Travelling the furthest of tonight’s bands, Iress hail from LA, forming their slow, brooding flavour of metal since 2010. It’s their first time in the UK, and this much is very clear from the rapturous response they draw tonight. Vocalist Michelle Malley is full of smiles, her eyes twinkling as they launch into the bitter-sweet ‘Blush’ from the 2023 EP, Solace. I must admit that Iress were new to me before this show, but I’m immediately captivated by the soaring sincerity of their sound. Like healthyliving, they’ll be surely going onto playlists alongside Chelsea Wolfe, Slowcrush, King Woman and Miserable.
Watching Iress perform is a truly marvellous experience, and I’ll wager that more than a few tears were shed in the audience tonight. The dreamy, doomy quartet perform with confidence, nuance and passion, with a particular sensitivity to dynamics, moving smoothly from a scream to a sigh, a thundering riff to a lightly rippling melody. Their set explores songs from latest album Sleep Now, In Reverse alongside tracks from older albums, some slightly “played around with” for the stage.
With their singer cradling a gorgeous matt-black Fender Jaguar at one stage, Iress get more moving as they get heavier. But my strongest memories of this show are Michelle’s most aggressive moments, propelling beautiful angst into a stunned, soporific crowd as the band closes with ‘Wolves’ from 2020’s Flaw.
My last words have to be on Michelle’s vocals: I don’t know where this emotion comes from, but it pours from every bittersweet note, emerging as soaring, earnest cries, near-orgasmic moans, and quiet, whispered contemplation.
A few flowers remain at the end, shredded yet graceful. Iress don’t return for an encore, but the crowd won’t accept defeat and keep baying for more until well after the lights have come up.
I’ve emerged from this show with tears in my eyes and three fine new bands to explore: utterly exhausted but so glad I came.