Me Rex, Regal Cheer and Haliwell at The Edge of The Wedge, Southsea: 'Smart lyrics and massive choruses' | Review
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Often to be found lurking in support – as they are tonight – the Southsea-based bunch have matured enormously as a band since making their debut a couple of years ago. They’re missing bassist/vocalist Hannah Thomas as she’s due to give birth any day now, but her fellow co-vocalists Ali Coote and Katy Ricks carry the show nicely in her absence. The acoustic, folkier sound of their earlier material is giving way to a harder-edged pop-punk sound and is all the better for it. Their songs preach empowerment and equality with a nostalgic nod to the ’90s. Catch them if you can.
Up next are Brighton duo Regal Cheer making their Portsmouth debut. Their guitar and drums combo make a healthy racket – their songs charge to the finish line at breakneck speed.
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Hide AdGuitarist Max Cleworth and drummer Harry Menear share vocal duties on these highly-charged punk bangers. Judging by the number of people at the merch table for them afterwards they made a few, well deserved, new fans tonight.
Rounding off the night with something rather different are headliners Me Rex. This London trio trade in synth and keys-heavy indie-rock with a good side-order of emo-angst. That’s not to say it’s heavy-going, there is plenty of humour in what they do too.
Guitarist Myles McCabe leads the vocals, but he is often joined in some rather lush harmonies by bassist/keys player Rich Mandell and drummer Phoebe Cross.
Since their formation in 2016, the band has released a string of dinosaur-named EPs and one sort-of concept album of 52 tracks, mostly 32 seconds in length which are designed to be played on shuffle. Mercifully the rest of their material is more conventional in length but the latter is represented here by a grab-bag of some of its highlights in one ‘extract’.
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Hide AdThere is a group of hardcore fans down the front who’ve been following them on tour and it’s easy to see how Me Rex could become your new favourite band. Their smart, heartfelt lyrics and massive choruses – check out Skin, It Itches or Jupiter Pluvius – are tailor-made for obsessing over.
They finish with an epic Sinkhole, and are done – no encore. A perfect finish.