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Of Monsters and Men – Bristol Beacon

A full house at the Bristol Beacon welcomed Of Monsters and Men on Friday, bringing The Mouse Parade tour into a venue built for clarity and balance. In a room that rewards detail, the Icelandic seven-piece delivered a performance that felt both expansive and tightly controlled.

Opening the evening, Árný Margrét stepped onto the vast Beacon stage alone with her guitar and held it with quiet authority. The venue regularly accommodates full bands and even orchestras, yet she filled the theatre without needing either. Between songs she admitted she does not speak much and appeared slightly nervous in the silence, but it only sharpened the focus. The music spoke for her. Her voice carried effortlessly to the back of the hall, and the stillness in the room was telling. It was an impressive display of presence – proof that scale does not demand excess.

Of Monsters and Men began with “Television Love”, a dramatic and cinematic opening that immediately drew the audience into their world. Rather than relying on volume, the band built tension through precision, allowing the arrangement to unfold with quiet authority before swelling outward. Nanna Bryndís Hilmarsdóttir and Ragnar Þórhallsson remain the band’s centre of gravity, their dual vocals balanced and emotionally charged against warm amber and cool blue lighting.

The set moved seamlessly between new material and established favourites. “Dream Team” and “The Actor” felt fully embedded in the narrative of the night, while “King and Lionheart” and “Dirty Paws” brought the first visible surge from the Bristol crowd. Mid-set highlights “Alligator” and “Empire” added weight and momentum, percussion cutting cleanly through the Beacon’s pristine acoustics.

Control defined the performance. Songs were allowed to build patiently, crescendos landing with genuine impact rather than forced spectacle. “Styrofoam Cathedral” and “Ordinary Creature” pushed the intensity, before “Little Talks” delivered one of the evening’s most unifying moments. A chorus of voices filled the hall.

An encore of “Love Love Love” and the piano-led “Fruit Bat” closed the night with warmth and composure. In Bristol, Of Monsters and Men proved that drama and restraint are not opposites – in the right room, they amplify each other.

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