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Review: Bright Eyes at 02 Apollo Manchester

“We we’re all set for world domination,” laments Conor Oberst in his signature Nebraskan drawl, as he relates what by how is a familiar story to a near-capacity crowd at the Apollo. Many in attendance tonight will have been holding on to their tickets for two-and-a-half years, since they first went on sale shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic conspired to derail the big comeback for one of the US’ most beloved indie rock outfits.

Bright Eyes still released their first album in nine years that summer, and Down in the Weeds, Where the World Once Was still met with a warm response from fans and critics alike, but you still got the sense that until he could assemble his latest sprawling backing band and take it on the road, there’s always be a feeling of incompletion about this new era for the group - not least because, as the title suggests, the record speaks to present-day anxieties shared by band and audience alike.

Over the course of a career that began when he was a teenager, Oberst has carved out a reputation as a poster boy for a certain kind of emotionally wrought, lyrically literate brand of songwriting, and yet, tonight’s show is an upbeat affair, a maximalist celebration of one of the 21st century’s richest indie back catalogues. Along with fellow core members Mike Mogis and Nate Walcott, Oberst fronts what is at times a 12-piece band that includes horn and string players sourced locally, not unlike the pasties they mention that friends from Leigh have brought them from down the road.

READ MORE: The best small gigs in Manchester in September 2022

That Oberst is backed so handsomely allows him to use the guitar and piano only sporadically and, for the most part, embrace the role of prowling frontman, bringing a

Read more on manchestereveningnews.co.uk