It’s been a busy few years for this Eel Pie Island bunch.

A clutch of albums, relocation to Texas and a hectic touring schedule has seen them develop from eccentric hipsters with something to prove to a rounded indie-pop act.

There’s a high-pitched shriek from the young crowd as Mystery Jets arrive on stage.

The band has matured while their audience are getting younger.

The Spotify generation have ousted the vinyl junkies. But that’s nothing new, and it doesn’t seem to irk the band who clearly display their influences through their music. A cover of Jet by Wings demonstrates this.

‘The band The Beatles could have been’, we are informed in true Alan Partridge-style.

Opening track ‘Someone Purer’ sets the scene and tells us tonight is going to be about the latest album Radlands.

The opening bass line to Young Love really excites the crowd. It looms over the rest of the set like the better, older sibling.

It’s a hit from the album Twenty One and is a highlight. Along with encore tracks Half In Love With Elizabeth and Two Doors Down it seems noticeable that it’s the 2008 album that throws the heavy punches.

Disappointingly, there’s nothing from debut album Making Dens.

Tonight is the new generation of Mystery Jets with Greatest Hits, Radlands and The Hale Bop. Tracks that deserve a second listen as an album in its entirety.

The set is rounded off with Lost In Austin as the group display a comfortable maturity.