Bigfoot, Fuel Rock Club, Cardiff
Maybe we've just been spoilt in recent weeks with our gigs.
Maybe the sun and beer back in July messed with our judgement and maybe we got
caught up in the social media frenzy. All I know is that this gig was a
crushingly underwhelming evening.
Arriving in time to catch most of The Boom Sons (6) set, the
three piece from The Rhondda grooved away with their fuzzy hard rock sound.
Performing to 12 people is unlikely to be the most inspirational event of your
life but the diminutive Vanessa Morgan, grappling with a giant bass guitar
didn't worry with a solid vocal performance. Playing a range of tracks from
their debut release Weird is the New
Black there was some welcome variation in their style although set closer Move Your Deriere reverted to type to
close the set. Whilst the band were okay, their inter song manner was pretty
chaotic. Something to work on but a bit of promise.
Most of Bigfoot’s traveling entourage slowly wandered into
the room for main support from the dirty ‘Port Everyday Heroes (7). These boys
had played the Friday night at Steelhouse and earned some positive reaction.
The crowd had swelled to around 35 by now, although we later realised this was
mainly due to the band's friends and family. In fact, there were probably fewer
than 10 non-associated punters in the room. Everyday Heroes are South Wales’
Answer to Northern Ireland’s Trucker Diablo, full of Black Stone Cherry,
Nickleback and the like. Led by the towering Luke Phillips who shoulders both
lead vocals and lead guitar duties the band are competent if a little routine.
Their supporters certainly increased both volume and temperature but their set
went on about four songs too long; there's only so much BSC lite I can take.
Back in the summer we had been sufficiently impressed by the
headliners to purchase advance tickets for this event. Social media suggested
that it was heading for a sell out. With a large percentage of the crowd having
left after Everyday Heroes but bolstered by their own supporters, this was
clearly a load of bollocks. With possibly 30-40 people in the room Bigfoot (5) hit
the stage in confident manner, riffs wailing but Antony Ellis’s vocals way down
in the mix. This continued for the next four songs by which time some of the
audience including their “supporters” had resorted to chatting and taking
selfies. Bigfoot’s songs were bland, repetitive and thoroughly uninspiring.
Maybe it was the sound which once again influenced the opinion, but I was
expecting much better. Sadly, by 10.50pm we'd had sufficient Bigfoot for one
year and headed out.
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