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 Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
The Stranglers | Brighton Source
Reviews

The Stranglers Review

Apr 4, 2017
-
Posted by SOURCE Writers

Our top five ‘bands with balls’ list varies over the years, but will always include: The Stooges, MC5, The Slits, Renegade Soundwave, and The Stranglers. All punk, or with a punk ethos, but the Stranglers are unique in that list; they are still together, touring, and absolutely riveting live. A Stranglers gig is now one of your last opportunities to see original punk expression on a stage, and the band did not disappoint at their recent Brighton Dome gig.

Their pioneering creativity is extraordinary: imagine having enough guts to put classic keyboards into a punk band in 1977, the same year as releasing two classic punk albums (‘Rattus Norvegicus’ and ‘No More Heroes’). Add to that, amongst a host of other brilliant projects, the audacity of covering a Dionne Warwick single, superbly, and having a number two hit (‘Golden Brown’) with what is basically a chamber-music harpsichord arrangement, which everybody still thinks is as cool as hell.

The Stranglers | Brighton Source

And you forget they had so many hits: 23 UK top 40 singles and, amazingly, 17 UK top 40 albums: that is bloody good going when you think about it. ‘Golden Brown, ‘Something Better Change’, ‘No More Heroes’, ‘Peaches’, ‘Walk On By’, ‘Always The Sun’, ‘Hanging Around’ and ‘Nice And Sleazy’ only make a small dent in the list of belting punk anthems these lads have produced.

The band took to the stage in their usual black gear, looking as cool as ever. Founder member Jet Black (great name) wasn’t on the drum kit, due to ongoing health problems, but was ably replaced by Jim Macaulay. Jean-Jacques Burnel’s unique bass sound complimented Baz Warne’s superb lead and vocal. Baz replaced Hugh Cornwell some 30 years ago, and is every inch the capable frontman, with a cracking throaty vocal style. Proper troopers every one: Burnel and Warne never once looked at their instruments: their stage presence and professionalism tell you instantly that they’ve been doing this for ever.

The Stranglers | Brighton Source

However, for our money, it’s Dave Greenfield’s soaring keyboard riffs that put a unique stamp on The Strangler’s sound. Ten seconds into any Stranglers single and you know it’s them. Greenfield is actually a Brighton lad originally, celebrating his 68th birthday onstage at The Dome, and after a couple of false starts, the whole crowd gave him a great rendition ‘Happy Birthday To You’.

The mosh pit bounced joyfully around to 22 absolute classics, as well as excellent new material, but we would have paid the ticket price just to hear ‘No More Heroes’ again. The encore track is about as good as it gets for a straight-to-the-point three minutes of total inspiration. See this band; live music rarely gets better than this. Like we said, there won’t be many more chances to see energy and talent like this.

The Stranglers | Brighton Source

The Stranglers, Brighton Dome, Tuesday 28th March 2017
Words by Sam Moffett
Photos by Gili Dailes

Apr 4, 2017
Email
SOURCE Writers
Sometimes an article is a bit of a team effort, and those are tagged SOURCE Writers. If you’d like to be part of that team, hit the Contact link at the top and get your work on this website.
← PREVIOUS POST
The Richmond Returns
NEXT POST →
Warpaint Review
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • Homegrown 2026
    Jan 26, 2026

    Homegrown will be back on April 11th celebrating all that is good about our lovely music scene in this city by the sea.

  • Brighton Psych Fest Line Up Announcement
    Jan 22, 2026

    Stereolab will be headlining a packed Concorde and a delightful bill at Psych Fest 26

  • Bold Politics live with Zack Polanski and Caroline Lucas, 23rd Feb
    Jan 21, 2026

    The current and former leaders of The Green Party join forces for an evening of topical discussions.

  • State of the Nation – An Evening With Akala, Sunday 12th April
    Jan 21, 2026

    Akala, one of Britain’s most formidable voices, presents an unflinching night of truth, history and hope.

  • Happy Mondays, Thursday 2nd April
    Jan 20, 2026

    Don't be an April Fool, it's time to party like its 1990 as The Happy Mondays return to Brighton with The Farm and Northside.

  • 4000 Days Review
    Jan 18, 2026

    A gripping, fascinating and often funny play on so many levels, with beautiful direction and stunning performances from the three actors.

  • Single White Female Review
    Jan 14, 2026

    A fresh take on the much-loved heart-in-your-mouth '90s thriller - familiar, fun and packed with thrills, chills and kills!

  • Mélanie Pain, Wednesday 11th February 2026
    Jan 10, 2026

    The voice of Nouvelle Vague comes to The Ropetackle to perform songs from her latest album and more.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
The Stranglers Review - Brighton Source