"I wish we were organised," sighed Rebecca Taylor, one half of boy/girl duo Slow Club, midway through their headline set at the Unitarian Church as they discussed which song to play next.

But this general feeling that anything could happen added to the casual and friendly atmosphere of the show, which they admittedly opened in an extremely slick way – commandeering the piano at the back of the room and performing their first song while hidden from view behind the audience.

The Sheffield-based duo spent most of the set previewing new songs they were currently putting together for the follow-up to last year's debut album Yeah So. As with their previous work it underlined their versatility, and ability to move from a rowdy rave-up to a beautiful Americana ballad at the drop of a hat.

Rebecca was equally comfortable switching between her basic drum kit to acoustic guitar and back again, while bandmate Charles Watson relied on his electric guitar played through a gorgeous vintage amp.

The main characteristic of their sound was the way their two voices combined together, whether it was on the downbeat romance of There Is No Good Way To Say I Am Leaving You, or the ecstatic energy of Because We Are Dead.

The onstage banter between the two and the crowd underlined the fact they don't take themselves too seriously, although the two amazing unamplified songs they used to close their set suggested that perhaps the rest of the world should.