4 People Done Good 

The Scottish legends set out to celebrate their 25th anniversary in 2020. So, befittingly for this pandemic, it was during their twenty-sixth year that they eventually managed to perform at Electric Brixton.

In the pantheon of rock music, much is made of moments when raw, angst-ridden bands tear down the status quo and smash the big red button to restart everything. However, Idlewild are rarely (if ever) talked about in this context. In 1998, the rock ‘n’ roll pendulum had swung back to the states as Quasi weaved distorted magic on ‘Featuring Birds’ and Sparklehorse shone with ‘Good Morning Spider’. Back in Blighty, Embrace and Shed Seven took big shots at Oasis’ diminished crown. North of the border though, Idlewild stuck two fingers up to the world with their Fugazi via REM ‘Hope Is Important’. No one spoke to teenagers as they did on that; especially on ‘100 Broken Windows’ in 2000. 

The 1991 Levellers track ‘The Road’, Mark Chadwick sings: “The words that you heard when you were young will always stay / The One’s that always stay make the world go away.” 

Never a truer word spoken than when Idlewild revisited these early days.

Roddy may not be able to hit his vocal rage, but accompanied by their bass hero Bob Fairfoull, the crowd can screech “dissatisfied”; snarl “no”; and bark “shapes” with youthful ferocity!  

The teens of ‘Hope is Important’ were coming of age on ‘100 Broken Windows’ and could see the decay of Rule Britannia in the rear-view window, whilst sneering at the cheap horse-shit sandwich of Nu-Metal. So, it was a truly special moment when Idlewild became a headline act with ‘The Remote Part’ and ‘Warnings/Promises’. A snapshot in time, perfectly encapsulated by the Brixton fans. The crowd-unifying rendition of ‘Love Steals us From Loneliness’ and raucous reaction to the all-out attack of ‘A Modern Way of Letting Go’.  

There is still life left in this unique beast of a band. Rod Jones can still catch fire on ‘Dream Variations’ and find new ways of invigorating their take on REM in ‘Interview Music’. Roddy’s foray into folk music has infiltrated the band and kept their horizons broadening and heartfelt.  

Here’s to another 25 years.