The people of Norwich certainly looked good on the dancefloor as they boogied the night away to Arctic Monkeys' impressive back catalogue of hits.

The indie rock band brought its latest tour to Carrow Road on Wednesday night and it follows the release of its seventh album The Car.

Before the high-octane set began, support acts The Mysterines and The Hives got the crowd raring to go.

READ MORE: All the pictures as Arctic Monkeys rock Carrow Road

Norwich Evening News: The Arctic Monkeys perform at Carrow Road in Norwich Picture: Thomas Horne The Arctic Monkeys perform at Carrow Road in Norwich Picture: Thomas Horne (Image: Newsquest)

With the audience nicely warmed up, Arctic Monkeys swaggered onto the stage with frontman Alex Turner oozing charisma and wearing a lounge suit with cravat and aviator sunglasses. 

The band began with The View from the Afternoon from its 2006 debut number-one album and this was quickly followed by Brianstorm and Snap Out of It.

Songs from the new album The Car got a great reception, particularly the ballad Perfect Sense which had fans waving their phones with flashlights on. 

Norwich Evening News: The Arctic Monkeys perform at Carrow Road in Norwich Picture: Thomas Horne The Arctic Monkeys perform at Carrow Road in Norwich Picture: Thomas Horne (Image: Newsquest)

But it was the classic Arctic Monkeys anthems that got the biggest reaction and even had mosh pits forming - with Fluorescent Adolescent, Do I Wanna Know?, Mardy Bum and I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor all crowd favourites. 

READ MORE: Fans queue for EIGHT hours to bag front-row spot at Arctic Monkeys in Norwich

Turner's rich tone and synth instrumentals from the band echoed around Carrow Road in haunting fashion and it truly was a masterclass in music and lyrics. 

Norwich Evening News: The Arctic Monkeys rock Carrow Road Picture: Thomas HorneThe Arctic Monkeys rock Carrow Road Picture: Thomas Horne (Image: Newsquest)

However, it would have been great to have more interaction with the audience to punctuate the full-throttle set and fill the breaks of changing instruments. 

Back in 2005, when Arctic Monkeys played at The Waterfront, this newspaper reviewed them and wrote: "If this performance is anything to go by, those in attendance may one day be able to tell disbelieving friends: “I was there”.

Fast forward to 2023, and on a much larger scale, fans will still be able to brag about bagging a spot on this tour.