Live Review: Belles Will Ring, Le Pie, The Wednesday Night

20 March 2017 | 2:40 pm | Chris Familton

"The unabashed enthusiasm and energy of Belles Will Ring has been missed on the Sydney scene."

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Three shades of psychedelia ruled a wet and windy Sydney night as Belles Will Ring triumphantly returned after a five-year absence from the stage.

The Wednesday Night recently released their debut LP and through shifting line-up changes have been refining their live show, becoming more nuanced and hypnotic in their sound. Based around Rob Young and Laura Murdoch, the five-piece know how to dig in and work a garage-pop groove as expertly as they can psych-out on girl-group vocals and trancey repetition.

Le Pie took the girl-group aesthetic further with her '50s bubblegum look, bathed in pink from her dress to her Stratocaster guitar. From tentative beginnings, their set got better and better and when Le Pie sang without her guitar the songs seemed to gain more focus and a stronger connectivity with the audience. Think gauzy, atmospheric psych-lite pop where Mazzy Star meets Dum Dum Girls.

Belles Will Ring seem like a band built on strong personal and musical connections. From the first song they locked in, exchanged self-knowing and happy smiles, lifting the mood of Factory Floor into the realm of celebration and inspiring uninhibited dancing. Aidan Roberts and Liam Judson sit at the core of the band and over the years they've honed a symbiotic musical relationship both as singers and guitarists, whether syncing The Byrds-ian harmonies or playing riffs that counter and complement one another, almost as if they're egging each other on to dig deeper and move further afield on their instruments. The band are way more muscular and freewheeling on stage. The songs revel in what sound like tangents but are actually cleverly composed and arranged space-rock freak-outs as they urge the songs onwards and upwards. The unabashed enthusiasm and energy of Belles Will Ring has been missed on the Sydney scene and their return shows that pop music can be raw, intelligent and layered while still remaining direct and uplifting. Let's hope the Belles keep ringing.

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