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Skunk Anansie: O2 Apollo, Manchester – Live Review
O2 Apollo, Manchester
4th April 2025
British rock icons Skunk Anansie play Manchester as part of their European and UK headline tour, promoting their hugely anticipated new studio album The Painful Truth. It’s their seventh studio collection and first in nine years, to be released on May 23rd. This show felt like a celebration of both legacy and rebirth, blending blistering punk with metal, the band whipped the crowd into a euphoric frenzy. Claire Glover from Louder Than War checks it out
Warming up the crowd tonight, or more like setting it ablaze, was London’s So Good, and yes, exactly that. So Good by name, and so fucking good by nature. Frontwoman Sophie stormed the stage, donning her signature look, short skirt, long socks, and a beret…exuding untouchable cool. Flanked by fellow singers/ dancers and bandmates in pink ski masks, the vibe was half protest rally, half chaotic rave, and the energy was electric.
To loud screams and cheers, Skunk Anansie make a powerful and theatrical entrance, with iconic frontwoman Skin cloaked in a black flowing cloak which billows dramatically under the strobe lighting. It’s instantly spellbinding. The band launch straight into This Means War and the thunderous Charlie Big Potato, sending the sold-out crowd of 3,000+ at the Apollo into a frenzy. Every beat and every lyric is soaked up by an audience who’ve clearly been waiting for this moment. Skin’s voice is a weapon, fierce and flawless, cutting through the dazzling visuals during the anthemic Because of You.
Between songs, she takes a moment to welcome the crowd with genuine warmth, her soft-spoken voice, a stark and beautiful contrast to the powerhouse heard during the show. She even handles a woman’s front-row flash of breasts with cheeky grace before reminding everyone about the band’s highly anticipated new album, The Painful Truth.
Guitarist Ace, bassist Cass, and drummer Mark are tight, electric, and locked into each other’s rhythm. There’s an effortless chemistry here, honed over decades, and it radiates off the stage. Skin pauses again to speak from the heart, about freedom, safety, and the basic human right to exist without fear. “It’s not just politics,” she says with intensity, “it’s about empathy.” Then she yells, “Slash the fascists” and the roar from the crowd is deafening. This is what Skunk Anansie have always stood for, breaking boundaries, smashing stereotypes, and delivering a sound that’s as urgent and relevant now as it was when they first exploded onto the scene. This isn’t just a gig, it’s a rallying cry and Manchester heard it loud and clear.
Next, the final hammer blow The Skank Heads. Skin calls for a female mosh pit, hurls herself into the crowd, and crowd-surfs like the absolute legend she is, riding a tidal wave of arms and screams in a moment of unfiltered punk rock glory.
With over 5 million records sold, Skunk Anansie have proven time and again that they’re a force to be reckoned with, unapologetic, unrelenting, and always vital. As the crowd drowns the Apollo in a tidal wave of applause, Skin takes a heartfelt pause. “We’ve been playing in Manchester since we formed 1994, but this… this has been the most phenomenal night we’ve ever had here.” skin says. Sure, she might say that to all the crowds, but tonight, it truly feels real.
Skunk Anansie deliver a masterclass in Power, Politics, and Pure Punk Rock Energy tonight.
Please note: Use of these images in any form without permission is illegal. If you wish to contact the photographer please email: mel@mudkissphotography.co.uk
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Skunk Anansie can be found at Twitter | Facebook | and their website here:
All words by Claire Glover. More writing by Claire on Louder Than War can be found at her author profile here. You can also find her on Twitter | Bluesky
All photos by Melanie Smith – Louder Than War | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Portfolio
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