Deftones ooze a different kind of confidence. If daring themselves not to be outdone by two of the sharpest acts in modern alternative every night didn’t make it clear that they’re revelling in this renaissance of their popularity, seeing Chino Moreno bounding through spring-loaded opener Be Quiet And Drive (Far Away) with more energy than he did when that song first came out will do the trick. That it’s one of only two songs from Around The Fur showcased in this setlist underlines their self-assured swagger, with a 10-ton rendition of Locked Club from last year’s Private Music, then a munchy Rocket Skates from 2010’s Diamond Eyes finding their mark before that album’s rollercoaster title-track careers through to get the crowd pumping.
And so we go. Digital Bath’s eerie blend of lust and fear gets beneath the skin to tremble the audience’s bones. Private Music’s My Mind Is A Mountain, Souvenir and Infinite Source sound bigger than on record, touring guitarist Lance Jackman a worthy understudy for Stef Carpenter, who continues to avoid shows outside the U.S. Brilliantly tasteful production elevates the step up into cavernous rooms like this: strip-lit risers and that colossal high-definition video display allowing them to switch between minimalist and maximalist aesthetics in the space of a single song. The slowly rising sun for Change (In The House Of Flies) is genuinely breathtaking, adding a sense of scale and occasion that no number of pyro stacks or confetti canons could hope to match.
Twenty songs slip by in the blink of an eye. Closing out the main set, Milk Of The Madonna feels like a bold choice, a band doing whatever they want regardless of the scale of the gig, but the Deftones version of a show-stopping encore underlines their qualifications to headline the major festivals that will doubtless soon come calling. Cherry Waves drags us into a pool of woozy psychedelia. My Own Summer (Shove It) thrillingly drags us right back out. Then 7 Words heads abrasively back to the beginning to spin us off into the night. That song’s pronounced nu-metal inflections thrill in their own right, but they’re also a reminder that Deftones never really
were nu-metal. And although many of the bands from that genre are also having a moment right now, there’s no trading on nostalgia from Chino and the gang, just heroes still at the top of their game.