Kickoff to Summer! w/ Metallica’s World Wired Tour + we check in w/ The Cult, The Sword & more (May/June 2017)

Summer is here! And what’s the best way to have a lit summer than catching some of the biggest show on the road!

Metallica – June 16th – ATT Stadium – Arlington, TX

Metal legends Metallica, on the road for their WorldWired Tour, in support of  their latest album, Hardwired…to Self-Destruct, hit the DFW area for the first time since 2009 in support of the previous year’s Death Magnetic LP.

“Metallica does not give a shit,” frontman James Hetfield declared early in the night, announcing an escape from these trying times & offering a place free of judgement, debate or ridicule. His rallying cry for the 60,000 members of the Metallica family in attendance, the majority of whom wore the band’s T-shirts.

Personally it was also the first time I’ve seen the band in almost 6 years & as someone who (along with like everyone I know) when this band comes to town, it’s not just an event, it’s the most happening thing in the world. Growing up obsessing over the minutuae of this band & currently entrenched in the most excellent book Back to the Front that chronicles their most excellent effort Master of Puppets, I was ready.

The first time this band has done a stadium show solely on their own shoulders after being away for so long is a testament unto itself.
They tour only in two-week increments with two weeks off in between. And in between gigs, they fly in and out of the cities they’re playing.
The stage is gargantuan, which stretches the width of the football field, that has the “M” and “A” from their logo on either end of it and is loaded up with pyro, video screens and inflatable balloons.

While naturally I prefer a more intimate setting, it was fun to see such a spectacle, the stadium is spotless & the dynamic of the Metallica has largely calmed. While sure their were younger fans moshing on the floor in the general admission section, largely this crowd was mannered & very appreciative. I consider myself to be a part of that thong as well, with a few matters I took exception to:

For one, the setlist is an odd one & the show is even more perculiarly paced – while the show was certainly enjoyable & I loved hearing the new stuff live, the show for me, never really peaked, like it never quite grew the legs I’ve come to expect.
For the first half 5 of the first 9 songs where from the new LP & then a few singles from the Black Album + a throw-away single from the much maligned Reload era. I kept thinking Creeping Death has got to be next, but it nor anything close to reaching an apex arrived & just like that it seemed the show was over in spite of it’s 2 hour length.

Setlist

Hardwired
Atlas, Rise!
For Whom the Bell Tolls
The Memory Remains
The Unforgiven
Now That We’re Dead
Moth Into Flame
Wherever I May Roam
Halo on Fire
Motorbreath
Sad but True
One
Master of Puppets
Fade to Black
Seek & Destroy

Encore:

Blackened
Nothing Else Matters
Enter Sandman

That’s not to say the show wasn’t fun, nor can we take anything away from the majesty of seeing this stadium full of eager fans having the time of their lives. At the end of the main set they convene on a  mini stage up front to play Seek and Destroy aiming to recreate the garage atmosphere where it was written.

It is this that Metallica still remains & exudes who they are at their core & why 60K packed a stadium to see them 36 years in to their incomparable career. Good times –

 

 

The Cult – May 16th – House of Blues – Dallas, TX 

Bounding on stage with Wildflower to kick off a blistering show, touring in support of their 10th studio album Hidden City. The simplistic stage set had no visual imagery, the focus purely on the music & the artists on stage. The only remaining original members of The Cult is lead singer Ian Astbury and lead guitarist Billy Duffy.

Duffy straddled the right while Astbury commanded center stage by doing his strut & prowl routine & thankfully his voice sounded stronger than the last few times I’ve seen him.

Throwing his signature tambourines around on stage and into the crowd, not much interaction with the other guys in the band (which is a welcome reprieve from a cringe-worthy show a few year where he openly berated them onstage).
However, musically complement each other perfectly along with drummer JoeyTempesta as they powered through the set.

The new music sounds great & effortlessly fits with The Cult’s well-known songs for a well-paced & thoroughly enjoyable show, closing with the hard rocking song Peace Dog, which was such an amazing surprise to wit Astbury humorously taught the audience how to sing the chorus.

Setlist:

Wildflower
Rain
Dark Energy
Honey From a Knife
Love
Lil’ Devil
Gone
Birds of Paradise
Deeply Ordered Chaos
Sweet Soul Sister
Fire Woman
Phoenix
She Sells Sanctuary

Encore: 

Peace Dog
Love Removal Machine

The Sword & ZakK Sabbath – May 26th – Gas Monkey Live – Dallas, TX

So naturally the Sword is a band for me personally & my circle that we do not miss live. Excited as ever to see them kick ass as always, touring in support of the recently released live LP Greetings From….
Despite having a career that’s spanned over a decade, there hasn’t been too much in the way of official live tracks & being such a killer live act, this has been long overdue.

Starting things off on this tour however is Zakk Sabbath which can only really be described as something while totally entertaining, ultimately completely unnecessary, Zakk Wylde playing Black Sabbath songs.

Like why is this happening? I love these songs but I don’t really need to hear them performed by Zakk Wylde & dude, if you played with Ozzy as long as he did, then wind up being in a cover band? Not sure the logic here, but again nothing has ever made sense for me as far as Wylde is concerned.
His whole biker gang getup & his other project Black Label Society is equally irrelevant – We had to joke that he must have some nervous twitch or compulsion to do that harmonic squawk on his guitar because he did every third bar, imagine hearing Paranoid with that shit – laughable & at times embarassing.

I get the connection however as The Sword are clearly influenced heavily by Sabbath – Upon their emergence from the very loudest corner of Austin’s music scene more than a decade ago, they were often dismissed as merely aping the monolithic riffage of  Sabbath & Thin Lizzy.
Five albums later, the Sword has put that sort of thinking to rest & now a stalwart of American heavy metal, the group has helped inspire a new wave of interest in throwback guitar thunder, and not least of all here in their home state.

They definitely have found their own lane, as many were polarized by their most recent studio record High Country & prefer more of their heavier, derivitive sounding material from their first few records. I for one, love this current identity & much to the chagrin of the purists crying foul, this is who this band is. They have truly found themselves & they aren’t looking back & we are all the better for it.

Setlist –

Maiden, Mother & Crone
Seven Sisters
Arcane Montane
The Dreamthieves
High Country
Tears Like Diamonds
The Horned Goddess
Tres Brujas
The Chronomancer I: Hubris
Mist & Shadow
Dying Earth
Seriously Mysterious
Empty Temples
John the Revelator (Blind Willie Johnson cover)

Encore: 

Agartha
Cloak of Feathers
The Hidden Masters

 

Photos –

Roy Turner
Joel Winburne
Calvin Mims

Tomahawk, The Sword & more (Oct 2012)

This was a pretty eventful month full of activity, fun and work. I had just started seeing someone new and we had a great time attending Halloween parties, fesitvals and of course October means post-season baseball.

Corrosion of Conformity – Trees – March 12th – Dallas, TX

A brief history lesson of C.O.C. – For the first ten years of their existence their were a three-piece (sometimes four) punk juggernaut with a blistering sound and a downright frightening image. In the early 1990’s they acquired new member Pepper Keenan, who not only took over on vocals but on the later albums, his taste/persona seemed to take over the whole band. His first record with them, Blind turned them into a straight up Heavy Metal band and then with the next three (and finally commercial success) they became this southern fried, blues-y Pantera-ish entity that made them completely unrecognizable from the former years, especially after drummer Reed Mullin left the band.
If I was being truthful, even though the purest will condemn this, when I want to listen to C.O.C. its those three southern rock albums I like the best, and probably haven’t purposely listened to those early records since I first heard them as a kid.
Well for this tour, Pepper Keenan is absent, (actually in the band Down with Pantera member Phil Anselmo) – Reed Mullin is back, C.O.C. are once again a three piece, just released a new album that’s a complete return to its punk rock roots and this tour they will be playing that stuff and only that stuff to celebrate its full-circle return.
I walked in right as they were starting –

This didn’t feel like some half-baked reunion or an example of diminishing returns, but a testament to immense talent and the elusive endowment of their staying power. They kicked serious ass. I thought I would miss Keenan more than I did, but in fact Mike Dean as I learned is actually a better front man and can engage the crowd better.
Towards the end of their set, a drunkish fratboy came up to me excited having just arrived, asking me of they had played Albatross yet, their one singular hit from the height of the Pepper Keenan era.
Clearly uninformed of the intent of what this tour is all about, while simultaneously appearing as the kind of fan that only knows the band’s biggest hit – this kid was lost. I tried to explain to him that they are not playing this stuff on this tour but his intoxication level prevented him from seeing the big picture. It did not prevent, in fact seemed to encourage his need to make me his new best friend and he literally pinned me to the wall with conversation that I couldn’t get away from. Nice kid, he was there with some other dudes in a completely unknown band who’s name escapes me from Florida on their way to Austin for SXSW on some first-time excitement shit.

Setlist:

Bottom Feeder
Psychic Vampire
Loss for Words
Mad World
Consumed
Seven Days
Your Tomorrow
The Doom
Vote With a Bullet
The Moneychangers
Deliverance
Rat City
Holier

Encore:

Hungry Child
Leeches
Technocracy

The Supersuckers – Lagrange – Dallas,TX

So we finish up our pizza and head across the street to La Grange and guess what? I’m not on the list – That’s two in one night! – I called Jess double-trouble after this. Actually I was on the list but this older woman working the door for some reason refused to look at the list. I can actually see my name on it, but this is my buddy Scott’s place and I wasn’t gonna ruffle any feathers. This night isn’t going so well is it?
Thankfully La Grange has a floor to ceiling front window so we just stood outside and watched as Speedealer were already on.
Great as always and we ran into their drummer Harden who’s an old friend afterwards. After a quick set change, the Supersuckers come out full force –

 

 

 

 

A band that at one time I thought was a local band I’ve seen them so many times, but Jess hadn’t so we endured the cold a little longer until I was freezing and felt ridicoulous for standing out there, so we retreated back over to Trees but inside this time.

 

Dan Deacon – Oct 12th – Club Dada – Dallas

Ok so the following weekend I invited Jess out again for another date – this time to see Dan Deacon. And once again, when we get to Will Call – The guy does NOT see my name on the list – I’m really sweeping this girl off of her feet. We joke that it’s her fault and I call her my good luck charm henceforth.
Finally the guy finds it and in we go.

Dan Deacon’s live performances defy any type of categorization. He does much more than sit on a stage and play music for you to watch. He forces engagement and interaction between attendees. Now I am by no means a committed fan of his – I couldn’t tell you the name of a single song or album – I’ve only seen him at festivals and only then becasue he was going on right before or after someone that I was originally interested in seeing, so I wouldn’t even know him at all if not attending those festivals. His look is one that vehemently annoys me: That overweight, bearded, hipster thing that drives me crazy and the kind of fans he attracts annoy me ever worse.
However, the shows that I witnesssed at the festivals were unique and enjoyable and I thought I’d like to see it when he had more time and was the focus.
In 20 years of coming to Deep Ellum I believe this was only my third time ever coming to Club Dada so that was also an incentive.

Finally taking the stage at 12:10 am after a lot of troubleshooting of the mess of cables known as Dan Deacon’s DIY music making table, the show was really on the road. But the ride was anything but what you could expect.

 

 

Dan Deacon does play live shows for you to hear his music, but for his audience to interact and be challenged… while hearing his music and dancing uncontrollably. Before a single note was played, he asked the audience to get down on one knee while pointing at the spot on the (nonexistent) mural on the ceiling. This was supposedley to represent each individual’s cowardice. Once the point was found, everyone redirected it toward a photographer in the middle of the room. This was supposed to be designed to free you and prepare you to lose yourself in the cacophony of sounds and release that the music provides.
Normally I would have been barfing over this kinda nonsense, but it actually worked! haha

After instructing the crowd to make a large circle in the middle of the room, he gave the rules for the Fight Club style dance off that was about to take place:

1. You have to be sassy.

2. You choose the next dancer when you are done dancing.

3. No cowards – if you are chosen you will dance.

He effectively removed all inhibition and self-consciousness that prevents people from letting go until the song is over. The whole audience is going to participate, everyone looks a fool, why not join in on the fun?

The community created by Dan Deacon within the audience was immense. During one song he split the room into two groups for a Michael Jackson Beat It style dance off. Everyone mimicked the moves of the leader of their “gang”, and the leaders cycled. The activity simultaneously bonded everyone together and allowed for the support of and immense enjoyment for the current leader of the gang. During another song, he instructed everyone to get out their phones and launch his app. The room was transformed into an engulfing light show as the technology that so often isolates and inhibits live interaction facilitated it in a great way.

Finall, he instructed the audience, with hands raised, to look to the center of the room. Once everyone took two steps forward, he had everyone lower their hands onto the head of the individual in front of them. After a brief lecture, he instructed the giant cone of people to slowly rotate to the left. As the song built and the pace grew,  the cone began to slowly get smaller and smaller. When the final build of the song hit, the floor finally disintegrated into a mass of individually dancing bodies.

Throughout his live human interaction experiment, he never forced his opinions on the audience. What he did force was thought and consideration of how we interact as humans. He stole the audience’s pointless self-conscious sense of image, if only for an hour and a half, and allowed us to enjoy the music together.
I was very impressed.

 

 

Do For It Records Halloween Show – Oct 27th – Rubber Gloves – Denton, TX

Every year on or around Halloween, awesome local collective Do For It Records stages an inspired show with the bands on their roster performing as tribute bands of their choosing for one night. It’s always inspired and never obvious – It’s acutally how the House Harkonnen first appeared on my radar, they had performed as Ween one year and someone showed me the video of it.
I’ve never had the pleasure to attend one of these soirees so I was very excited about tonight. Especially after I heard what bands were being paid tribute:

Mothership as Motorhead
The Spectacle as White Zombie
Red Light Kills as Black Sabbath
Shaolin Death Squad as Weird Al Yankovic

Starting off the night was also supposed to be The Phuss as Alkaline Trio but for whatever reason they didn’t play or something happend, not sure the story.
Jess and I get there and were there to meet up with my buddy Patrick and his girl who were in costume as Cowboy & Indian which was pretty cool.
The place was literally buzzing with excitement and a joyous vibe in the air and it felt good.

We walked into the main room to see Shaolin setup and do their set as Weird Al –

 

 

 

 


 

 

This was so unbeliveably awesome and so super inspired – If you’ve never seen Shaolin before, the normally do dress in weird Kabuki-like outfits but this was just dedication. Think about it –  they had the most work to do – to learn the songs, but with the parodied lyrics which was probably difficult not to say the lyrics they are used to hearing and then they decided to wear the appropriate costumes…for each corresponding song! – Just awesome and they should have gone on last and given the most time. They were the most prepared and dedicated and what they were doing just screamed the vibe of the night not to mention the humor it brought.

Next up was a band that I wasn’t familar with – Red Light Kills who had a tall order doing the mighty Black Sabbath to a room full of music snobs and metal kids –

…and I’m happy to report that amazingly they totally pulled it off!! – Their was just a great vibe tonight – Songs I’ve heard a million times and have heard a million others cover were suddenly breathing new life from a crowd that was just really into it. When they did the “Ooohh lord yeah!!” of War Pigs I actually got a chill and was just so caught up in it – they sounded that good.
We went back in and took a little break and that became extended due to the congestion at the bar and running into people that seemed like an old familiar face every 10 ft. We ran into the Phuss guys and tons of others but in doing so we actually missed the Spectacle doing White Zombie.

But we ran back into the show room for what I was originally anticipating as the highlight of the evening of Mothership doing Motorhead –



Think about how fun it was to sing those Black Sabbath songs, I couldn’t wait to do the same with the Motorhead catalogue – They started with Bomber and the place went nuts – The House Harkonnen guys were down front and singing every word right along side of us. Their set was sorta plagued with sound issues and quite honestly, nothing was going to top that one-two punch at the start of the evening, but they still kicked ass and we had a great time. One of the best nights of the year hands down.
 

 

 

The Sword – Oct 30th – Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Studios – Denton, TX

Ok so just three nights removed, I’m back in Denton, right back at the same place – arriving just as the Sword was wrapping up their first song.
I kinda new tonight that though we had only been dating for like a month that I was totally into Jess. Normally I’m happy to be with the boys at Metal shows and I met up with Ryan of course (and later Patrick and his girl again) – but having her here three nights prior and not having her here tonight made me miss her and I don’t normally do that.
I would have liked to have got here earlier – they had a pretty killer lineup with some great openers like Gypsyhawk who I’ve been wanting to see but I just couldn’t make it and was lucky to got here and only miss one song.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I love how this band really doesn’t have to play here or at a venue of this size but still does out of a simple joy of doing so – that’s pretty much the spirit of this band. That you not only really enjoy their music but you identify deeply with the members of the band as people and they command such a deep respect in that manner. They just released their killer new album Apocryphonwith all of the cool imagery and fun packaging their known for and came to kick ass as usual.

Setlist –

Veil of Isis
Codex Corvidae
Hammer of Heaven
Tres Brujas
Maiden, Mother & Crone
The Horned Goddess
Cloak of Feathers
The Hidden Masters
Seven Sisters
Freya
To Take the Black
Eyes of the Stormwitch
Apocryphon
The Chronomancer I: Hubris

Encore:

Barael’s Blade
Winter’s Wolves

 

Tomahawk – Oct 31st – Granada Theater – Dallas,TX

I love Halloween but I’m not one of those people you would equate with Halloween – I love it less for the horror movies and more in a It’s the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown sorta way.
For me, Halloween is being at my mom’s house carving pumpkins & watching the World Series while we take turns answering the door for the trick-or-treaters of the neighborhood and enjoying their enthusiasm and costumes. She gets a big turnout at her house of usually averaging around 100 kids or so during the night.
Speaking of costumes, after the kids were all gone, she changed into this for our night out, so was already starting out as the best Halloween ever.

We had a fun and ambitious night planned of going to see the return of one of my fave of Mike Patton’s projects – Tomahawk, and then going to a Halloween Party after. Their is something inherently cool about seeing Mike Patton doing his thing on Halloween.

Up the road Marilyn Manson & Rob Zombie were having what I’m sure would be considered a dream combo on Halloween for some but this was definitely more my speed.
Tomahawk is about to release Oddfellows, their long-awaited fourth album and first in six years. The supergroup (Mike Patton, Jesus Lizard’s Duane Denison, and Battles drummer John Stainer) have replaced bassist Kevin Rutmanis with Fantômas/ Mr. Bungle bassist Trevor Dunn.
Oddfellows is easily Tomahawk’s most diverse to date: There’s groany, smoky, Morricone-jazz; there’s twisty AmRep-gone-R&B bludgeon; and, most notably, there’s the types of epic, majestic choruses that Patton diehards might remember from the final Faith No More LP, Album of the Year.
We haul ass to the venue – staying late at my mom’s as not to miss out there – we were sure we had missed a considerable amount of the show, however when we got there (and my tickets were actually there this time haha) we learned they were only into their third song.

Jess had absolutely no idea who they were or their rich, individual histories so I was surprised by how much she was really getting off to it – It just shows you when its good its good and this was very good. They had such an effective punch with everything they pulled out along with that unpredictable nervous energy that Mike Patton always brings as its still always a thrill for me to see him perform. It being Halloween and all defintely added to the mystique and I don’t know if you can tell from my shitty camera phone but some guy dressed as a unicorn made it on to the stage and was welcomed instead of being hauled off.
As a special treat for the holiday as an encore they returned and did all Bad Brains covers. Fucking awesome

Setlist –

God Hates a Coward
Flashback
Oddfellows
101 North
Stone Letter
Point and Click
Birdsong
Rape This Day
Honeymoon
Capt. Midnight
Baby Let’s Play
White Hats / Black Hats
Rotgut
Mayday
Laredo

Encore:

Stalkin (Duane Eddy cover)
Waratorium
Pay To Cum (Bad Brains cover)
How Low Can a Punk Get (Bad Brains cover)

 

Photos –

Roy Turner
Jim Riddle
Dane Walters

 

SXSW 2012: Fiona Apple, The Sword meet Anthony Bourdain & more

I will give you the most basic of rundowns: SXSW is a 3 week festival covering Interactive Media – Film and Music with a entire week dedicated to each field, some usually overlapping – that takes place in Austin, TX in March – that completely takes over the town a la Mardi Gras that falls during Spring Break, that will showcase thousands of bands attended by 10s of thousands of registrants.
ok? OK –

Day 1 – March 14th

I learned alot last year about throwing a showcase – I learned alot about what to do and what NOT to do. For all the success and press we got out of that little shindig last year, clearly ALOT of mistakes were made

I had people coming up to me the entire festival asking me if I was “that dude that threw that boxing ring thing last year” constantly – Easily 10x as many people that were actually there – That’s something that I’m very proud of – I wanted to do something different – Something people would remember and knowing that I accomplished that makes me happy –

After that I ran over to Stubb’s to try to catch Fiona Apple. I’ve never seen her like most people, due to her neurosis that keeps her from touring, or even speaking properly has eluded most people from seeing her perform.  I get a hero’s welcome when I go to Stubb’s, so thankfully their was no line or any other indignity suffered (I would save that for the rest of the week) – I get in and go right up to the side of the stage that my friends and kind staff of Stubb’s afforded me.

Very grateful too, as like I said, not only had I not ever seen her, this was one of the most anticipated shows of the festival with a total shitshow outside trying to get in. She has another show tomorrow but this was her first show outside of Los Angeles in five years and would be playing new music for the first time in over seven (though I did hear later that at the second show she added her cover of Across the Universe)
I was most certainly looking forward to hearing some new tunes, but since I’ve never got to see any of her material live before I was hoping to hear a few tracks off her 2nd LP When The PawnIt holds a special place for me as it always transports me back to a special time.
I got my wish and I got in early, it was almost like she was making up for not touring that record as the first four songs were from that LP.She still looks really good, and she sounded good too, but at times her intensity just over rode everything and she would shout the verses or change them up completely to account for her sudden thrusts of anger. I had always wondered how legit all this was, cause admittedly it can be a  bit much. Like how much of this is manufactured and I gotta tell you that being this close to it, made me a believer.
I’m not saying that it wasn’t ridiculous that she required two handlers to get her on and off stage – who she kept looking over to for approval/reassurance. Or how they would have to come out and remind her to drink the tea on her piano, or when she would look lost to offer her a towel. It was all a bit much, but her elusiveness has reached such legendary heights over the years that it was thrill just to even see her, let alone this close and see her perform. The new songs were really good too.
Setlist: Fast as You Can
On the Bound
Paper Bag
A Mistake
Anything We Want (New Song)
Valentine (New Song)
Sleep to Dream
Extraordinary Machine
Every Single Night (New Song)
Carrion
Criminal

After she finished, I stuck around to see Sharon Van Etten, another songstress that I was recently turned on to. Her stuff was a little quiet for the cavernous Stubb’s as well as first day excitement, but she got a great reception from the crowd and I thought she sounded great.

After that, I walked around Stubb’s to meet up with my friend Lena – A talented artist and a total babe – She’s a great writer and has a new musical project that she will be debuting later this year – you can check that out here

We talked a caught up a bit but then she was leaving so I grabbed another beer and while waiting for Dan Deacon to start his set.
Though I am not even remotely Deacon’s demographic – nerdy-teenage-smartass hipsters in bright clothing – He has always been entertaining in the few times I’ve seen him perform.
Deacon is also likable for his slacker appearance – He’s overweight, balding and the last person you would think could lead 2k people in a dance freak-out, so his improbability gives him that underdog factor.
However he is also from D.C./Maryland and has that zero bullshit quality as well – Without being dickish he exchanged words with the stage hands that were growing impatient with his setup time and his equipment failure. At one point he even said into the mic, “We got it, and you don’t need to speak to us like we are children” – later for which he apologized on the mic for and even lead the crowd to show appreciation for the crew who I think took it as sarcasm but it still seemed genuine to me.

Its unclear to me exactly what Deacon is performing, as it seems like he just hitting a bunch of sound effect with a propulsive dance looped beat. This time he had a full band with him, but other than Maestro, I’m not sure what his contributions actually are.
Known for snarky impromptu, he then started a parlor game among the 2k in attendance and created a giant dance circle while he was giving direction via a megaphone. Good times –
And now for something totally different, I left there to go over to the building that used to be called Emo’s to see the Sword. A local Austin band that has reached global success, especially with a high-[profile tour as the opening slot for Metallica recently.
Trickykid alumni Never Got Caught along with Clutch toured with them as well,so I’ve gotten friendly with them over the years as well as they have become one of my favorite bands. So I was excited when they invited me over to their showcase.
I get there, and suddenly I see a familiar face onstage while they are getting setup – Their is a camera crew filming this for a show and its host – Anthony Bourdain who’s career is a constant reference at my mother and sister’s homes. I even took them to see him on his tour last year.
The guys in the Sword were so busy with all of this, I didn’t even have the chance to really even let them know that I was here, or express my gratitude for their invitation.
In what seemed like a millenia to get properly sound-checked, the bass player knew he was holding up the party, and finally threw his hands up after shouts of “Goddamn, it doesn’t have to be perfect” started emitting from the crowd- and got the show started.

They were fucking deadly as always and they played like 8 new songs. The newer stuff sounded more straight up rock which is direction that I’m happy that they are increasingly headed in. Starting with Black Sabbath’s Children of the Grave and ending with their hit Freya that’s also become a staple of Guitar Hero – with all new stuff in between.Ok, wanna get even heavier? – Where could this night take us now, How about across the street where Corrosion of Conformity were playing a dive bar for $5.00? – Perfect.

A brief history lesson of C.O.C. – For the first ten years of their existence their were a three-piece (sometimes four) punk juggernaut with a blistering sound and a downright frightening image. They were ones of the bands when you were younger that you actually feared.
In the early 1990’s they acquired new member Pepper Keenan, who not only took over on vocals but on the later albums, his taste/persona seemed to take over the would band. His first record with them, Blind turned them into a straight up Heavy Metal band and then with the next three (and finally commercial success) they became this southern fried, blues-y Pantera-ish entity that made them completely unrecognizable from the former years, especially after drummer Reed Mullin left the band.
For most people this was their first time hearing the band and thought they were like this new Southern Rock band, which you can imagine completely alienated, their former punk rock faithful.
If I was being truthful, even though the purest will condemn this, when I want to listen to C.O.C. its those three southern rock albums I like the best, and probably haven’t purposely listened to those early records since I first heard them as a kid.
Well for this tour, Pepper Keenan is absent, (actually in the band Down with Pantera member Phil Anselmo) – Reed Mullin is back, C.O.C. are once again a three piece, just released a new album that’s a complete return to its punk rock roots and this tour they will be playing that stuff and only that stuff to celebrate its full-circle return.

Though the sound in this place is dismal, they still kicked severe ass – Though I totally miss Pepper, I can’t deny that Mike Dean is actually better suited as a front man than him. He’s more engaging, more menacing, and has the between song banter down flat, something that Keenan has always suffered with. I saw the show in Dallas a few days prior and both of these shows were just brutal and way exceeded my expectations.Setlist:

Bottom Feeder
Psychic Vampire
Loss for Words
Vote With a Bullet
Mad World
Consumed
Seven Days
Your Tomorrow
The Doom
The Snake Has No Head
The Moneychangers
Deliverance
Rat City
Holier
Hungry Child
Leeches
Technocracy

What else is left? How much further can this night go? – Now I had to go get my car and head over to Lustre Pearl (which was easier said than done) to end this first night with Mobb Deep.


I was also their to meet up with my buddy Matt, who I would be staying with on this trip. My man loves that gangster shit, and now that it was almost 2am and we hadn’t seen each other in a year, I got a drunken hero’s welcome haha.We left there to get some late-night drive thru before heading to his place. I hadn’t seen his new place since he moved in and their I was introduced to his roommates’ sister and her boyfriend as well as the couch I would be living on for the next week.Stay tuned for more…..Photos –

Roy Turner
Eric Danton
Chris Ellis