If you already caught this show, much will be familiar: the giant angel mosh-clap for Kool-Aid, the weird but funny Daryl Palumbo video for his part on AmEN!, Shadow Moses being set against a frozen, Game Of Thrones backdrop, with its ‘This is sempiternal’ break still one of the most exciting live moments in modern metal. But there’s new stuff, too, namely their take on Oasis’ Wonderwall, which is absolutely storming. And, actually, underlines BMTH’s ‘just go for the biggest thing you can think of’ approach, making it something wholly theirs.
It is, though, in the balance between sky-high production values and visceral, human connection that they continue to succeed. For every bit of CGI, PlayStation-looking NeX GEn narrative on the jumbotron, there’s a call for bigger, fiercer pits. For all the fire and choreographed effects, you realise there’s no other festival headliners demanding that, “I wanna see some blood.” Even when Oli goes full stadium rock, requesting people get on one another’s shoulders and hold up their phones, there’s an Alan Partridge tang: “I want a condensed Bon Jovi concert.”
Who, actually, is a peer of BMTH now. You might not hear the New Jersey cowboy calling for Germany to “Make me fucking proud” by giving him “a big, fat fucking circle-pit”, but this unvarnished banter among so much perfectly-executed grandiosity is part of what makes Horizon so brilliant at such a level as this. It keeps them human, the same lads they were 15 years ago. Just with more explosions.