Outbreak festival review – hardcore and pop hooks collide in impeccable genre-fluid lineup

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"Outbreak Festival Debuts in London with Genre-Fluid Lineup Featuring Punk and Pop Elements"

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The Outbreak festival made its debut in London, showcasing a diverse lineup that merges hardcore punk with various genres such as emo, hip-hop, and alt-rock. The event, part of the broader Lido festival series, drew a mixed crowd, with some attendees struggling to fully engage in the high-energy atmosphere. Australian punk band Speed kicked off the festival with a straightforward punk sound, but their performance suffered from poor sound quality in their tent. Other acts like NYC's Model/Actriz and US singer-producer Jane Remover brought a more dynamic vibe, with Model/Actriz prompting audience participation by performing among the crowd, and Remover's breakcore-pop tracks energizing attendees. Despite the heat and initial audience reticence, the festival maintained its punk edge, highlighted by rapper Danny Brown's lively main stage act that resonated with fans.

One of the notable shortcomings of the festival was the placement of cult-favorite bands like Sunny Day Real Estate and Have a Nice Life on a smaller, third stage, leading to disappointment among fans who were unable to see them. Have a Nice Life delivered a standout performance, captivating their audience with emotional renditions of their songs. Kentucky metalcore band Knocked Loose also impressed with their tightly choreographed and engaging set, showcasing their experience from supporting major acts like Slipknot. Headliners Turnstile epitomized the festival's genre-blending ethos, seamlessly integrating elements of hardcore, pop, and new wave into their performance. While some critics may label the festival as overly commercialized, it remains a vital space for innovative and genre-fluid music in London's competitive festival scene, indicating a promising future if it continues to attract breakout stars.

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‘More! More fucking violence!” Jem Siow, frontman with Aussie hardcore punks Speed, is hectoring a crowd he deems to not be moshing hard enough. Perhaps it’s the 30-degree heat, or perhaps we’re soft southerners compared with those at Outbreak’s home in Manchester. Yoking together hardcore, emo, hip-hop and alt-rock with impeccable taste, its first London iteration is part of the wider Lido festival series and so it means there are incredibly un-punk sights, such as a VIP area and branded tequila experiences – but the actual music retains its edge.

Speed’s route-one punk is enjoyable enough though the sound in their tent is muddy and elsewhere there are much more colourful fruits of a punk mindset. NYC industrial-dance unit Model/Actriz also seem dismayed by their initially static audience: “I’m going to come out and scold you,” mock-huffs singer Cole Haden, which he duly does, performing two numbers roaming through the crowd and melting any English reticence. Half the crowd are pogoing, the other half body-popping to this exhilarating jet propulsion. US singer-producer Jane Remover causes similar pandemonium with breakcore-pop full of vocal hooks that hit like a video game power-up, enhanced by an appearance by rapperDanny Brownwho later delivers a relaxed yet on-point main stage performance, with not a single word missed in the ratatat flows of When It Rain.

A failing of Outbreak in this format is putting some of the most cult-attracting acts on the third stage, enclosed in a small tent, meaning plenty of disappointed punters are left outside for the likes of Sunny Day Real Estate and Have a Nice Life. I really feel for the latter fans who miss out on the day’s best set. This US band went basically unnoticed for a decade before online forum-dwellers amped them up, and the passion of their following, singing back Bloodhail like supporters of a League Two side that’s just made it to Wembley, electrifies the room. The band themselves are on superb form, from the foregrounded bass to the Cure-like atmospherics and the oaken heft of Dan Barrett’s lead vocals (very unlike Alex G on the main stage, who regularly ends up in an entirely different postcode to the key he’s meant to be singing in).

Kentucky metalcore troupe Knocked Loose arrive having supported Slipknot in US arenas and you can certainly tell: this is a well-drilled, very entertaining and ever so slightly corny performance, full of entreaties for us to wave our hands or say yeah (the latter pronounced with eight es). It’s like being sped around in the hands of an elite rally driver, seamlessly changing gears from sludge to hardcore in the space of a few seconds, then punching across a bumpy stretch of groove-metal.

Headlining are Turnstile, who epitomise Outbreak’s genre-fluid ethos: the insistent high-tempo attack of hardcore is never far away, but there are flute solos, soaring pop vocal hooks and on the wonderful new song I Care, perky and sassy new wave energy. Outbreak will perhaps need more breakout stars like them to thrive at this level, as the festival caters to quite a specific type of inked, bookish demographic – while there will be some who accuse it of selling out, actual tickets seem far from sold out. But Outbreak has cleverly, passionately identified a free-thinking musical spirit and deserves a yearly spot in London’s often corporate-feeling festival market.

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Source: The Guardian