Something great, courtesy of the NME tour's final bow of 2010, took place at Brixton Academy. Following a hype-fulfilling, tambourine fuelled performance from NYC's
The Drums, a feedback drenched set from
The Big Pink and a coming of age performance from a visibly gleeful
Bombay Bicycle Club,
The Maccabees tore through a frenetic hour of new wave hit after hit after hit.
Orlando Weeks' voice and on stage presence has progressed beyond comprehension since the band's early days and, having picked up a guitar himself, the band's sound is noticeably more physical on
Young Lions than their debut's spiky punk shudder of
X-Ray. It's the combination of the two that keeps the kids dancing, with full time ring-leader and part-time guitarist Felix White leading the Brixton faithful through a soaring
Precious Time before the misanthropic noir drama of
No Kind Words highlights the flaws in most of this year's 'Best ofs' in their Maccabees related oversights.
While the encore was inevitably going to feature Wall of Arms highlight
Love You Better (which it did, along with the equally inevitable yet no less exhilarating or joyous re-appearance of the other bands), no-one could have predicted Mr Weeks' introduction of new-wave icon and one of the most distinctive voices in British music
Edwyn Collins. A thrilling
Rip It Up was the cover of choice, with Collins taking centre stage and proving that while his body may be letting him down his charisma and vocals remain as sharp as ever they were.
Collaborations are one of the many things The Maccabees do right, but this one was more right than most.
While the much, and often rightly, maligned NME may be in something of a decline, the bands on tonight's bill are definitely on their way to even greater triumphs.
Edwyn in his youthful pomp.