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The Sick Man of Europe @ The George Tavern, London (Live Review)

  • Published in Live

 

The Sick Man of Europe

The George Tavern

Words & Pics by Captain Stavros

 

We were told to see the light. Nobody mentioned the strobe lights and migraines. Yes, it’d be a night of unexpected horrors and delights inside The George, drenched in retinal red, The Sick Man of Europe (a man the spitting image of Buffalo Bill) took to the stage not like a band but like a warning. A man in sleeveless black, howling into the void, backed by players who looked more like revenants than musicians. The lights flared like police raids. The air hung thick and sour from the ghost of the warm-up acts, sweat pooling before the first bass note landed.

What followed wasn’t a set so much as a not so ubiquitous initiation into a cult. This wasn’t the usual charming DIY fare the George offers up; there were no winks, no whimsical solos, no clever banter between songs. This was darkwave initiation. Cold, exact, and weirdly religious. It felt like being buried under dry ice (cold but burning) and waking up fluent in post-industrial dread (making ends meet in London).

The recorded material hadn’t prepared us for this. At home, TSMOE can come across like a monologue muttered through a vent; minimalist, maybe even too studied. But live, it hit like revelation. The guitars weren’t just strummed; they slashed and came at us. Drums, even when programmed, punched like they’d been sharpened beforehand. The vocals were there, in the room with you, moving air. No distance. No polish.

 

They played ‘Obsolete’ early, or maybe it just felt early, time was already melting, and it landed hard; a hymn to everything we discard in ourselves and each other. “At what point do we become obsolete?” asked the track. Fair question. By that point, my shirt was sticking to my spine and the couple next to me had stopped trying to talk over the music and simply stared, rapt.

The songs blurred, not due to sameness, but because of momentum. You could feel it in your gut: the set was speeding up. Each track felt faster, leaner, more aggressive than the last. Whether that was by design or delirium didn’t matter.

By the time they hit ‘Sanguine’, the supposed centrepiece of the record, we were all in it together; drenched, blinking, locked in. On record, it’s almost clinical in its restraint. Here, it hurt. The kind of song that drags you through the mirror, tells you you're already someone else, and leaves you to deal with the consequences.

There was no encore. Nobody needed one. Not for lack of want but because anything more would’ve broken the spell. The heat, the pace, the sheer intensity of it… mercy looked like the better ending. Two gigs in a night, one city across; it was enough.

And here’s the thing: we almost didn’t stick around. We talked about ducking out after the openers, grabbing a drink somewhere with airflow. But we stayed. And The Sick Man of Europe reminded us why you stay. Why you sweat. Why you let your eardrums take the punishment.

Because it’s the ones you don’t expect that get under your skin. That re-write the music you thought you already knew. That make you listen to the album again the next day; not for the first time, but like it is.

 

 

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Singles That Mingle 20250603

  • Published in Columns

 

Singles That Mingle

With Captain Stavros

Christian Lee Hutson – After Hours 

Paradise Pop 10 Delux Out June 6 Via ANTI 

Use this lullaby to drift off in the after hours. 

 

Dag Och Naat – Iron Man 

Years and Years Out August 15 Via Labrador Records 

A perfect storm of ease. 

 

Maria Iskariot – Waaromdaarom 

A real shock and awe track. 

 

Ghostwoman – Alive 

Welcome to the Civilised World Out September 5 Via Full Time Hobby 

Great roadtrip music. 

 

The Sick Man of Europe – Transactional 

The Sick Man of Europe Out June 20 Via The Leaf Label 

Unease with a rhythm. 

 

Tops – Chlorine 

Bury the Key Out August 22 Via Ghostly International 

Real 80s themes in this one. 

 

Unknown Mortal Orchestra - Boys with the Characteristics of Wolves 

Curse Out June 18 Via Jagjaguwar 

A buffet of genres. 

 

Durand Jones and the Indications - Lovers’ Holiday 

Flowers Out June 27 Via Dead Oceans 

Smooth sailing on this holiday track. 

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