Allo Darlin' might not be pushing boundaries but they are an antidote to a complicated world.

The London four-piece led by Aussie singer Elizabeth Morris write simple, catchy, bittersweet songs.

Rallying through an hour’s worth of material from the recent third album, We Come From The Same Place, plus picks from Europe and debut album Allo Darlin’, their unmistakable honesty felt like a breath of fresh air.

Morris’s vocals, not the strongest but certainly the surest, were one reason why.

On Romance And Adventure, which nearly never made the new album before their manager intervened, she stressed with candour, “I’m just tired of being strong”.

With its post-punk guitar, the track might even nod to a new direction, but most wanted to hear the effortless indie, driven by the pretence-free guitars and drums of Paul Rains and Mikey Collins. We Come From The Same Place’s eager beat and simple lick felt like motif for the band.

While the twee disco love-letter Dreaming, with Morris trading glances and vocals with bassist Bill Botting after he’d sipped a late-night anti-rock-and-roll coffee, sounded as good as it did when Fortuna Pop first put it out in 2010.

Allo Darlin’ are a community club rather than Premier League. Who else would play an encore song because the punter said please?