Inside the Hordern Pavilion tonight there’s a collective hum, the sound of a crowd ready to time travel. Bloc Party’s return to Australian stages is less about nostalgia and more about presence — two decades on from Silent Alarm, their angular, restless energy still pulses in the room.
Young The Giant set the tone with a warm, open-armed performance. For many in the crowd, it’s a first chance to see the Californian band live in 14 years, a mix of discovery and familiarity running through the room. Their choruses rise and unfold easily in a space like this, pulling the early evening crowd into a communal sway. Frontman Sameer Gadhia talks about Mind Over Matter—a song that initially flopped when they released it during a period of experimentation but has since become one of their most streamed tracks—saying it’s proof that you should always follow your art and your heart.








By the time Bloc Party walk out, the atmosphere is dense with anticipation. The Pavilion feels like it’s holding its breath: friends linking arms, people adjusting positions to see over the heads in front, phones clutched but mostly forgotten. There’s a quiet sense of shared history in the room, the kind that comes from growing up with these songs in the background.
The crowd’s energy swings between ecstatic and reflective, and there’s a sense that this 20-year mark isn’t just a celebration of a band’s longevity — it’s a reminder of how much the scene they helped shape still matters. The sound is sharp and loud, the beats taut, and even before the first chorus, the Hordern is already a mass of motion.






















Bloc Party head to Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, Brisbane and NZ next. Go HERE for tickets.
Images Deb Pelser
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