The Frames - Olympia Theatre

Given a fresh lease of life with the release of their fourth album, For The Birds, The Frames have slowly but surely clawed their…

Given a fresh lease of life with the release of their fourth album, For The Birds, The Frames have slowly but surely clawed their way back from being but a memory to being a rock band very much in the here and now.

Employing a full-frontal assault, and fusing essentially folk musings with a mixture of post-rock sensibilities and Pixies-like intensity, on Friday night they came across as somewhat more than local heroes made good.

Using a sequence of archetypal amateur snapshots as a backdrop to the music, The Frames music is now as big as the stages they tread on.

Whether mouse-quiet or tiger-loud, there is a visceral quality to their music that defies the usual cliches. Front man Glen Hansard appears to revel in their new-found freedom from the strictures of the corporate rock industry, awed by the beauty of several moments.

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Friends come and go (David Kitt, Paddy Casey), cover versions are sung (The Waterboys' Whole Of The Moon, The Pixies' Debaser and - please don't ask - Rolf Harris's Two Little Boys). Fists are raised in transcendental salutes and celebrations. Hugs abound.

Above it all, a band that many had been written off as unambitious and occasionally pretentious prove themselves capable of mysteriously turning around their fortunes.

An amateur-hour, no-safety-net busking ambience might prevail (which, indeed, might prove to be their biggest self-styled beautiful mistake), but, really, when a gig is as good as this, virtually anything is forgiven.

The Frames tour Ireland throughout April. This week they play UL, Limerick, April 4th; Curracloe Hotel, Wexford, April 6th and The Lobby, Cork, April 7th. For further dates, see The Ticket each Wednesday

Jane Coyle

Jane Coyle is a contributor to The Irish Times specialising in culture