Past shimmer, present punch
Temples are a UK psych-rock group from Kettering that blend jangly sparkle with a firm, modern low end. After the studio-rich glow of
Exotico, co-crafted with
Sean Ono Lennon to push bright textures, they lean into color and steady groove on stage. You can expect a set that pulls from early anchors like
Shelter Song and
Keep in the Dark, with newer cuts like
Gamma Rays and
Sun Structures landing bigger than on record. The room skews mixed in age, with vintage mod jackets near the rail and casual indie fits farther back, and the chatter drops when the harmonies stack.
Notes and nuggets
Fans tend to sway more than shove, and phones appear mainly for choruses or the kaleidoscopic backlights. Trivia: many early tracks were built in singer James Bagshaw's home setup using old tape units, and the 2020 single
Paraphernalia marked their first outside-production step with
Sean Ono Lennon. For clarity, the setlist shape and production flourishes here are best guesses and can change from show to show.
Temples community: suede, shimmer, and sing-backs
Retro cues, modern ease
Around a
Temples show, you notice suede jackets, patterned button-downs, and clean sneakers more than boots, a nod to 60s style without costume. Tote bags and soft pastel tees echo
Exotico artwork, while others sport black
Sun Structures designs that have faded with stories. People tend to sing the oo-oo lines of
Shelter Song and clap on the off-beat when the tambourine hits.
Shared rituals, soft-spoken pride
Between numbers, talk drifts from favorite pedal chains to memories of early UK club videos, and the tone stays polite. Merch tables move vinyl first, then cassettes, with pins near the register for those who collect small things. The energy is focused and warm, more heads-down listening than jumping, with cheers snapping in at the end of tidy, three-minute bursts. After the show, fans often compare set notes rather than chase selfies, which hints that the songs, not spectacle, led the night.
Temples in full bloom: sound before spectacle
Airy voices, grounded groove
Temples lean on James Bagshaw's airy tenor, stacked harmonies, and a bright, chiming top end. Guitars favor clean bite with phase and tremolo, while the bass moves like a second melody rather than a thud. Drums sit crisp and dry, keeping a mid-tempo strut that lets choruses arrive with snap. Live, they often reharmonize a bridge with keys doubling the vocal line, which makes familiar hooks feel newly lit.
Small tweaks that reshape songs
A small but telling habit is adding floor-tom and tambourine from the keys station to thicken the back half of a song without raising volume. On some nights,
Sun Structures or
Mesmerise stretch into a longer drone-and-delay middle before dropping back on the one, a simple move that deepens the trance without losing shape. Visuals wash in saturated color and slow-motion patterns, but the mix puts guitars and voice first so tone, not lights, carries the arc.
Temples kindred on the road
Fellow travelers in modern psych
Fans of
Tame Impala will connect with the smooth bass pulse and fuzz-polished hooks that
Temples ride.
Pond brings a looser, jam-friendly swing, and that same love of chorus-soaked guitars shows up in
Temples mid-set peaks. If you like the off-kilter soul and warped pop of
Unknown Mortal Orchestra, the hushed falsetto moments and tight rhythm pockets here will feel familiar. Vintage-leaning fans of
Allah-Las will hear the jangly 60s sparkle and surfy snare that
Temples update with modern weight.
Why these fits matter
All four acts prize melody before texture, which keeps songs singable even when the effects glow. The difference is that
Temples keep their structures tight, landing choruses fast rather than drifting for long stretches. So if you enjoy concise psychedelia with color, this show fits your taste.