The Waeve at Band on the Wall

Johnny James, Managing Editor
Band on the Wall

The Waeve at Manchester Academy 2, Manchester 18 March 2025 Tickets from £24.75 — Book now

A year on from their acclaimed eponymous debut album, Rose Elinor Dougall and Graham Coxon AKA The Waeve are back with a new record and a new tour.

Combining dreamy, foreboding folk with motorik synthpop, The Waeve might not be what you’d expect from Coxon, a Britpop guitar hero, nor Dougall, a onetime ’50s girl-group revivalist. But if uncharacteristic, the elixir of sounds and styles they’ve created together feels fresh and exciting, and it’s growing only more potent as they prepare to tour their new album, City Lights.

It was just a few years ago that the pair met backstage at a show in London, swapped playlists and discovered their mutual love for British folk music. “Within a week we were recording”, says Coxon. “Our work was exploratory. Two people asked questions of each other, and as a consequence the void became less yawning. Music was created, and these two voices in the songs became two people: Rose and I.” Sidenote – that’s Rose, I, and the baby, now, if you’re interested…

Their debut came loaded with a pretty strong sonic signature: brooding analogue synths, dissonant saxophones and industrial, krauty beats. On top, the shared vocals (hers, strong, velvety, deep; his, twangy, faltering and vulnerable) offered pastoral vignettes of “jagged shores” and “ancient tides”, drawing on a long lineage of folk horror in British film and music. Among countless other press plaudits, DIY called it “Cinematic in scope, often luscious in its arrangements, it’s a singular gem”.

With City Lights, The Waeve’s sound solidifies into something bolder, more expansive and self-assured. From the off, everything feels dialled up. The motorik beats are heavier and wilder (‘Broken Boys’), the folk and chamber elements more lush and beautiful (‘You Saw’), and the songwriting markedly more ambitious (‘City Lights’).

70s post punk is a frequent touchstone, and we even get a bit of interstellar glam in the title track, which The Quietus called “a futuro Roxy Music or less depraved version of The Moonlandingz”. It’s the first of many tracks to be splashed with Coxon’s sax, whose dissonant squalls offer deranged commentary on Dougall’s brooding synth pulses. He might be one of the country’s most loved guitarists, but the man can’t half toot a horn.

It’s a great second album, and the heavier tracks make an exciting live proposition. Catch them at Manchester Academy 2 on 18 March.

The Waeve at Manchester Academy 2, Manchester 18 March 2025 Tickets from £24.75 Book now

Where to go near The Waeve at Band on the Wall

Whitworth Park, Manchester
Manchester
Park
Whitworth Park

This 18-acre park opposite the Manchester Royal Infirmary provides a welcome patch of green in an otherwise densely populated and heavily used part of the city.

Manchester
Music venue
Manchester Academy 3

Brilliant venue for catching a touring band on the rise. The boringly titled Academy 3 or more interesting Hop and Grape, as it was once known, is a self contained…

Cafe at the Museum
Manchester
Café or Coffee Shop
The Cafe
at the Museum

Manchester Museum’s cafe is run by the people behind award-winning cafe Teacup Kitchen. The menu features home-baked cakes, the finest loose leaf teas and breakfast, as well as a wide selection of mains and meals for kids.

Manchester Academy music venue on Oxford Road Manchester.
Manchester
Music venue
Manchester Academy

The Manchester Academy is a mid size, modern warehouse venue adjacent to the University of Manchester Students’ Union. It lacks any architectural merit and has always been a difficult place…

Manchester
Shop
Want Not Waste

Want Not Waste is a student-run, not-for-profit zero waste shop operating out of Academy 1 at the University of Manchester Students’ Union.

Universally Manchester Festival 6-9 June 2024
Manchester
The University of Manchester

Celebrating its 200th year in 2024, The University of Manchester is the largest single-site university in the UK, and boasts come incredible cultural institutions, found on campus, across Manchester and…

Manchester
Bar or Pub
Big Hands

Big Hands is the one-time haunt of legendary Manchester band Elbow; it’s shabby, loud and dark, with a jukebox and excellent roof terrace.

Manchester
Bar or Pub
Kro Bar

Kro Bar, Manchester is an independent pub and music venue housed (somewhat ironically) in the former Temperance Society building.

What's on: Music

A black woman sat down looking to the left.
Until
MusicLeeds
Sound Out Leeds 2024/25

Leeds International Concert Season is on a mission to push boundaries, expand horizons, and ask the question: ‘What haven’t we heard?’ as it presents its city-spanning Sound Out Leeds series.

from £10.00
Two dancers and orchestra on stage
Until
DanceManchester
Dance:Music at the RNCM

Through a treasure trove of concerts, the RNCM’s initiative Dance:Music explores the symbiotic relationship between music and dance.

from £0.00
A musician looking into the distance.
Until
MusicManchester
RNCM Spring Season 2025

From classical masterpieces to cutting edge contemporary works, world-renowned soloists to homegrown talent, the RNCM spring season has it all.

from £8
FKA TWIGS
MusicManchester
FKA Twigs at Aviva Studios

One of the must-see gigs of the year comes as GRAMMY-nominated, multidisciplinary artist FKA twigs performs at Aviva Studios.

from £37.50

Culture Guides

Mohair Man, 1991, by Dave Swindells
Exhibitions in the North

Cinematic sets, 90s nightclub photography and even new gallery - we have a great mix of exhibitions for you this month.

Poet Imtiaz Dharker. Photo by Ayesha Dharker
Literature Events in the North

It's like the Woolies pick'n'mix counter this month in live literature land – so much choice, we're not sure where to start digging in.

Theatre in Manchester and the North
Theatre in the North

DaDaFest’s 40th anniversary line-up, contemporary reimaginings and outlandish fringe, check out our top theatre picks for spring onwards.

We shelter here sometimes promo image. Featuring My Dog Sighs inside and abandoned building.
Cinema in the North

David Lynch, International Women's Day and Manchester Film Festival are amongst our cinematic highlights this March.

GROVE
Music in the North

We’re championing all things underground this month, with a selection of gigs and festivals that embrace the strange.

Classical Music in the North

Read our latest highlights from the live classical music offer in Manchester and the North, taking in a number of the region's most cherished orchestral forces and venues.