Oasis can pack up their parkas and put their feet up – the next wave of Brit brilliance has arrived. On a balmy night in London’s legendary 100 Club, Block 33 staked their claim as the torchbearers of mod revival with a blistering set, brimming with swagger, sweat, and sing-alongs.
Kicking things off was Cian Downing, a 21-year-old North London troubadour who, with his band, delivered an upbeat blend of ska, soul, and indie that set the tone for the night. His set felt like a musical pub crawl through Britain’s past, with shades of The Jam, Billy Bragg, and a dash of Paul Weller-esque bite. By the time they launched into The Jam’s "Town Called Malice", a handful of die-hards sang along, while the rest of the crowd nodded, tapped their feet, and exchanged that universal look of "Oh yeah, this one's a tune".
Then came the main event – Block 33, the new Mods on the Block, a four-piece from Hertford who play like they’ve been mainlining the entire history of British guitar music. Their sound? Imagine if The Who, The Kinks, and Oasis had a pub brawl and somehow formed a band in the aftermath.
Opening with "Breakthrough", from their latest album (which, by the way, has already conquered the Independent Chart at No.1 and cracked the Top 25 in the official charts), the band hit the ground running and never let up. Each song built upon the last, sending the energy higher and higher, with Andy Manning’s searing lead guitar cutting through the charged atmosphere, Stephen 'Keeno' Gardner’s basslines pulsing like an engine at full throttle, and Jamie Moore’s drumming shaking the very foundations of Oxford Street.
Midway through the set, just when you thought things couldn’t get any more unpredictably brilliant, the gig paused for a marriage proposal. A punter hopped on stage, got down on one knee, and popped the question to his girlfriend of 24 years. (Talk about commitment to the build-up!) She said yes, of course – because let’s face it, if you’re not saying yes to love at a Block 33 gig, when are you?
"Beaten" had a dedicated cluster of fans in the front row singing their hearts out, arms in the air, completely caught up in the moment. There was no wild mosh pit—this wasn’t that kind of night—but their enthusiasm was infectious. The band fed off it, pushing the energy higher with "Sweepstake", its pulsing bassline and punchy chorus making it impossible to stand still, and later "When It Comes Around", which had that anthemic, arms-around-your-mates quality that makes a gig truly special.
Even the more laid-back crowd behind them wasn’t immune to the atmosphere. There was a steady ripple of foot-tapping, head-nodding, and the occasional pint raised in appreciation—that unspoken British seal of approval. It wasn’t a night for chaos, but for those moments where the music grabs you, whether you’re throwing yourself into every word or just standing back, soaking it all in.
One of the most refreshing things about Block 33 is their DIY ethos and deep connection with their fans. Dan Dodson, the band's charismatic frontman (who, let's be honest, wouldn’t have looked out of place as the third Gallagher brother in their young days), has said before that the bond with their supporters is what makes the band tick. And they proved it post-gig, sticking around for handshakes, hugs, and heartfelt chats.
In a scene where trends come and go, Block 33 are proving that staying true to your roots doesn’t mean standing still. They’re keeping the mod flame burning bright, blending nostalgia with a fresh, electric energy, and if tonight was anything to go by, this is just the beginning.
Verdict: Brit brilliance, a baptism of sweat, and a night for the history books. If you weren’t there, you missed out.
Setlist:
Cian Downing
Feel So Fine
A Better Place
Found My Way Today
I You Went Away
Led Astray
Tales Of Two Cities
Wasting Our Time
I'll Always Keep
Enthrall Me
Malice
Untouchable
Block 33
Breakthrough
A Glimmer Of Hope
The Promised Land
London Town
Lost In The Crowd
The Monday Club
Beaten
Square Man
Sweepstake
Cold Heart Of Stone
The Girl In The Yellow Jackie Dress
Devils Silhouette
When It Comes Around
What The World's Expecting
(These Are) The Good Old Days
Alive & Dangerous
Better Tell The Devil
Eye Of The Hurricane
Keep On Smiling
Lucky Day
Arriving at The O2 for the first night of Radiohead’s London residency, we walk in under Stanley Donwood artwork lining the walkway and the lines of the band’s bleak modern chant “Fitter Happier” printed on a huge banner hanging from the ceiling of the former Millennium Dome. The moment instantly brings back memories of walking into Oasis’ Live “25” tour earlier this summer. This is the other major rock return of the year and the atmosphere carries a different kind of excitement, yet the intensity feels just as real. Instead of bucket hats and throwing drinks into warm air, we have cold weather and a slow shuffle through the night to gather in the dark. Toniiiiiight, I’m a pig in a cage on antibiotics.
It almost feels unreal that nine full years have passed since Radiohead’s last album, the rich and sorrowful “A Moon Shaped Pool”, and that they have not toured since 2017. In between, we have seen several side-projects, including Ed O’Brien’s overlooked but inspired solo run as EOB and the way Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood nearly recreated Radiohead’s spirit under a different name through the sharp jazz-rock of The Smile, as well as a wave of controversy.
After performing in Tel Aviv in 2017, questions grew louder about the band’s connection to Israel as the horrors of the genocide in Gaza intensified. Attention landed on Greenwood’s collaboration with Dudu Tassa, an Israeli musician who has played for the IDF, and on Yorke’s later comments responding to criticism. The guitarist had joined anti-government protests in Israel, where his wife is from, and the band recently made their views clear again by speaking out against Netanyahu’s regime, insisting that music should be something that unites people from every culture. That idea guides the show tonight, where there is no sign of protest or boycott.
The audience surrounds the stage, which sits in the center to create a more personal and absorbing feeling than most massive arena shows ever manage. A flickering vocoder opens the room and builds tension before the band walk out and jump straight into old-school territory with the raw guitar gloom of “The Bends” opener “Planet Telex”. It is one of many choices designed to thrill the crowd from a group not always associated with this kind of approach, and the packed venue screams back “everything is broken. why can’t you forget?” as a shared release against everything falling apart in the world around us.
With a “busking approach” guiding the tour, the band rehearsed more than 70 songs and have performed around 43 so far, so this is not the predictable hit conveyor belt of Oasis’ shows. It feels refreshing to never know what is coming next. The setlist leans heavily on the treasures from “OK Computer” and “In Rainbows” and gives equal space to the once-dismissed but now appreciated “Hail To The Thief”. It creates a kind of Radiohead-style hit parade, without “Creep” of course, and includes the occasional glammed-up oddity to let the show breathe.
There is the roaring political fear of “2+2=5”, the huge and aching sweep of “Lucky”, the pulsing electronic rush of “15 Step” and the joyful sing-along of “No Surprises” anchoring the early part of the performance. This section also includes “Sit Down. Stand Up.” with a new soft happy hardcore ending, “Bloom” from the fragile “The King Of Limbs” that now carries a brighter neon energy, and “The Gloaming” flowing into “Kid A”, giving the night a moment to sink before everything intensifies again.
There is not a single chance for a toilet break from that moment onward. From the gentle pain of “Videotape”, to the wild three-part surge of “Weird Fishes/Arpeggi” into “Idioteque” and “Everything In Its Right Place”, to the guitar-driven “In Rainbows” songs and the massive first-act finale of “There There”, every moment lands exactly how a Radiohead fan would hope. The visuals also look spectacular.
Then we reach the reward of a seven-song encore that reads like fantasy on paper, complete with the newly viral “Let Down”, a playful return to “a song we wrote on a freezing cold farm in 1994” with the indie powerhouse “Just”, and the huge final blow of “Karma Police”. This show becomes the cinematic and artistic contrast to Oasis’ carefree chaos, capturing that feeling of “standing on the edge” and letting everything wash over you. The entire night carries a fierce energy and a well-judged sense of scale, offered with warmth and intention, and Yorke leans fully into his rockstar presence as the band rotate around the stage to engage each part of the arena. For a group that once cringed at the idea of “arena rock”, no one performs it better. A new album and another night like this would be welcome as soon as possible.
‘Planet Telex’
‘2 + 2 = 5’
‘Sit Down. Stand Up.’
‘Lucky’
‘Bloom’
‘15 Step’
‘The Gloaming’
‘Kid A’
‘No Surprises’
‘Videotape’
‘Weird Fishes/Arpeggi’
‘Idioteque’
‘Everything In Its Right Place’
‘The National Anthem’
‘Daydreaming’
‘Jigsaw Falling Into Place’
‘Bodysnatchers’
‘There There’
‘Fake Plastic Trees’
‘Let Down’
‘Paranoid Android’
‘You and Whose Army?’
‘A Wolf at the Door’
‘Just’
‘Karma Police’