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Julian Casablancas
30 July 2010
Hordern Pavillion, Sydney
Thursday July 29
Swaggering onto the stage as the intro to Queen’s We Will Rock You washed over the capacity crowd at the Hordern Pavillion, The Strokes began their set in style, with the thundering guitar-heavy riff of New York City Cops. Four songs into the evening and you knew it was going to be a rock ‘n’ roll night to remember, as Julian Casablancas announced as calm as you like that it was presently “a beautiful morning” (despite being 9:45 at night), before continuing to dish out hit after hit in a setlist that could easily pass as a greatest hits collection. The Strokes had everyone in the room religiously singing along to the likes of Is This It, Reptilia and Last Night before departing the stage after under an hour, much to the bewilderment of the masses. After an anxious few moments the band were back to begin what i wil call the second act of the gig, as Nikolai began the bassline to the band’s most commercial successful single to date, Juicebox. As great as Someday is, when the band performed it, it was honestly hard to pay attention to the men on stage as the huge led screen behind them displayed some classic arcade games including Pac Man, Pong, Space Invaders and Tetris. As the set continued and the band began their thanks to the crowd, that uneasy, impending feeling that the final song of the night was near grew in everyone’s gut – clearly nobody wanted the night to end. a fitting climax, however, was not far away as Heart In A Cage preceded the highly energised delivery of Take It Or Leave It. A truly memorable night of sixteen entertaining rock tracks (within an hour-and-a-half) concluded as the band vacated the stage to the echoing sounds of the M*A*S*H theme, leaving all in attendance with one clear, adrenaline-fuelled thought in their minds – fuck yeah!
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