Kicking off with the sublime The Sea, taken from the hugely-popular album Deep Calm, Morcheeba proved they know how to please their fans.

Better known for making cool and collected music rather than being ego-driven stars, Morcheeba have never had a huge chart-stormer and are unlikely to be mobbed when walking down the High Street.

However, as their album sales attest, they are a band who do what they do with little flash but plenty of flair.

In the classy surrounds of the Dome Concert Hall, the band, led by the seductively-voiced Skye Edwards, launched into a set which spanned their four albums (Who Can You Trust?, Deep Calm, Fragments Of Freedom and the recently released Charango) with a surprisingly rocky/hip-hop-driven edge.

Morcheeba are on the chill-out check list of every muso in the country so it was surprising to hear them warm up with a dance-inducing mix of rawkish strumming from guitarist Ross Godfrey and scratching from brother Paul on decks.

Taking in the standards of Part Of The Process and Trigger Hippie as well as lesser-known songs such as the title track from Charango and an unlikely cover of Dolly Parton's Jolene, an eclectic mix was presented by a band who have become somewhat pigeon-holed.

Anyone who went just to hear the sounds from Big Calm would have had their horizons broadened by a collective that surely has a lot more to offer.