Type and hit ENTER

Commonly used tags...

Brighton Festival Brighton Fringe Brighton Pride British Sea Power Cinecity Lewes Psychedelic Festival Locally Sourced Lost & Found Love Supreme Festival Mutations Festival Nick Cave Poets Vs MCs Politics Rag'n'Bone Man Record Store Day Save Our Venues Six Of The Best Source Virgins Streets Of Brighton Street Source Tattoos The Great Escape Tru Thoughts Unsung Heroes
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Advertise
The Leisure Society
The Leisure Society
The Leisure Society
The Leisure Society
The Leisure Society
The Leisure Society
The Leisure Society
The Leisure Society
The Leisure Society
Kristin McClement
Reviews

The Leisure Society Review

May 2, 2015
-
Posted by Jon Southcoasting

We were pleased to arrive at the Komedia early for the support act, the wonderful Kristin McClement who we interviewed on these pages only recently. Beginning with ‘Mouthful Of Shells’ from her album ‘The Wild Grips’, Kristine proceeded to play an old song, ‘Bells Once Rang’ from her first EP, and then four songs that were new to these ears, and captured well her Sibylle Baier / Nick Drake vibe. The Komedia provided a perfect stage and the early audience were generous with their appreciation.

The Leisure Society aren’t quite an English institution but they sometimes feel like they are. Lead singer Nick Hemmings announced they felt they were playing a hometown gig, but admitted it also felt like that in London and Nottingham. Christian Hardy joked that if he paid his rent more often he wouldn’t have to move around so much. In any case, there was a small stage invasion by a group of the band’s friends for the final song ‘Forever Shall We Wait’ (from 2013’s ‘Alone Aboard The Ark’), but as this was the Leisure Society, the invaders were all smiles and polite dancing.

The band’s new album ‘The Fine Art Of Hanging On’ is another collection of songs featuring Nick Hemming’s trademark intelligent lyrics and the band’s warm quasi-orchestral folk-pop melodies. The cover is again by Brighton’s Owen Davey, looking again like the next volume in the collected works of Nick Hemming, each different but all of a style and very much of a piece. The thing about the Leisure Society is that you know their sound the moment a song starts. There’s a familiarity that breeds warmth without managing to sound bland. The album’s familiar feel probably means it won’t set many end-of-year lists alight or win over new fans, but that’s a shame because the songs are very good indeed.

The album was partly inspired by the death to cancer of a close friend, and there is a certain seriousness to the new songs with which they open the set, although the stand-out ‘Outside In’ picks up the pace a little. The lead single ‘Tall Black Cabins’ inspired by fishermen’s nets on Hastings beach also had the feel of a familiar friend, despite being just a couple of weeks old. These songs did not sound out of place set next to the band’s better known tracks, such as the award-winning ‘Last Of The Melting Snow’ or the exquisite ‘We Were Wasted’. Then the pace quickened with ‘Dust On The Dancefloor’, “another song channelling the rich seam of late 1990s Midlands clubbing” according to Nick, and the gig took on a party feel. ‘Save It For Someone Who Cares’ had the whole room moving.

Coming off their UK tour, the band were tight and it felt disappointing when the concert had to end. Monday nights are hard. Mumford and Sons were playing their (shhh, secret) gig down the road but I think the crowd in the Komedia might have got the better deal.

Komedia, Monday 27th April 2015
Words and photos by Jon Southcoasting

May 2, 2015
Email
Jon Southcoasting
Jon Southcoasting photographs all sorts, including music, writes about things, as often as not musical, and sometimes plays his own songs too. He lives in Brighton.
← PREVIOUS POST
Foodies Festival
NEXT POST →
Jakob, Wild Cat Strike & Written In Waters Review
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • Opus Kink Announce Debut Album and Launch Show
    Jun 24, 2026

    We love the gothic glory that is Opus Kink who are releasing their long awaited debut album.

  • The Great Escape 2026 Review: Part 2
    Jun 20, 2026

    Peaches provides the teaching, while Morn, Maquina and Alice Faye provide all that is glorious about live music.

  • Caterpillar Review
    Jun 20, 2026

    Set over the weekend of a seaside town’s ‘Birdman Festival’, this play concerns three characters in a Bed and Breakfast.

  • HENGE, Friday 19th March 2027
    Jun 19, 2026

    The Mancunian space rockers will be landing back in Brighton as part of a huge world tour. Prepare for lift off.

  • You’ve Gone Quiet Review
    Jun 19, 2026

    A truly groundbreaking piece of theatre, beautifully written and stunningly realised, where we as the audience become the main character Beth: a Trans Woman.

  • The Great Escape 2026 Review: Part 1
    Jun 17, 2026

    As the world goes dotty for the dotty ones from outer space TGE deliver the hottest ticket in the country twice.

  • Priscilla Queen Of The Desert Review
    Jun 17, 2026

    A shimmering shining lavish spectacle of glitz and glamour: all singing, all dancing, yet character, story and depth at its heart. An eye popping must see show.

  • Sister Sledge Interview
    Jun 11, 2026

    We spoke to the iconic soul family about jazz, Philly Soul and their love of the temperamental British weather.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
Brighton Source review the Leisure Society's return to the Komedia