Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Against Me! @ WUK, Vienna - December 18, 2016

Against Me! at WUI, Vienna
Despite the one hour delay to start the show, this is one of the better Against Me! shows I've seen (I'm up to 7 now.) There was a good vibe and lots of smiling from the band. I went with friend and fellow Against Me! fan, Janey who's a great concert pal. As opposed to London where they played 7 tracks off the new album, Shape Shift With Me, tonight they only played 5. The new song Norse Truth wasn't done in London and was the penultimate song during the encore. Kind of a lyrical follow up to Delicate, Petite & Other Things I'll Never Be which they also played.

Against Me!
A huge highlight of the night for me was when they played their cover of Clash song Train in Vain. I'd seen videos, but it was cool to get to see and hear it live and jump around like a mad woman. I got the feeling not everyone around me was as familiar, which was strange. Does that make me old?

WUK is a really nice venue to see a show. It has a 550 standing capacity, so a good size, plus good sitelines. It's basically one big square room with concrete floor and a wide raised stage at one end. The room next door is the bar and set up really well. The efficient bar staff were all friendly. They have reusable drink cups, so that's great. Best of all, they stayed open after the gig so we could have another drink or two after the show without being rushed out. What a treat! It was also really easy to get in and out without logjams. Even the bathrooms were easy. Such a great venue really helps improve a concert experience immeasurably.

Setlist:
True Trans Soul Rebel
333
Haunting, Haunted, Haunts
Unconditional Love
White Crosses
Dead Friend
Pints of Guinness Make You Strong
T.S.R. (This Shit Rules)
Cliche Guevara
Walking Is Still Honest
Bamboo Bones
White People for Peace
Delicate, Petite & Other Things I'll Never Be
Rebecca
Transgender Dysphoria Blues
I Was a Teenage Anarchist
Black Me Out

Encore:
Train in Vain (Clash cover)
FUCKMYLIFE666
Norse Truth
Sink, Florida, Sink
Against Me! WUK

Thursday, December 8, 2016

Against Me! @ Electric Ballroom, London - December 8, 2016

The last four times I've seen Against Me! have been with my concert pal, Janey. (We actually met because of this band, when her boyfriend/my friend wanted to get out of going to see them in London in '14). This concert got announced right after she received a present of tickets to another show on the same night. She was gutted, but we decided to catch another show and took a trip to Vienna for it ten days later, which you can read above. I did briefly consider skipping this show, but couldn't bring myself to miss it, particularly since seeing AM! at the same venue two years ago is possibly my favourite concert memory ever. Nope. I was going.

The openers were Mobina Galore and Milk Teeth, the latter's set I caught part of, and it was reminiscent of 90s indie bands, almost riot grrl stuff, like Veruca Salt. They were a little dull to watch until the drummer stood up to try to get the audience into it.

I'd bought Janey Laura Jane Grace's new autobiography Tranny at the merch table, so with it in a cloth bag tied to my belt, I tried to keep it from bashing those around me, as I can never help myself from jumping around when AM! play. And from the opening notes of the first song, I was jumping! The whole set was full of energy and passion. It was great to hear all the songs of the new album live and it seemed that the band was having fun playing them.

Laura talked to the crowd between songs, with some familiar banter ("this is about self-care, smoking cigarettes and drinking whisky") and some new banter. She commented that Rebecca sure has a lot of words, and how happy she was to play in the UK, where she knows with 100% certainty that no one there voted for Trump. She dedicated Dead Friend to "old friends" and 12:03 to "new friends". Bamboo Bones she prefaced by saying she's an atheist and how performing feels for her is what she imagines going to church feels for others, and she said you can call this song "an atheist's spiritual". She also said that she hopes we are excited to hear new songs, cuz they are excited to play them, but they are conscious that people like to hear old songs, and they played the "deep cut" Tonight We're Gonna Give It 35%.

Really glad I went. Note to self: Never miss Against Me!

Setlist:
True Trans Soul Rebel
333
Haunting, Haunted, Haunts
Unconditional Love
Pints of Guinness Make You Strong
White Crosses
Dead Friend
12:03
Crash
Delicate, Petite & Other Things I'll Never Be
Rebecca
Bamboo Bones
Tonight We're Gonna Give It 35%
T.S.R. (This Shit Rules)
Cliche Guevara
Walking Is Still Honest
Transgender Dysphoria Blues
I Was a Teenage Anarchist
Black Me Out
Encore:
Baby, I'm an Anarchist! (Laura solo)
FUCKMYLIFE666
Boyfriend
Sink, Florida, Sink

Full Set recorded by fan, pbrook:

Or watch on youtube, with comments and song timing marked.

Levellers @ UEA, Norwich - December 7, 2016

This was the 25th Anniversary tour for the Levelling the Land album. I saw that original tour in Toronto in 1992, after having LOVED that album and listened to it over and over. So when my concert pal invited me, I had to go.

We tried to get there to see the opener Gaz Brookfield, as I'd seen him in a pub in Camden after a London Faith No More Gig and he was very impressive. Unfortunately we only caught one song, but it was nice to see something more of his. He seemed full of energy and audience interaction, and I will try and see him again. The second openers, Ferocious Dog, I didn't know, but seemed suited to the slot, being folk punk with a touch of hippie (dreads galore).

The Levellers played their album in track order and I found myself singing along with almost all of it, transported back 25 years. Damn if those songs don't hold up! Still such a good album. The band were full of energy and gave their all. Following up the album were a bunch of songs that I'm unfamiliar with, having not kept up with their music. Glad I didn't miss this one.

Setlist:
One Way
The Game
Fifteen Years
The Boatman
Liberty Song
Far From Home
Sell Out
Another Man's Cause
The Road
The Riverflow
Battle of the Beanfield

This Garden
Men-an-Tol
Truth Is
Carry Me
The Cholera Well

Encore:
Julie
Beautiful Day

2nd Encore:
What You Know (with Ferocious Dog members)



Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Slaves @ O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire, London - November 29, 2016

I'd been really looking forward to seeing Slaves live, anticipating a super high energy show. But, I was still surprised at just how much fun it was. The crowd was young sure, but more varied than I thought. There were plenty of girls and some attendees put way more thought into their outfits than I'd predict for a "punk" show. But the overall feeling from the crowd and the band and the night was feel-good, fun and welcoming.

Having looked them up before the show, I was interested in checking out openers LIFE. They're from Hull, and were a great match for Slaves with their enthusiasm and matching energy. Good choice.


Slaves Shepherd's Bush Empire
With only an EP and 2 LPs to choose from, Slaves still put on a great long show. Lots of their songs are short, sharp punk singalongs, so the show had a great up beat throughout.

Laurie and Isaac were both indefatigable and engaging right at the very front of the stage; both often stepping up on the monitors, Isaac when he moved away from his stand-up drum set-up. On a few songs, Isaac was off the stage, on the barrier, or just in front of it. The fans respond accordingly with a huge, surging mosh pit and singing along enthusiastically.

Slaves are one of the best live bands I've seen. They make a genuine connection with the audience. They feel real and present and are extremely compelling to watch, and, of course, jump up and down with. I'd definitely catch another show.

Slaves November 29, 2016 O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire


Setlist:
Intro
Sockets
Play Dead
Same Again
People That You Meet
Dave (Skit)
Despair and Traffic
Suicide
Where's Your Car Debbie?
STD's/PHD's
Fuck The Hi-Hat
Consume Or Be Consumed
Angelica
Take Control
Hey
Girl Fight
Steer Clear
Cheer Up London
Feed the Mantaray
Are You Satisfied?
The Hunter
Encore:
Gary (Skit)
Lies
White Knuckle Ride
Spit It Out

Slaves Shepherd's Bush London

Pixies @ O2 Academy Brixton, London - November 28, 2016

Pixies November 28, 2016 Brixton Academy
33 songs is a lot for the average concert. But, I was really surprised at some of the omissions. It made sense when I checked the setlist for this blog entry, and saw the following night's setlist in the same venue. They almost didn't repeat themselves. This would have been awesome for the fan attending both shows, of course. So, I missed Wave of Mutilation, Monkey Gone To Heaven, Gigantic, and some lesser gems like Is She Weird and Subacultcha. But, fortunately I got to hear U-Mass, my favourite Pixies song, to which I lost my shit over. As you do. Because they're touring in support of their new album, Head Carrier, I was expecting to hear the first single which I really like, Um Chagga Lagga. The next night's fans got that treat.


Pixies London Nov 28/16
We got a good spot with a view of centre stage, and I spent much of the show letting the Pixies sound/noise wash over me. It was a slow builder, and no one in the band addressed the audience, but slowly you get swept into their sonic sea. The early songs are mostly back lit, obscuring the detail of their faces, as they seemingly take their time letting us into their world. Then the full colour hits and by the first notes of Here Comes Your Man, we are fully welcomed in, with the attendant singalong.


Francis Black and David Lovering of Pixies
It was great to experience the Pixies' sound live, having loved many of their albums and tracks for years. Some bands are all about showmanship or energy or loudness, but the Pixies' live are all about the sound. And they got it right. It was special, and before a brief encore, the band took a bowing curtain call, which you don't often see at rock shows. Then, just before they came back on, the dry ice machine belched a massive wave over us. As it cleared, it was like emerging from a warzone, grey and surreal. As the Pixies played Into The White in the eerie fog, the new bassist Paz Lenchantin stood silhouetted with her low slung bass and sang almost motionlessly. Then more massive waves of dry ice buffeted us. It was by far the most I've ever experienced and then that was repeated half a dozen times. This final destination was a fittingly atmospheric representation of the enveloping aural journey we'd been taken on.

Pixies Encore

Setlist:
Where Is My Mind?
Nimrod's Son
Break My Body
Brick Is Red
Winterlong (Neil Young cover)
Blown Away
Mr.Grieves
La La Love You
Ana
All the Saints
Here Comes Your Man
Motorway to Roswell
Magdalena 318
Tenement Song
Classic Masher
Head On (Jesus and Mary Chain cover)
U-Mass
I've Been Tired
Velouria
Havalina
Snakes
Caribou
Rock Music
Baal's Back
Isla de Encanta
Oona
Planet of Sound
All I Think About Now
Hey
Gouge Away
Debaser
Tame

Encore:
Into the White

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

The Specials @ Rivermead Centre, Reading - November 8, 2016


Rivermead Reading November 8, 2016, The Specials
The Specials live are all I hoped they would be: genuine and invigorating.

The set opened with their huge hit Ghost Town, and being in Reading at a little used (for music) leisure centre, it seemed fitting. Although the place was anything but a Ghost Town; it was packed with mostly 50+ Fred Perry and pork pie hat wearing blokes, a few with their girls in tow.

Terry Hall quite quickly starting chatting with the crowd and continued throughout the show. For once, I could clearly hear the stage banter. In fact, I thought the sound was really good and at the perfect volume. No ringing ears this morning!

He asked about the Town name pronounciation jokingly and there were some nods to missing band members, particularly John Bradbury who passed last December and should have been on this tour. Gary Powell from the Libertines very ably sat in on drums. At one point Terry admonished whoever threw a bottle on stage, and warned that one more and they'd walk off - they don't put up with that shit. I liked his middle-aged reasonableness: "put the empty in your pocket. Keep Britain Tidy." I imagine that the humble Mr. Hall has always been a decent bloke, and liked seeing this side of his personality.

Terry Hall and Lynval GoldingLynval Golding was full of energy throughout the show, and also talked to the crowd, mentioning (on this US Election eve) that he now lives in America and doesn't know if that's a good or bad thing. Horace Panter, the only other original member held down stage right with his bass. The rest of the band was guitarist, keyboardist, and at times, 2 trombonists, a violinist and backup singer.

Following Ghost Town were a handful of songs that weren't very familiar to me from my North American viewpoint, but by Blank Expression I was well into very familiar territory. This is the bouncy, driving ska band I fell in love with all those years ago.The only song I'd have like to have heard that I didn't was Pressure Drop, but that's only in retrospect as I type this.

The Specials in Reading

Setlist:
Ghost Town
Do Nothing
Friday Night, Saturday Morning
Stereotype
Man At C&A
Blank Expression
Rat Race
Redemption Song (Bob Marley Cover)
Doesn't Make It Alright
Nite Klub
(Dawning of a) New Era
Do the Dog
Gangsters
Concrete Jungle
A Message to You, Rudy
Monkey Man
Little Bitch
Too Much Too Young
Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)
Guns of Navarone
All the Time In The World (dedicated to John Bradbury)
You're Wondering Now

Friday, July 8, 2016

The (Almost) Complete Concert List

I like lists. I like to document stuff. In the past year or so, I've used setlist.fm to double-check the setlists I post here, or add them there for others. That's led to adding all the concerts I can remember going to.

My username is 45rpms

There are a couple of concerts that I can't add, because I can't (yet!) verify the actual date of the concert, but it's pretty close to complete. The different acts in festivals and as opening bands make it look like more concerts than I've been to, but by my own math, I've seen at least 61 concerts. Not bad.

If I'm not sure I saw it, I've left it off, like was I at that Tears for Fears concert in 1985 at the Lethbridge Sportsplex or am I just remembering my brother's photos? Not sure.

This weekend, I dug out an old diary that had a lot of exact dates of concerts, so I could finally add most of the early missing concerts that had been bugging me. Pleased as I am with the setlist.fm list, it struck me that losing it would be a blow, and a major pain to reproduce, so I'm reproducing it here now, as a back up...

These are (almost) all the dates that aren't listed over there < < < in the left sidebar:


d/m/y Band Opener Venue City
06/08/03 Evanescence
Mesa Amphitheatre Mesa, AZ
30/07/98 The Crystal Method Velvet The Rage Vancouver
05/07/95 Lollapalooza
Thunderbird Stadium Vancouver

Mighty Mighty Bosstones Pavement


Sinead O'Connor Hole

Sonic Youth

05/12/94 Bad Religion Samiam Commodore BallroomVancouver
06/11/94 Ween Kyuss Starfish Room Vancouver
01/10/94 The Selecter Gonch Messiah Town Pump Vancouver
27/09/94 Nine Inch Nails Jim Rose Circus Sideshow PNE Forum Vancouver
18/06/93 Lollapalooza
Thunderbird Stadium Vancouver

Primus Tool


Alice in Chains


08/02/93 D.R.I. Propain Alternative Cabaret Winnipeg
09/12/92 SNFU
Spectrum Cabaret Winnipeg
20/07/92 The Levellers Uncle Green The Opera House Toronto
16/07/92 Bad Religion Helmet The Spectrum Toronto
??/07/92 Sons of Freedom
La Brique Montreal
02/07/92 The Dead Milkmen
Les Foufounes Electrique Montreal
01/07/92 Furnaceface
Alternative Canada Day Ottawa
12/03/92 Rollins Band GodClapham Grand London
29/02/92 Mega City Four Midway Still University of Essex Colchester
??/??/91 The Long Tall Texans
Crash Musikkeller Freiburg
18/05/91 GBH Rumble Militia Crash Musikkeller Freiburg
05/05/91 The Sisters of Mercy Loud Stadthalle Freiburg
26/10/88 Midnight Oil Yothu Yindi Olympic Saddledome Calgary


(Not listed: small, local (bar) bands in Winnipeg, Vancouver, etc.)

Friday, June 24, 2016

Jane's Addiction @ O2 Forum Kentish Town, London - June 13, 2016

Jane's Addiction
Sometimes I go to concerts to experience a band live and get to know them a bit better. But tonight, I went to relive a piece of my past. The early '90s to be precise. Right before alternative music broke into the mainstream, Jane's was paving the way, like NIN and a few others. This music feels very personal to me; it was mine before I had to share it with the rest of the world. And when we did have to share it, in that post-Smells Like Teen Spirit world, Perry Farrell was the main curator through Lollapalooza.

I never saw Jane's Addiction live and missed the first couple of Lollapaloozas as I wasn't in the country, but I was at the 3rd one, and the 5th one. I had friends who'd followed them around on tour, inspired to be in bands themselves. I was a particular fan of Nothing's Shocking. Honestly, I found the song and video for Been Caught Stealing ridiculous and cartoonish. But this album was special as it was released after I already loved them and was eager for more. Reliving the album in full in concert was a bit like discovering it the first time, unwrapping the CD. Yeah, they're still pretty awesome, was the exact feeling of relief I felt on both occasions.

The first thing that I was impressed by was the gogo dancers on scaffolding, gyrating behind the band on the opener, Stop! How perfectly Jane's, and how perfectly Ritual. So few bands do more than just show up, stand there and play. I really should have known to expect more from these inveterate showmen!

The band looked like they were having a good time with plenty of smiles and interaction. They sounded good and looked dapper and showy with just the right dash of maturity to acknowledge the 25 years past. I don't think I could have taken Perry in braids and a sundress.

The truly jaw-dropping moment of the show came at the end of the first encore when they play Ted, Just Admit It... Two girls in bondage gear thrashed around at the end of long lines dangling from the ceiling on either side of the stage. And yes, they were hooked through the skin, in the old native american sun-ritual way. The song's phrase "Nothing's Shocking" was surreal: I was genuinely shocked, and yet I would have been less shocked in 1990. Is this a function of aging? I don't know. I saw the Jim Rose Circus Sideshow back in the day (an act that benefited from Perry's promotion), but it's been so long since I've seen a band that want to play provocateur with their art. I miss it.

The evening wrapped up with a stripped back performance of Jane Says, encouraging the sing-a-long atmosphere everyone knew was coming. The band were all at the front of the stage with bongoes and acoustic guitars, with all the go-go dancers, satyrs and suspension girls joining them, making for an intimate finale, complete with theatrical bow.

25th Anniversary of Ritual de lo Habitual



Setlist:
Stop!
No One's Leaving
Ain't No Right
Obvious
Been Caught Stealing
Three Days
Then She Did...
Of Course
Classic Girl

Encore 1:
Mountain Song
Rebel Rebel (Bowie Cover)
Just Because
Ted, Just Admit It...

Encore 2:
Jane Says

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Weezer @ O2 Academy Brixton, London - April 5/16

Weezer by Janey
This concert has been a long time coming. I was a fan from the first, back to '94's Blue album. And Island in the Sun is probably my favourite pop song....Of. All. Time. Weezer seem to play a lot of festivals, and as you may know from reading below, I avoid festivals unless they are really really packed with amazing bands I can't bring myself to miss. Then, finally, back in 2008, Weezer were playing Vancouver and I was on the verge of buying tickets when I checked out the date with my brand new (at-the-time) boyfriend, Steve. Uh-oh. Same date as his best friend's wedding, of which he was the best man, and of which I was his date. Can't really wriggle out of that one. Many swear words were invented and tested out that day. It's probably a good thing I didn't know then it would take another eight years for this to finally happen. But it has. And it was great.

It wasn't great in exactly the way I thought it would be though. Based on the many mellow songs Weezer has, I was worried it would be a more sedate show than I really like. Sure lots are poppy and make you want to move, but not in a moshing kind of way. But fans mosh to Weezer. There was a definite crush up front, not helped by some idiotically placed permanent barriers on the O2 Academy floor. Maybe I was a little less sweaty than I would be after an Against Me! gig but I jumped up and down a whole hell of a lot. Many songs live are more energetic than off the albums, Island in the Sun being a prime example. The prettiness of it got lost somewhere between the fans screaming along and the less sparse, simple arrangement of the recording. The perfection of the "hip, hip" moment, produced perfectly on the record, was just an approximation on this night, but it was enough for me.


Weezer in Brixton

I heard plenty of North American accents, as we wound our way from the bar towards the stage. The crowd looked to be about 75% geeky college boy, which makes sense. No bad asses in sight, and a few cute, if straight-laced, girls. I'd say most in their mid to late 20s, but it's harder to tell as I get older. But, they seemed a good deal younger than that when Weezer closed the main set with the Sweater Song and a violent grappling of a jumper ensued after someone held theirs aloft. They will have a good story as to how they lost a sweater during that song at a Weezer concert, but the garment, I'm sure, is history.

So, my impression is that Weezer live are a massive and bouncy sing-a-long band, even though the band themselves are pretty low-key. I thought that the show would be more centred on the new, White album, as it only dropped 4 days ago, and the show seemed to be promoted in that light (and it's a bit of a trend to do whole albums these days), but we only got 5 out of the 10 new tracks. My favourite new track Do You Wanna Get High? was my least favourite new live song of the bunch which was weird, but there were so many other highlights it was fine.

Setlist:
California Kids
My Name Is Jonas
Hash Pipe
Back to the Shack
L.A. Girlz
El Scorcho
The British Are Coming
Pork and Beans
(If You're Wondering If I Want You To) I Want You To
Do You Wanna Get High?
Cleopatra
The Waste Land (Instrumental)
Thank God for Girls
Say It Ain't So
The Good Life
You Gave Your Love to Me Softly
King of the World
Island in the Sun
Undone- The Sweater Song
Encore:
Beverly Hills
Buddy Holly

Full Set recorded by fan, Vaso Proiou:


Or watch on youtube, with comments and song timing marked.

Sunday, January 31, 2016

Peter and the Test Tube Babies @ The Owl Sanctuary, Norwich - January 30, 2016

Peter and the Test Tube Babies, Owl Sanctuary 2016
Old school British punk in a great small punk venue. So much fun.

When I heard that The Owl Sanctuary was losing it's current lease, I decided I had to check it out before it closed (it's now relocated thank goodness). My concert pal, Janey, has told me lots of great things about this place, and we decided to check out the last live show there.

I was never a big Peter and the Test Tube Babies, but remembered the awesome Banned From the Pubs from the punk complilation Punk and Disorderly.

Partial Setlist:
Moped Lads
The Jinx
Elvis Is Dead
Up Yer Bum
Transvestite
Banned From the Pubs
Keep Britain Untidy