New Upcoming Artists: the reformed Live at Leeds in the City

Written by Richard O'Brien
Edited by Eve Moat

Up and coming, varied, independent – all words that could describe Leeds as a city and it’s most
authentic music festival Live At Leeds in the City. While Leeds Fest may grab all the headlines, it’s
Live at Leeds which truly represents Leeds musically.

Held annually in October, the festival run by Futuresound and Leeds City Council is played across
venues in the city center and surrounding areas. The aim – prompting new, largely undiscovered,
and emerging musicians.

Like a pick and mix, as you dive your hand in and scoop out an assortment, some you will like and
want more of. Others, you might put back in the box. Similarly, a dive into the previous acts who
have performed at the festival will bring up some acts that have aged well and others verging on
cringe-inducing. Mumford and Sons, Bombay Bicycle Club, Ed Sheeran, James Blake, Jake Bugg, Alt-J,
Catfish and the Bottlemen, Royal Blood, Circa Waves, The Academic, George Ezra, Clean Bandit. The
list goes on. I will let you decide which side of the aged well to cringe-inducing kaleidoscope the
previously named acts end up on. Undeniably, however, the festival attracts global artists when their
resale tickets are closer to £5 than £500.

This year’s iteration of the festival, like previous years, will take place at the city’s most iconic
venues. Expect more niche bands to be playing at Brudenell Social Club and The Wardrobe. Whereas
the headline acts will inevitably perform at the bigger venues including O2 and Leeds Beckett’s
Student Union. For those unfamiliar with Leeds, Live at Leeds in undeniably one of the best ways to
explore the city’s music scene and venues.

While seeing one or two of the headline acts and a couple of medium-sized acts might justify the
admission fee of around £45 (after the “administrative fees” are added on), the joy of the festival is
discovering those unheard-of acts. Hanging around for the next act because you have an hour free.
Getting to a venue early to ensure you have a front-row spot for the following act. Or, for some,
staying at one venue throughout the day with the only excursion into the sunlight being to grab a
bite to eat. Almost by design, the festival ensures you see artists you otherwise wouldn’t.

Another consequence of the design of the festival, which I am still undecided if it is intentional or
accidental, is that it answers the critiques of summer music festivals. No more wardrobe nightmares
due to unexpected weather, leaving you in the cold to think about your mistakes. Rather than
vendors capitalising on a captive audience to hike prices, a quick Tesco meal deal (other
supermarkets are available) while journeying between venues buffers the assault on the bank
account. Yes, it does have it’s downsides, namely a longer journey time between venues, but the
format certainly alleviates some turn-offs for those less keen on summer festivals.

Despite my disappointment at The Mysterines seemingly removed from all mentions of this
upcoming lineup since the initial reveal, the overall picture of artists still looks exciting.
Wunderhorse, Cassia, and Corella appeal to my admittedly basic, indie pop/rock music tastes. But
with nearly 125 acts confirmed so far, there will undoubtedly be something to appeal to those with
more niche music tastes.

While Leeds Fest or headline acts grab headlines and attention, just like the city itself, supporting
smaller acts and venues is the purpose of Live At Leeds In The City. Like a music-themed open-top
tourist bus, the festival allows you to tour the city’s best venues and some of the latest emerging
talent. And as with Ed Sheeran, you can say I saw them before they were cool (or uncool).

Live at Leeds In The City takes place on Saturday 14th October with tickets still available online
from Live At Leeds’ official website for £42 plus booking fees.

Local Artist Shaene plays Hyde Park Book Club

Written by Emie Grimwood
Edited by Eve Moat

On the 9th September, I had the pleasure of watching Leeds based, emo/lo-fi
project Shaene at Hyde Park Book Club. Following the release of her debut
album time lost/time regained, Shaene took to the stage and graced
audiences with a fresh sound, one previously unheard in the Leeds scene. The
album is an exploration of how childhood experiences have long lasting effects
on her current relationships, featuring themes of mental health, familial
alienation, and the trans experience.


The performance itself translated the message of the album. From set design,
to lighting and delivery of the songs. The blue lighting felt synonymous with
the album and Shaene and using the balloon display, typically associated with
birthday parties and celebration, felt like an ode to a loss of innocence. The
tainting of something so fragile due to traumatic experiences. The display
partnered with the music demonstrated how despite all, Shaene was taking
something back, regaining control and re-imagining experiences for what they
should be.

Image Credit: @musicthroughemiescamera on Instagram


The set was magical. The way the band took stripped back songs and elevated
them to a point that had the entire room captivated. The album time
lost/time regained
was entirely self-recorded and self-produced, which
makes it more impressive. She displays an incredible ability to create beautiful
music, and on a technical level, can produce it too.

Artists such as Shaene are rare. It is no wonder that she is making a name for herself, being recognised by
names such as BBC Introducing, Yellow Button, Get in Her Ears and Wax Music. Shaene is such a unique voice, one I look forward to hearing more of and I’m excited to see what she does going forward.

Track List time lost/time regained:
1. june
2. bleach
3. sad
4. fair
5. dumb
6. snot
7. maybe

AM I going to Snap Out of It?: 10 Years of the Arctic Monkeys record

Written by Jacob Payling
Edited by Eve Moat

When Arctic Monkeys released Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino (2018), like many other
fans of the Indie-Rock genre, I slowly began to fall out of love with Sheffield’s favourite
foursome. I still have vivid memories of going to see that eponymous 2018 tour: me, a casual Monkeys
listener at my first show, desperate to hear the rowdy and up-tempo classic The View From
The Afternoon
(2006) and instead being treated to nearly an hour of dreary, dragging ballads
performed rather wearily by Turner. Besides the standout track Four Out Of Five, the first
half of the night was slightly disappointing, and it was only later into the night when guitarist Jamie
Cook sounded the fuzzy riff of R U Mine? that the show began to take off. The
mass of sweaty teens crowded the pit, breaking off into mosh-pits as drummer Matt
Helders made the staccato snare reverberate around the arena. It was almost as if the sound team had turned up the band’s entire mix. My friends and I left the show with Why’d You Only Call Me When You’re High? stuck in our heads, with us humming it to our hearts content.


Five years on since that show and a decade since the album’s release, it is plain to see why
AM (2013) is still the band’s most commercially successful album. While on Tranquility Base Hotel and Casino (2018) and The Car (2022), Turner’s lyrics are sometimes tediously introspective, whereas on AM (2013) he is brilliantly to the point, commanding his lover to Snap Out of It, asking R U Mine? and later Why’d You Only Call Me When You’re High? is questioned. Indeed, AM follows the blueprint for a successful record through Turner’s universal and digestible lyrics. Each song’s subject matter is never far from home and frequently touches on themes of failed romances and drunken promises. For example, the track I Wanna Be Yours (written by John Cooper Clarke, sang by Alex Turner) perfectly balances the recognisable theme of unrequited love with personal, specific imagery. My favourite instances of this are where Turner asks to be his lover’s ‘vacuum cleaner, breathing in [their] dust‘ and later to be their ‘setting lotion, and hold [their] hair in deep devotion’.


Alongside its lyrical pedigree, AM’s status as the band’s most popular record – three of its
tracks boast over 1 billion streams – is reinforced by its sonic power. Recorded in Los
Angeles with producer James Ford, the album’s tone is markedly different from any previous
release. Most notably the Arctic Monkeys cast off their usual listening habits of British rock and instead take inspiration from the US hip hop scene. Unlike 2011 release Suck It and See where the band used mostly live takes, sounding, as Turner puts it, like “four lads in a room”, AM is masterclass in overdubbing, layering and aural experimentation. Besides the dreamy, almost Beatles-inspired Mad Sounds, a personal favourite of mine, and No. 1 Party Anthem which is reminiscent of Turner’s solo work on Submarine (2011), AM (2013) takes inspiration from bands such as Black Sabbath and Queens of the Stone Age. Indeed, Josh Homme of the latter group does actually provide background vocals on two of AM’s tracks though.


It’s frankly scary to think that AM (2013) turns ten years old this month. For myself and my
friends, tracks like Arabella and Do I Wanna Know? were the soundtrack to our teenage
years, our introduction to the rock genre, and the songs we would slap on just before a night out.
Moreover, Snap Out of It was the first song we covered and performed live in my band,
kidding ourselves that we had the swagger of Alex Turner. A decade on from its release, AM
has undeniably stood the test of time. When I walk into my local HMV, the white waveform
still stands boldly against the black background. In Indie bars across the country R U Mine?
is always a crowd favourite and I even occasionally hear Why’d You Only Call Me… at my
gym. AM is undoubtedly a seminal record in the rock world and is now, more than ever,
worth a listen.

£1 pizza slices and mac n’ cheese on offer at new outlet on campus

Leeds University Union’s latest food outlet, Tantino Slice Bar, is offering pizza slices and mac n’ cheese bowls for just £1 this Friday (October 6).

Located on the lower ground level of the students’ union, the Italian food outlet says the ‘lunch madness’ will begin tomorrow at midday until stock lasts.

Tantino won the contract to take over the food served at the newly refurbished Terrace bar and opened its kitchen in April.

Its latest endeavour, Tantino Slice Bar, launched last month, offering Italian food on the go.

It serves pizza slices and customisable mac n’ cheese bowls.

The offer will be limited to one per customer. No gluten-free options are available but there will be limited vegan pizza.

“So come get the lot whilst you got the chance, because you don’t want to be in a queue around the corner, it’s not Alton Towers, it’s Tantino”

Re-branded rock duo Soft Play find witty resurgence in new single ‘Punk’s Dead’

“Punk’s dead, pushing up daisies, Come and get a load of these PC babies!”

Written by Evelyn Wallace
Edited by Eve Moat

Rock Duo, ‘Soft Play’ hailing from Kent, includes frontman Isaac Holman and drummer
Laurie Vincent, who recently cleared up the negative baggage deriving from their
previous band name ‘Slaves’. Negative discourse began in 2015 when a critique was
published in The Fader with an article titled, “Why Would a Band of White Dudes Name
Themselves Slaves?”.


Soft Play announced their name change on Instagram in December 2022. They
explained the name ‘Slaves’ “was intended solely as a reference to the grind of day to
day life” but “as younger men, [we] responded to criticism of the name from a place of
fear and defensiveness” and that the “intent doesn’t change the fact that the name
Slaves is an issue”.

In late August, the duo released their latest single ‘Punk’s Dead’, a brilliant way to
confront the surge of criticism by sarcastically vocalising the ridiculous reaction to their
name change. Isaac explains, during their Reading and Leeds interview with Rock
Sound, how ‘Punk’s Dead’ was literally “written off Instagram comments” from people
who were “annoyed at us”. Laurie added that this comeback had resulted in the “most
radio play we’ve ever got”, confirming confidence in their decision to turn exaggerated
criticism into a tongue-in-cheek, riff-heavy Punk song.


For many fans ‘Punk’s Dead’ has reaffirmed their faith in the band.
Soft Play told Rolling Stone that ‘Punk’s Dead’ addresses “the haters head on”,
demonstrated in their airy lyrical attitude. The verses are filled with whiny demands,
allowing the listener to mock these childish claims such as, “I don’t like change” and
“Why can’t you just stay the same”, followed up by the chorus, “Punk’s Dead, pushing
up daisies, come and get a load of these PC babies”, pointing to the discomfort and
dislike of political correctness in the Punk sphere. The particular lyric, “Are there any
real men left in Britain, I’m starting to think that there isn’t”, addresses the toxic belief
made that to be ‘Punk’ you have to be masculine and hard, whilst left notions are
considered weak and soft.


The music industry, particularly in the area of Punk Rock music, has seen an increase
in bands referring to left-leaning discourse being confused with weakness. The
‘snowflake’ rhetoric; featured in ‘Punk’s Dead’, is also referred to by rock band IDLES,
highlighted in their lyric, “this snowflakes an avalanche”, noting to not underestimate the
power of the collective, and so-called ‘snowflakes’, whilst they label their music as being
“hard music for soft people”, provoking the idea that modern Punk is inevitably being
reshaped by the unavoidable progression of society. This idea of being ‘soft’ is
comically put to life in the newly released music video for Punk’s Dead, with Isaac and
Laurie getting pushed around by little kids on a bouncy castle, finishing with Robbie
Williams pictured in the sky singing the bridge which messes with idioms, “snowflake,
snowflake, cherries on the woke cake”. This jabs at the ridiculous response Soft Play
received after responding to political correctness.


The song’s lyric, “thought you were rowdy thought you were Punks”, links to the
expected idea of Punk rockers having to be ‘anti-establishment’, ‘hard’ and breaking the
status quo. The comeback of Punk’s Dead is unapologetic and Punk in its very nature
by biting back at convention. Many fans commented on how conforming to societal pressure and political correctness is pathetic and ‘unpunk’, but Punk Rock by its very nature, simply rejects bigotry, thus this is on brand for the band and is a fantastic demonstration of how to be sensitive but also unapologetic. Perhaps it could be conceived that the outrage seen is now not very Punk, and instead being altruistic is the new ‘Punk’.


Soft Play’s name change and new single has highlighted the noticeable discomfort
surrounding political correctness within the music industry, specifically within sub-genres, and perhaps comments on how the cultural left is redefining Punk music and putting progression into the spotlight. Laurie noted on Instagram, “In this day and age we believe it is very important that people change and
make improvements no matter how far down the line they are”. Punk’s Dead is a beautiful, nonchalant piece which creates mockery out of what is expected of Punk artists and abandons old rules to progress in line with modern society.


Soft Play has truly proven you can break down stereotypes and create contrast between harsh and so-called soft music.

Vice-chancellor and President Professor Simone Buitendijk announces resignation

Today (4th October 2023), the University of Leeds’ Vice-chancellor and President announced she was leaving the role.

Professor Simone Buitendijk has been Vice-Chancellor since September 2020. In a press release on the University of Leeds website she said: “I feel the time is right for me to start the next chapter of my career in leadership in UK and international higher education”.

She cited the ‘Universal Values, Global Change’ strategy as a success of her time, saying the university has prioritised collaboration not competition.

The university says it will begin a global recruitment process to find her successor. In the meantime, the Deputy Vice Chancellor Professor Hai-Sui Yu will be taking on the role.

Image credit: University of Leeds website

The role of Vice-Chancellor is the highest level of administrative and academic office in a university’s executive.

Notes from Abroad: Fresher’s Edition

Welcome (back) to Leeds! Whether you live 30 or 300 miles away, there is plenty to explore. 

I arrived in Leeds as a fresher straight after the Pandemic, my plans to go travelling having been cancelled. I was desperate to start exploring having realised that I only had six months of university a year. At the start of 2022, my flatmate and I decided to escape our student halls and take a spontaneous trip to Rome booking cheap last-minute flights and booking two hostel beds. We were so fresh out of covid restrictions, that we were flying the week PCR tests to Italy, France and Spain were cancelled. We had 48hours in total in the city and were determined to do everything. This was actually was a lot easier and cheaper in February without the infamous Roman crowds.

With Manchester airport only a 90-minute train from Leeds (and more free time on your hands as a Fresher) there are many opportunities to travel! The shoulder season which stretches from September through October in Europe is a period of off-season travel: which means cheaper flights and less tourists! It’s the perfect time to visit places in Southern Europe which are too hot in the height of summer. Destinations might include: Tirana, Rome, Barcelona, Madrid, Lisbon or Milan. In Spain, Italy, Greece and the Balkans the summer stretches into September and early October, making them perfect destinations to get some extra sun before heading into a cold winter in the North of England… 

And yet, if planes are not your thing or you’re an exchange student looking to explore the UK. Do not fear! There are plenty of places in England and Scotland close by to visit. Join the Leeds Hiking Society and explore the many National Parks close by, such as the beautiful Yorkshire Dales or closer yet, Ilkley Moors. If nature does not excite you and you prefer big cities, take the train or bus to Liverpool or Manchester. Both cities have excellent restaurants, museums, clubs and shopping centres. If it’s a beach you’re after, then you’re in luck! Head to Formby, just north of Liverpool, for miles of sand, sea and beautiful woodland or get the train to Scarborough: one of the most famous beaches in England! The water might be freezing but the fish and chips are great!

My name is Frankie and two months ago I moved to Copenhagen to start my studies in History and Danish. I wanted to study somewhere I’d never been before and where the culture was completely different to the UK. (I’ll come back to that later…) Not only have I learnt loads about Denmark so far, but my friends come from all over the globe, from Brazil to Japan! In fact, many of my friends from Leeds have also chosen to study abroad which has given me an extra excuse to visit new places! In fact, I’m on my way to Norway now to visit that same flatmate! See you soon Jess! 

This year, I will be writing this column Notes From Abroad about all things study-abroad/cheap/young/fun and affordable travelling!!!!