Pavement review – 90s indie giants defy slacker reputation with high energy and deep cuts

O2 Academy, Leeds
For a band once deemed indifferent, Pavement’s return is upbeat and playful, showing off the timelessness of their songwriting

When 90s US indie outfit Pavement announced they were re-forming again for dates this year, it marked a decade since their last re-formation, and 20 years since their original split. They’ve released no new material in between, and have always been known for their tensions and resentments: the last show of their first phase, in 1999, involved singer Stephen Malkmus hanging handcuffs from the mic stand and declaring “these symbolise what it’s like being in a band”. So it was easy to chalk it up as another cynical cash-grab tour in an industry already overflowing with nostalgia and anniversary shows.

Yet when Pavement kicked off the tour at Spain’s Primavera festival earlier this year, rather than running through the motions with gritted teeth in palpable discomfort, they radiated joy, fun and overwhelmed gratitude. Malkmus seemed relatively at ease, while other members, especially Bob Nastanovich, hurtled around the stage like sugar-loaded toddlers, screaming what may well be the band’s final run of screams.

This good-spirited nature has been evident in their 2022 setlists, too: rather than rigidly sticking to a setlist of predictable hits, they’ve been digging out rarities and switching things up night after night, with more than 50 different songs rolled out over the course of the tour so far – not bad going for a band that have often unfairly been painted as indifferent slackers.

In reality, they have always been as tight as they are loose. Precise and chaotic, both melodic and discordant, and they feel like a taut, if slightly tired, unit as they hit the UK. Early favourites lift the room – the crunchy blast of Stereo, the chugging pop hum of Summer Babe – while the snaking melodies and singalong lines of Shady Lane make you forget that the band never actually had anything in the way of a conventional hit.

Unsurprisingly, for a band as terminally sartorially challenged as Pavement, the visuals on the screen behind them are underwhelming – at one point a tennis player is superimposed over a police car for minutes on end. But it also captures their inherently oblique attitude. Malkmus’s lyrics have always been experimental and playful to the point of being abstruse and Pavement always set out to exist outside the framework of other alt-rock bands of the era – despite, ironically, becoming a template for endless banal copycats.

While some songs feel rushed and hammered out tonight, when they grind things down into elongated tender jams, as on a beautifully unfurling Type Slowly, a poignant We Dance or the subtle groove of Spit on a Stranger, they allow their personality, wonky edges and timeless qualities to shine. Even better, when they can combine this idiosyncratic stripped-back side with dynamic bursts of streamlined noise, as on Trigger Cut – “best fucking band in world” someone screams shortly after – the push-pull, quiet-explosive nature of Embassy Row, or the triumphant closer Stop Breathin, they harness all their greatest assets at once.

Fan favourites like Gold Soundz and Here are left out tonight, but their set doesn’t feel lacking. Instead it thoughtfully excavates and explores Pavement’s rich history, re-engaging with, rather than simply reenacting, the material. And there’s no handcuffs in sight.

Contributor

Daniel Dylan Wray

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Pavement to reform for US festival

News: Legendary indie band, who split up 10 years ago, will play New York SummerStage event and may announce further dates

Sean Michaels

17, Sep, 2009 @9:17 AM

Article image
Billy Corgan brands Pavement 'sell-outs'
Smashing Pumpkins frontman resurrects 15-year-old feud with indie-rock band, calling them 'the death of the alternative dream'

Sean Michaels

16, Nov, 2010 @10:33 AM

Article image
Pavement – 10 of the best
Slacker’s finest posterboys or artful rockers perfectly combining bristling noise and elliptical, self-effacing lyrics? Here are 10 of their best songs – you decide

Danny Wright

06, Jan, 2016 @11:00 AM

Article image
Pavement to curate All Tomorrow's Parties for UK comeback
The reunited American indie-rockers are to headline next year's ATP festival in Minehead. And you may even get the chance to watch them bowl!

Sean Michaels

08, Oct, 2009 @10:15 AM

Article image
Pavement | Pop review

Brixton Academy, London
Pavement's track Summer Babe lurches along, a glorious, lovelorn shambles. But their performance is still accompanied by a thrilling sense of imminent chaos, writes Alexis Petridis

Alexis Petridis

11, May, 2010 @9:15 PM

Article image
Stephen Malkmus on Pavement's legacy, the Jicks' 'metrosexual revolution' and his favourite guitarist
The former Pavement frontman answered questions on his fly-fishing exploits, Berlin’s nightlife and getting slated by Beavis and Butthead

25, Oct, 2018 @12:20 PM

Article image
The Courteeners review – indie-rock underdogs defy the naysayers
The atmosphere is like a football match as this once-maligned band celebrate 10 years at the top with massed chants and singalong choruses

Dave Simpson

08, Apr, 2018 @11:55 AM

Article image
New Pavement material 'inevitable'
According to a founding member, the indie-rock royalty will likely record new songs if their reunion tour goes well

Sean Michaels

02, Dec, 2009 @11:21 AM

Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks: Mirror Traffic – review

This fine collaboration with Beck makes good use of Stephen Malkmus's oblique wit, says Hermione Hoby

Hermione Hoby

20, Aug, 2011 @11:05 PM

Article image
Joanna Newsom/Pavement | Pop review
Harpist Joanna Newsom reveals her rollicking side. Elsewhere, Pavement's wayward drummer steals the show, writes Kitty Empire

Kitty Empire

15, May, 2010 @11:05 PM