If you were looking for big screens, stage dives, flashy light displays, major rock 'n' roll statements and humorous between-song banter, well, you were always going to go home disappointed.
Likewise, if you were expecting a shy, subdued bedroom troubadour to take the stage for a set of sad, introspective songs dedicated to loneliness, you'd be wrong on that count too.
That's because Jake Bugg has grown up remarkably since he was last here all of nine months ago, shedding many of the expectations and reputations that have built up around the fast-rising star.
For starters, Bugg was playing an Auckland Town Hall rammed with screaming, dancing fans that numbered at least twice as many as last time.
And, thanks to the addition of last year's rockier, Rick Rubin-produced second album Shangri La, Bugg's setlist has grown in size too, this time whipping through more than 20 songs in a rollicking, rowdy set that ran to an expanded 75 minutes.