Gig Review: Jared James Nichols Nottingham Gig 2025
Jared James Nichols Live Blues Power at the Rescue Rooms Nottingham
There is a distinct shift in dynamic when an artist moves from the cavernous main hall of Rock City to the tighter, boxed-in intensity of the Rescue Rooms. When the Jared James Nichols Nottingham Gig 2025 tour date was announced, the immediate thought was that this would be less of a standard show and more of a gathering of the faithful. Nichols has become something of a local favourite in this city, having previously commanded the big stage next door as support for Mr. Big. But seeing him in this intimate setting offered a completely different beast of a performance.
Walking in from the December cold, the atmosphere inside was already charged. The room was filling up fast, buzzing with the specific kind of tension you get when an audience knows they are about to see a musician who refuses to dial it in.
Dan Byrne Sets the Standard


Before the main event, the crowd was treated to a masterclass in vocal control from Dan Byrne. If anyone was expecting a gentle warm-up, they were quickly corrected. Byrne has been making serious waves in the UK scene recently, and tonight he showed exactly why.
There is a richness to Byrne’s voice that hints at the classic rock giants of the 70s, think Paul Rodgers or a young Coverdale but delivered with a modern, hungry edge, however tonight he was strugging with a cold but reassured he will be back. He commanded the stage with an ease that belied the fact he was the support act, delivering a set of soulful, hard-driving rock that woke up the Thursday night crowd in seconds. By the time he hit the final high notes of his set, the room was fully engaged, proving he is far more than just a support act; he is a headliner in waiting. It was the perfect, high-quality appetiser for the blues power to come.
The Jared James Nichols Nottingham Gig 2025 Experience
When Nichols finally walked on, he took up most of the available real estate. He is a towering presence, but any intimidation factor vanishes the second he cracks a grin. There is no ego here, just a man and a battered Gibson Les Paul, ready to work.
Launching straight into “Easy Come, Easy Go”, the sound was immediate and huge. For the uninitiated, Nichols is famous for his unorthodox “pick-less” technique. He attacks the strings with his bare fingers, anchoring his hand and clawing at the instrument to extract a tone that is jagged, raw, and incredibly vocal. You can hear the flesh snapping against the strings. Standing this close to the stage, you really get to see the mechanics of it—the physical effort required to wrestle those signature growls and squeals out of the wood and wire.

A Setlist of Heavy Hitters
The setlist was a well-oiled machine designed to keep the momentum surging. Tracks like the new single “Ghost” were delivered with a rhythmic ferocity that had the crowd locked in. “Good Time Girl” brought a swaggering groove that loosened up the room; this wasn’t a mosh-pit frenzy, but a sea of people nodding in unison, totally absorbed in the musicianship. Nichols has a way of making complex blues runs look effortless, but it is the heavy, rhythmic chug that actually gets the heads moving.

A standout moment of the night was undoubtedly “Threw Me to the Wolves”. It is a track that allows the band to flex their dynamic range, dropping the volume right down to a whisper before slamming back in with a wall of fuzz.
Mid-set, Nichols hopped off the stage again — this time not just to greet the faithful, but to hand over the goods. He leaned into the barrier, letting the entire front row tap and thump the strings of his Les Paul like some kind of communal blessing. Then, in a move that should honestly go down in Nottingham folklore, he handed the guitar to a guy in the crowd who proceeded to rip out a solo so sharp and confident it had the room roaring. For a moment, it felt like Nichols had cloned himself — and the roof very nearly came off.

Later in the night, between songs, a woman called out asking him to shift slightly so she could get a clean photo of the sign behind him. Without missing a beat, Nichols deadpanned, “Would you like me to move the mic stand and go to Greggs to get you a sausage roll?” The room erupted.
The Finale: Grunge Meets Blues
However, he didn’t leave it there. Instead of a standard blues jam to finish, the band dropped Nails. It was a masterstroke for a closer. Nichols’ flattened the place in a way only he can.
As the night drew to a close, the intensity only ramped up. A colossal cover of Black Sabbath’s “War Pigs” had the entire room chanting the lyrics back at the stage—a ritual that never gets old in a UK rock venue.
Jared James Nichols Nottingham The Rock News Verdict
If you were looking for technical perfection without soul, you came to the wrong place. But if you wanted passion, volume, and virtuosity, the Jared James Nichols Nottingham Gig 2025 was a triumph. Seeing him in the intimacy of the Rescue Rooms was a reminder that blues-rock is best served up close and loud. It was a masterclass in tone and tenacity that left ears ringing and faces smiling.
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