Drug Church open proceedings with a challenge. Aiming for 100 crowdsurfers over the barricade at 7pm might seem ambitious, but Patrick Kindlon isn’t the type to take ‘no’ for an answer. “I’ve said this each evening and it’s important, I feel,” the frontman says, with a poet’s cadence even in his between-song banter. “We are the opening band this evening, and it’s our responsibility to set the tone...” In truth, the New York punks channel neither the randiness of the headliners nor the anarchic madness of main support Denzel Curry. In terms of originality and uncompromising verve, however, they set an absurdly high standard. Dissections of the 21st century experience, Fun’s Over and Weed Pin may have been born in pokey sweatboxes but they rule the Hydro’s grand stage.
Denzel Curry whips on in a blur of edgy hip-hop, cool, with a balaclava-like snood pulled up over his head for the first section of his set. Glasgow doesn’t go in for posturing, mind, with a cracking barb murmured from the crowd: “Does he realise how much that thing looks like a foreskin?” It’s fitting, in a way, as the Florida firebrand’s 45-minute set is turgid with big dick energy. The 2000s alt. metal scene from which Deftones emerged was indebted to rap music, and it’s a fascinating to observe how the influence has come full-circle, with BLACK FLAG FREESTYLE and HIT THE FLOOR (replete with a nod to Drowning Pool) drawing tone and texture from the world of rock – and a cover of RATM’s Bulls On Parade goes down a storm. If you’re going to make a song called GOATED, both your rhymes and confidence levels need to be through the roof. Fortunately, that’s exactly what Denzel delivers.