The four tracks aired off Skeletá slot into this brilliantly. Indeed, the band arrive with the as-yet unheard Peacefield, swiftly followed by the less-than-a-week-old Lachryma. What balls. What audacity. What genius that they still manage go from nought to 100 with it all from the second the first lights go up. With that as a starting point, by the time they wrap up two hours and change later with such rapturous versions of Dance Macabre and Square Hammer as they do here, they are so good all you can do is collapse into giddy joy.
Ghost already won years ago, a fact spoken to by the legions of Papas and evil nuns filling Manchester’s taxis and trains tonight, not to mention an almost total domination of Ghost shirts in the AO’s postcode. But even for a band with a magical ascent already logged, this all feels like a moment. Iron Maiden had the legendary World Slavery Tour, Metallica had their early ’90s Black Album run, and Slipknot truly arrived with the enormous Iowa campaign. With the Skeletour, Ghost can now count themselves among that rare group of bands whose blossoming moments didn’t just do for themselves, but will be remembered as a waymarker in metal’s history books.
“How do you like it?” enquires a delighted Papa, following an apocalyptic Mummy Dust. “How did I do?”
As if you have to ask, Father.