Its been seventeen months since I was waiting to hear whether Frank Turner’s gig at Rock City on 21st March 2020 was going to go ahead. It didn’t and was cancelled a few days before. Meaning I haven’t been to a gig since December 2019 which was We Are Scientists in Leicester. It’s been a long old wait and it’s a bit emotional when old stagers China Crises take the stage at a busy but not full Rescue Rooms to huge applause. It’s not really clear who’s applauding who for being here, probably a large dose of both.
They open with the gorgeous ‘Arizona Sky’ from their seriously underrated fourth album ‘What Price Paradise’, released a mere 35 years ago but probably filed under their ‘newer’ stuff. The majority of the set is 'older', as they constantly refer to when they were 17, with a set that seems to roughly divide into two sections, ‘what they want to play’ and ‘the hits’.
What they want to play seems to be no less than six tracks off
their debut album ‘Difficult Shapes & Passive Rhythms’ from 1982, I’m guessing that they wrote when they were
17, making it easily the most pulled from album tonight and way ahead of their more
famous records.
There’s room also for a newbie ‘Fool’, a youngster aged just
six and a recent treat from their 2015 ‘Autumn in the Neighbourhood’ album
which was their first new recording in 21 years and a B-side ‘It's Never Too
Late’ which only appeared on the limited edition 12" of ‘Black Man Ray’.
Which appears itself later in the brief ‘hits’ section. Sadly they didn’t have
too many of such things.
Throughout Gary banters about other eighties bands, some of
which may have gone on to world domination to his slight annoyance, but none of which he stresses is to
be repeated on Twitter ever.
The end of the set seems to come several times but they
never leave the stage. Protesting that the dressing rooms are too far and
they’re up against a 10pm curfew anyway so that the Rescue Rooms can let the
youngsters in.
They finally finish for good with ‘Here Comes a Raincloud’ before
inviting everyone down to the oldest pub in England later. Although, as there’s
some dispute about this, I’m not sure if they mean Ye Olde Trip or Ye Olde
Salutation. Some would even say it’s Ye Olde Bell. So I don’t join them but I
do hear they did indulge in a bit of Karaoke in the Sally. I’ll catch them next time
around.