Here’s the question – you’re a band that has never broken the mainstream, but no longer are you riding the wave of critical acclaim or commercial hype. Stripped of a record label and financial backing, what do you do?

In more and more cases it appears you do it yourself. Hence The Sunshine Underground arrived in the cosy confines of the Green Door Store to promote their fan-funded third album.

The Shropshire-via-Leeds trio’s enthusiasm showed no sign of waning though, as they ploughed on with their danceable brand of electro-infused indie.

Commercial Breakdown and Borders can’t accurately be described as hits, but their small arsenal of fan favourites was fired off with alarming speed, leaving the remaining set to be peppered liberally with current material. Was it confidence or craziness? Maybe they were past worrying.

The blips and beeps that signalled the arrival of It Is Only You and Don’t Stop gave credence to the influence of dance music that has long been spoken of by the band, but still they have more in common with terrace chants than the strobe light of a Balearic club.

Not that there’s anything wrong with that. The Sunshine Underground were, as ever, fantastic. They sounded tighter than they probably ever have.

That’s what makes it so frustrating that the question remains over how long bands like them can financially sustain themselves before a more grown-up lifestyle swallows them up out of necessity.