Leonie Cooper 

Captain

Borderline, London
  
  


"Last time we played here, Trevor Horn was watching," remembers Rik Flynn, the tall, male half of Captain's singing twosome, with what can only be described as a big dumb grin on his face. "So Trevor Horn's sweat is adorning these walls," he continues. "A superior sweat, some might say."

Aided and abetted by Horn, Captain are a pop group for grown-ups. Theirs is a sensible, complex music that lifts the spirits and plunders the treasures of retro rock. Reviving the type of bombastic, soulful 1980s AOR that you probably last heard while wheeling a trolley down a supermarket aisle, Captain are floating on their own in a sea of punk plagiarists.

It's a situation they are evidently happy with, and also rather proud of. After a stirring Hazelville, Clare Szembek, the keyboardist and female singer, coyly looks around the venue at the wide-open eyes of the appreciative, bopping crowd before breaking into a massive smile. It's moments like this that lend a lovable, almost gawky air to the fivepiece - most of whom look strangely awkward playing their instruments, but still manage to make them produce fantastic, shattering noises. Frontline is their most playful moment, a jolly tune that recalls Deacon Blue and sees Rik Flynn - whose name is perfectly 1980s - squirming behind his guitar in true gauche teen fashion.

Captain don't look like pop stars, or even rock stars; their single attempt at an out-there sartorial statement comes in the shape of Flynn's grey, undersized trilby. Top marks for effort, but really, with tunes like these, who needs gimmicks?

 

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