MAXIMO PARK // BARROWLANDS, GLASGOW

Paul Smith is selling socks at the Barrowlands.

MAXIMO PARK PERFORMING AT GLASGOW’S BARROWLANDS - 13.10.2022
PICTURE BY: KENDALL WILSON

"We've got three-hundred pairs to shift," the Maximo Park frontman tells his attendant audience, "and tea towels!" Hosiery and kitchen linens may not be conventional stock at most indie rock concerts but in the face of unsustainable economic structures and an industry in crisis, creative merchandising is a necessity. It isn't enough to simply write, record and release great songs because no-one pays for great songs; artists have to sell stuff, and sell well, to finance their musical endeavours and basic living. Having great songs will help though.

To this end Maximo Park have hit the road to tout their wares throughout the UK. As Smith explains at one point, "We had a single; we didn't have an album. We wanted to tour the single hence, the Singular Tour." Following the release of their nearly chart-topping seventh studio album, Nature Always Wins, in 2021, and a run of sold out shows across the country just over 12 months ago, the band are now treating audiences to a Maximo Park retrospective comprising "only the singles" - and for tonight, one B-side - with each city's set containing select songs voted for in advance by the local fan base.

Dutch outfit Pip Blom are tasked with warming up the steady stream of early arrivals. Their formula of sugary vocals and occasionally fuzzy guitars is a bright and effervescent delight, dynamically building through the bluesy lilt of Tinfoil into the grungy Pussycat before overflowing with quaint garage-pop on Keep It Together. Heads are bopping throughout the crowd. It's a good sign.

The Park's set, by contrast, takes more than a moment to find its rhythm and direction. Or rather it opens with a certain rhythm, alternating consistently between crooners and kickers, before switching to a smooth, upward cadence for the latter half. The aforementioned B-side, The Night I Lost My Head, comes out of nowhere within the first three songs and, while a generally energetic bop, it sits incongruous to the more mellow grooves of Leave This Island and Hips and Lips which follow. The crowd are undeniably into it though. "If you wanna do a bit of dancing I will also do a little shuffle" Smith declares, as if he had no plans to move otherwise.

This isn't a nostalgia trip proper and it's evident that the nature of the tour has been successful in drawing out fans of each and every part of the band's catalogue. The emphasis of the singles tour is on songs all people (theoretically) will have heard, not just die-hard or historic fans, and as such the audience has a more diverse emotional investment in this set. No song is ever met with indifference despite some having not felt the spotlight for a few years.

"Stay hydrated; we've got a lot of hits to get through" Smith quips, semi tongue-in-cheek, before launching into The National Health, during which the audience are surprisingly well-behaved. This one used to be quite a rager. It's not much longer though before pints are flying and Smith is leaping, scissoring the air, illuminated in deep red and blinding white; the tones of A Certain Trigger. A thickset man is propped up on shoulders during Karaoke Plays and the atmosphere is becoming intensely sentimental.

Great Art, the single that precipitated this roadshow, repackages the band's typically poetic social commentary while deploying as iconic an earworm as Radio 1 could ever hope for. It's a popular one across the generations of listeners in attendance and serves to unify the energy from the stage all the way to the lighting desk. What follows from this point could be described as a passionate ascension which says as much about the music as it does about the band-audience relationship.

The intense romance of Questing, Not Coasting, a song about "falling in love in a thunderstorm", has fists punching the air and arms swaying hypnotically. Our Velocity is a perfect song, worthy of dissertation, that somehow delivers more with every performance - especially in this room. The Kids Are Sick Again feels weighty and poignant, perhaps more than it ever has.

"If this is your first gig, welcome to Maximo Park. This is for you!" Smith announces before walking to the side of stage, allowing spotlights to focus attention on Duncan Lloyd's silhouette and coarsely chiming guitar intro to Going Missing, the band's first ever single. The crowd response is unparalleled with sustained, rapturous applause and spontaneous stamping. The same follows Books From Boxes, arguably the most beloved of fan-favourites, leaving Smith speechless for a few moments before humbly declaring, "This is why we do it."

The set concludes with superb renditions of Versions Of You and Apply Some Pressure, both immaculate demonstrations of the band's musical ethos and proof that the key to artistic longevity lies not in sales techniques or creative merchandising but in perfecting one's craft. Great songs are what really matter. They drill this point home with a masterclass of an encore; Midnight On The Hill, Girls Who Play Guitars and Graffiti. Smith introduces his bandmates over relentless cheering, finally stating "My name is Paul and I've had a wonderful time". You can't half tell as he lingers long on the stage, radiating joy and gratitude, and basking in its elated reciprocity.

Here's hoping they sold a lot of socks, because they certainly rocked plenty off.

REVIEW + PHOTOS BY:
KENDALL WILSON

SETLIST:
BARROWLANDS, GLASGOW

ALL OF ME
THE COAST IS ALWAYS CHANGING
LEAVE THIS ISLAND
HIPS AND LIPS
BABY, SLEEP
THE NATIONAL HEALTH
I WANT YOU TO STAY
KARAOKE PLAYS
GREAT ART
QUESTING, NOT COASTING
GET HIGH (NO, I DON’T)
OUR VELOCITY
WHAT EQUALS LOVE?
THE KIDS ARE SICK AGAIN
GOING MISSING
BOOKS FROM BOXES
VERSIONS OF YOU
APPLY SOME PRESSURE

ENCORE:

MIDNIGHT ON THE HILL
GIRLS WHO PLAY GUITARS
GRAFITTI

TOUR DATES:

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