bunch of stellar bands are on the bill. Sydney’s beloved Oxford Art Factory is celebrating it’s 10th Birthday this year and to commemorate it, they’re throwing a party called FREEDOM; a four part series of free events curated by music/art collective VOLUMES.

Off with a bang, the first instalment brought together the likes of Body Type, Imperial Broads, Pearls, Felix Lush and The Gooch Palms. And with Round 2 rolling in, things are heating up nicely with Aegean Sun, Sloan Peterson, Crocodylus, Betty & Oswald, Tropical Strength, Flowertruck, Julia Why?, and none other than The Lemon Twigs in the headline spot.

The Twigs have been making waves lately with the release of their debut LP Do Hollywood. Brothers Brian and Michael D’Addario are delightfully off-kilter and boast some intricate arrangements and delectable melodies on their latest record. Their look and sound are fairly removed from this era; it’s like Keith Moon, Pink Floyd and Procol Harum all entered the room at the same time and this is the result. They were in the country for Splendour in the Grass and their sole Sydney sideshow was a slammin’ free gig alongside some of the best talent going in Oz right now. We were stoked to say the very least.

Check out the shots below.

Crocodylus

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Tropical Strength

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Flowertruck

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The Lemon Twigs

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Photos: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes

After cancelling a number of scheduled festival appearances, Frank Ocean has appeared live in public, for real, performing at several European and USA festivals throughout the summer season. The majority of footage thus far has only been available via social media posts and live feeds on Instagram and Periscope, but now, one dedicated fan has uploaded Frank’s most recent performance at FYF Fest in California, in its entirety, to YouTube.

Though the cancelled appearances ruffled more than a few feathers, the Blonde artist’s live performances have been nothing short of remarkable. Honestly you’ll probably tear up watching this. I certainly have.

For the most part, Frank’s live sets have focused heavily on Blonde material as well as the smattering of standalone tracks released this year and a couple earlier numbers from Channel Orange and Nostalgia, Ultra.

Other FYF Fest performers this year included Missy Elliott, Nine Inch Nails, Solange, Bjork, A Tribe Called Quest and Run The Jewels, as well as Australian artists Julia Jacklin and Royal Headache.

https://youtu.be/2dFHnwuPnmQ

Frank Ocean FYF Fest Setlist

  1. Pretty Sweet
  2. Solo
  3. Chanel
  4. Lends
  5. Biking
  6. Hublots
  7. Commes Des Garcons
  8. Runnin Around/Good Guy
  9. Poolside Convo/Self Control
  10. Wither
  11. Close to You/Never Can Say Goodbye
  12. Ivy
  13. Only You (Steve Monite cover)
  14. Thinkin Bout You
  15. Nights
  16. Pink + White
  17. Futura Free
  18. Nikes

 

Head bangers and heavy rock fans united for Royal Blood‘s Splendour in the Grass sideshow in Sydney last week and, boy, did they get what they asked for. The UK drums and bass duo have been doing the rounds since arriving on the scene in 2013, experiencing a meteoric ascent of sorts, including copping some surprise backstage and birthday party appearances from the likes of Lars Ulrich and Jimmy Page. They’ve been quipped as a throwback to the proverbial old-school rock and roll, fusing monolithic bass with rapid fire drumming, which make for a lethal live combination.

And last Thursday night we found ourselves on the front line. Singer/ bassist Mike Kerr threw his instrument around and bellowed into the mic while the entire venue sang right along, while drummer Ben Thatcher commanded the helm in a wild furor.

What they do, they do so well; AC/DC produced 17 albums of their signature heavy rhythm and blues and their fans are among the most devoted in the world. Royal Blood don’t appear far off; with just two records to their name, the people are already flocking in droves.

If you missed them this time around don’t fret, they’ll be back next April for a massive headline tour. More info here.

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Photos: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes