The Cult 8424 Tour Newcastle City Hall Oct 30 2024

It is some time since I saw The Cult live. In fact it is almost 40 years! How time flies and it does not seem that long ago. The NE1 site said of the concert: “Commemorating their 40th anniversary, The Cult arrive at Newcastle’s O2 City Hall with the ‘8424 Tour’! Expect to hear tunes from their 11-album discography with this celebration of their groundbreaking music and undeniable influence in the industry.” 11 albums. Wow!

The announcement was made thus: “The Cult have announced details of a UK tour, which will celebrate their 40th year as a band. Announced today, the shows are set for later this year and will see the iconic ‘80s rock group perform in 10 cities across the country. The dates come in celebration of a huge milestone for Ian Astbury and co., as this year marks four decades since the band formed as we recognise them today – swapping their name from the original title ‘Death Cult’ into ‘The Cult’.” But first, let me reminisce.

I have seen The Cult twice before. The first was at Redcar Coatham Bowl when the band were morphing from Southern Death Cult to the cult, the band at the time were known as Death Cult. The second time was when they had fully morphed into The Cult as a full electric band. I also saw Ian Astbury “playing” the part of Jim Morrison in a later incarnation of The Doors. Sadly, at the time I was not writing a lot on each concert and running one into another. This was because I was trying to catch up and record all of my past concerts . It took me five years, getting up one hour early before work every day and doing one entry each morning.

My blog entry of the time says: Death Cult Redcar 1983 and The Cult Newcastle 1985.
Ian Astbury is an interesting and impressive guy. He was born in Liverpool, lived for some time in Canada, and discovered music through The Doors, punk and Crass. I first became aware of him in Southern Death Cult, first saw him live in Death Cult, and then in the later incarnation of the band, The Cult. My first encounter with Ian Astbury was in the Death Cult, at Redcar Coatham Bowl in 1983. Ian was sporting a painted face and bandanna, strutting his stuff to the goth / new wave music of this post-punk supergroup, which he had formed with Billy Duffy from Theatre of Hate. Pretty impressive stuff, but just a taste of the rock splendour that was to follow a couple of years later.

The next time I saw The Cult in concert, they had transformed into a fully-fledged rock band and were touring to support the Love album. “She Sells Sanctuary” had been high in the charts for a number of weeks, and their new single “Rain” had just been released. Ian was now very much the heavy rock god. I remember being particularly impressed by Ian’s performance and by Billy Duffy’s guitar playing that night. I had a seat pretty close to the front and recall that the gig was very LOUD; my ears were ringing for some time after. “Love” and the follow-up “Electric” are both great albums, the former more psychedelic rock, and the latter much more hard-rock oriented. The City Hall concert was pretty electric, and the band went on to tour the USA to new phenomenal success.

The next time I saw Ian he was fronting The Doors (of the 21st Century) at Manchester Arena in 2004. The line-up of this incarnation of The Doors was Ray Manzarek – keyboards, vocals; Robby Krieger – guitar, vocals; Ian Astbury – lead vocals; Ty Dennis – drums, percussion; Angelo Barbera – bass guitar. Drummer John Densmore declined to take part in the project and sued the other band members over their use of the name. I had mixed views about going to the gig. The last time I saw the band (1972) Ray and Robby took vocal duties and the set was largely new material. The picture, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, shows the line-up of The Doors that I witnessed in 1972.

This time it was clear that the set would be classic Doors and Ian was almost mimicking Jim Morrison. I wasn’t sure how I would feel about that, and how appropriate it was. However we (I and my son David) did attend, out of interest as much as anything. The 20,000-capacity venue was nowhere near full, I would say it was a quarter full if that. We had great seats a few rows from the front. There was no support act, and the band were onstage for a couple of hours, the set consisting of a selection of Doors classics. One disappointment for me was that they didn’t play “Riders on the Storm”. Picture of Jim courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

But putting that aside, this was a great gig, which Ian carried off well. He looked like Jim, was dressed like him, and must have studied videos of his movements. As a massive Jim Morrison fan, Ian must have been in his element. We had many of the old songs, a psychedelic light show, and a band with two original members. It was just great and made me realise how amazing The Doors must have been in the day.

And so we move to the current day and The Cult 8424 Tour at Newcastle City Hall 2024
The support act was very weird. He was a guy called Jonathan Hultén, who was the original guitarist of the Swedish death metal band Tribulation. He was dressed with some very strange sort of cone above his head. At times he disappeared into a bizarre looking tent. This is the best I can describe it (have a look at the images). His website read: “Building on the haunting beauty of his 2020 debut album Chants From Another Place, Swedish songwriter Jonathan Hultén returns today with news of his highly-anticipated follow up Eyes Of The Living Night, set for release on 31st January 2025.”

“While going through this trial, you also discover hidden treasures along the way—important emotions and insights—that help guide you on your path through the seemingly endless night. When you finally reach the burning candle at the heart of the labyrinth, you realize that all along you were on a quest to find all those hidden treasures, and that they actually were things you had once lost—namely, parts of yourself.” It was clear that the guy was trying to take us on some sort of spiritual journey, but more of that later. I found him strange, intriguing, entertaining in terms of his performance art and his music. A great introduction to another spiritual journey.

Guitarist Billy Duffy said of the new tour: “Following up from the great energy of Death Cult 8323 shows, I’m looking forward to bringing that sense of celebration of the band’s music, and the communion with our fans, to Cult 8424. CFFC. Let the ceremony commence!”

And ceremony was the right term to describe the event. This was a coming together of the electric and Goth tribes, to a ceremony which celebrated the life of an iconic band. I did not realise just how much The Cult fans idolised this band until this concert. The City Hall was absolutely crammed, and Jackie and I were perched high above the crowd looking over the proceedings. It seemed that everyone was dressed in black, and the majority appeared to be what, one would term, Goths.

And, it seemed like Ian Astbury had morphed back into their Death Cult days. Ian was wearing a bandanna and black tunic which was almost like a Gothic dress with a short skirt. See the pictures and you will see what I mean. Billy Duffy remains the consummate electric guitarist. These two original members swirled through their back catalogue. The lighting was dark, sometimes red, sometimes blue. This had become a spiritual gathering of the clans and a celebration of the music of The Cult from 1984 to 2024, hence 8424, spanning 40 years and matching the period since I last saw the band. The crowd went crazy.

To be honest, many of the songs were unfamiliar to me. “Sweet Soul Sister” was familiar and reminded me of the 1984 tour when I saw glimpses of Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin coming through the performance. If you look at the titles of some of the other tracks that they played you can see the sort of vibe that this band carries with them: “The Witch”, “Lucifer”. Say no more. By the time The Cult reached the encore we were back on familiar territory. The closing song just had to be “She Sells Sanctuary”. The crowd went absolutely crazy. Nuts. This band is magical and crosses the territory between pure Goth and electric heavy rock.

By the way does anyone who reads this blog know what Billie Duffy means by “CFFC” which he uses in the quote above? This keeps bugging me! Many thanks to Jackie for the photos, and Chris for manipulating the site. Oh, and I treated myself to a signed poster (see image) which was rather expensive as I recall, perhaps £75? What the hell. Well worth every penny.

Setlist: In the Clouds; Rise; Wild Flower; Star; Mirror; The Witch; The Phoenix; Resurrection Joe; Edie (Ciao Baby); Sweet Soul Sister; Lucifer; Fire Woman; Rain; Spiritwalker; Love Removal Machine.
Encore: Brother Wolf, Sister Moon; She Sells Sanctuary.

4 responses to this post.

  1. TerriersFan's avatar

    I’m glad that you enjoyed them again, Peter, and that this time you managed a fuller review.

    I saw them back in June 2022 and enjoyed them. Good band.

    Roger 🤘👍

    Reply

  2. Kevin's avatar

    Posted by Kevin on January 2, 2025 at 9:18 am

    Re: CFFC – it’s simply Cult Forever Forever Cult.

    Happy New Year Peter.

    I’ve loved reading your blog and ticking off the gigs that I was also at, loads at the City Hall, Mayfair and more recently The Fire Station.

    Here’s to many more gigs in 2025

    Reply

    • vintagerock's avatar

      Posted by vintagerock on January 2, 2025 at 1:06 pm

      Many thanks Kevin for following my concert adventures. I am actually way behind with my blog entries and trying to catch up during the holiday period. If you wish, and if you ever see an old guy in a wheelchair at a concert do come along and say hello

      Keep rocking 🙂 happy days Peter

      Reply

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