We have to go back to April 14th 2014 for the Within Temptation gig, one I was attending with good friend Gordon Smith, we'd both been looking forward to catching them live after being impressed with a couple of their recent albums including new release Hydra. So a leisurely meet up and a couple of pints before heading across to the O2 Academy only to be greeted by the longest queue to get in I'd seen for some time, right around the block the Academy is on and then almost all the way along an adjoining street, clearly this was a sell out! By the time we got in the support band Delain were already part way through their set, pretty good sound but lacking that 'killer' song.

Fast forward four weeks to May 10th and it's off up to Glasgow to take in Tori Amos, courtesy of a TicketMaster freebie after the Midlake ticket cock up! Apart from the first couple of albums I wasn't really up to speed with Tori's later works but I'd always found her interesting so was anticipating a good, classy gig. Well maybe anywhere else, but not Glasgow! Lots of audience noise and calling out, you'd think it was a Slayer gig! But Tori Amos was excellent, everything you could hope for for a one woman performance, Crucify was electrifying live and a great cover of the Eurythmics Sweet Dreams made for a classic gig.
Moving on to June 14th brought yet another trip up to Glasgow, rapidly becoming my go to place for a gig. This time it was Television performing Marquee Moon, surely one of the iconic albums of the New York Punk scene and also it happens to be one of my fave albums of all time. Taking in this one with my son Rory we had a leisurely day in Glasgow, sampling some fine foods and ales before heading to the O2 Academy on Sauchiehall Street. Don't recall much about the support but Television were everything you would want from these aging punksters, at times absolutely brilliant, particularly on the track Marquee Moon and at other times shambolic and seemingly disinterested, perhaps most evident during the encore Little Johnny Jewel which was great, but when Tom Verlaine encouraged the band to stay on stage they launched in to what is best described as a bit of a dirge finishing with a track called Psychotic Reaction a cover of a Count Five song... I'd never heard of Count Five either! Despite all that it's been one of the best gigs so far this year.
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