Plan B was one night of current and fresh entertainment. It all kicked off with the huge club vibe from the first support act and Radio 1 favourite, Rudimental.

For a largely young audience, it was a great start and set the pace, before the second so-called support, Labrinth, took to the stage. His music is big, happy sing-a-long pop which the crowd loved. But even he had nothing on the main star of the show, Plan B a.k.a Ben Drew.

He came to Bournemouth, sang his heart out, and looked like he was having too good a time to leave at the end.

The show was split into two halves, with the first seeing him suited up as the alter-ego of his first album, The Defamation of Strickland Banks.

Hits included She Said and Love Goes Down, which were performed with a big band, all dressed smartly, before a short interlude by a mesmerising beatboxer, Faith SFX.

Plan B then returned for part two, featuring second album, iLL Manors, the soundtrack to his film of the same name.

Against tunes including Playing with Fire and Lost My Way, the stage was turned into a London housing estate, with the help of projectors.

The focus became gang culture, as he played clips of the movie in the background, and videos from the London riots.

In a time when most music artists are churning out tracks that could be released at any time, Plan B is so up-to-date and time-relevant.

So if you're bored of the same songs on repeat and are looking for something different, there's always Plan B.