Irish Daily Mirror

These rock Kings are still on fire

- With GARRY BUSHELL

Kings Of Leon

The fighting Followills are back! The three hard-living brothers and their cousin from Nashville set the charts alight with Use Somebody and the carnal arson of Sex on Fire. But have they lost their swagger?

Not a bit of it. This is modern stadium rock at its most self confident; broad of appeal and uplifting in feel. The Tennessee foursome recorded their eighth album in a lockdown bubble and few rock fans will be able to resist its emotional sweep.

The Bandit captures the gritty essence of the band, full of bounce and vigour.

“Reckless abandon, rundown and stranded, must catch the bandit,” sings Caleb, a man who could make a shopping list sound passionate. 100,000 People positively pulsates. Jared’s brooding bass underpins lyrics that echo the frustratio­ns of our closeddown lives: “Wide awake, encased in a dream, everything is not what it seems/all your time is heaven sent, days and nights all start to blend.”

The title track is equally dreamy, beginning with a simple guitar phrase which morphs into something close to tolling bells. It’s a restrained, soulful number punctuated by jagged chords.

Matthew’s lead guitar work is most effective on Stormy Weather, with simple but enchanting notes that bend and stretch with the slow suppleness of an advanced yoga class.

At times, Kings Of Leon recall U2, not least on Golden Restless Age, an upbeat song with an atmospheri­c anthemic feel. On rockier workouts like Echoing, the four prove they can still party like it’s 2009.

A Wave builds into a tide, reminding us that these songs work best when performed to festival crowds. Let’s hope we don’t have to wait too much longer for them to prove that.

These 11 tracks show that the band once dismissed as “wannabe Strokes” are now kings of the world’s arenas.

GORDON ELLIOTT will learn the cost of the photo that shocked the racing world when he appears on a disrepute charge before the Irish Horseracin­g Regulatory Board today.

The 43-year-old has been at the centre of a storm since a picture of him sitting astride a dead horse — later revealed to be the four-time winner Morgan — on his Co Meath gallops was published on social media on

Saturday. And the Cheltenham Gold Cup and three-time Grand National winner faces a ban from racing at the Referrals Committee hearing, due to begin at 9.30am.

Elliott (left) has already been hit by the removal of horses owned by the Cheveley Park Stud, including unbeaten superstar Envoi Allen (right), who is now in the care of Henry de Bromhead.

Co Waterford-based de Bromhead, who revealed he had received “really helpful” insight from Elliott about the new arrivals, said yesterday: “I feel fortunate that Cheveley Park have decided to send them to us.”

With the Cheltenham Festival set to start in 11 days’ time, the British Horseracin­g Authority will keep close tabs on events today.

Should Elliott’s licence be revoked, a senior member of staff at the Cullentra stable — assisted by jockey Davy Russell — is expected to take the helm and prepare its runners for the four-day meeting.

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