Queen Square, Bristol
1st August 2025
Photography by Sam Wilson (@samuelwilsonphotography)


Charlie Pinhey
Music journalist & online sub-editor for CLUNK Magazine based in Bristol. Fumbling around on social media trying to tell people about my interviews and reviews. Follow me @charvawritesstuff
IDLES kick off their first of two UK shows in Bristol’s Queen Square with support from Soft Play and Lambrini Girls
โSplit the crowd from the left to the right all the way to the back,โ Joe Talbot spat like a disgruntled teacher, โplease.โ He finished with a flourish of soft sarcasm. Shocked into action, the crowd parted once more as they had for Soft Play and Lambrini Girls several times each earlier in proceedings. Feet scraped sideways, trawling the ground and rippled back through the crowd.
Friday was the first half of IDLESโ Block Party shows at Queen Square, Bristol, for their only UK tour dates of the year. And what better place for the band to play than Bristol? โJust round the corner from here is where I went to uni, where I met the most brilliant people and decided I wanted to make music,โ Talbot continued after โDivide and Conquerโ. He pointed off to the far corner of the square, โAnd over there is where I got arrested.โ
IDLESโ DNA is woven into Bristol. Walking down to Queen Square, I stopped at a mural of the band next to a laundrette in Bedminster. Itโs a few years old now but has a conductive property that captures some of IDLESโ magnetised charge. โIt goes and it goes and it goesโฆโ Like the mural, the same charge existed only tenfold in the crowd on Friday, turned on by Lambrini Girls and Soft Play, and again when Jon Beavisโs drums kicked in for โColossusโ. Like one of many fizzing molecules in a grassy petri dish I was ready to collide, and I was ready to love.
IDLES hammered through their twenty-song set with fire, rage and a healthy dose of reflection, but it was the words spoken in between that were particularly uplifting and simultaneously poignant. Joe Talbot took a beat to dedicate โMotherโ to his father who taught him how to be loving, kind and be creative. He also encouraged anyone in the crowd to speak up about addiction and mental health issues, โspeaking about it might save your life or someone elseโs life.โ
Talbotโs words washed over the crowd and resonated in the same way as Soft Playโs โEverything and Nothingโ which also tackles loss. Live, the Soft Play track was stripped back with Laurie Vincent playing a mandolin, its softer tones allowing for Isaac Holmanโs guttural vocals to take centre stage.
The show was also punctuated with support for Palestine with QR codes shone out to the crowd for them to donate to the charity Medical Aid for Palestinians. โFree Palestino!โ came the shout from the stage and the crowd together whilst people donated what they could.
Mark Bowen and Lee Kiernan dove into the crowd a few times and rocked out with Aiden, a young lad from the crowd, brought on stage to play guitar for IDLESโ final track โRottweilerโ. Adam Devonshireโs bass thrummed throughout as the mosh pit swirled into its final maelstrom and the walls of the buildings surrounding the square seemed to shake for their final track.
As well as being a homecoming of sorts, it was poetic to have the gig at Queen Square- one of Bristolโs commercial hubs; laying bare IDLES, Soft Play & Lambrini Girlsโ dogged determination for foundational change, their voices unified and powerful in the wake of global turmoil.











Photography by Sam Wilson (@samuelwilsonphotography)
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