Thursday, April 30, 2009

Tarja @ The Fillmore, 4/29, and other thoughts . . .


So . . . Tarja ROCKED the Fillmore at Irving Plaza, NYC, last night, April 29. By far the best show I’ve seen this year.

What a pleasure it is to witness a REAL singer perform. It’s amazing to hear a trained mezzo soprano soar over an ear-splitting band. Not to disrespect other singers, but come on, this is Tarja - the FIRST of the great female symphonic metal vocalists. To see a legend like her perform live – in top shape no less – is one of the events of the year.

And Doug Wimbish on bass? How does it get better than that?

Which brings me to another issue . . .

How is it that when I mention Tarja to the American metalheads I know, hardly anyone knows her? In fact, how is it that when I say she’s the ex-singer of Nightwish, hardly anyone has heard of them either? What gives? Is Nightwish an obscure band? No! Are Americans so stuck in their genre holes that they can’t see more than four feet in front of their faces?

To all the metalheads over 30: there HAS been great music recorded after 1995. Just thought I’d let you know. And to all the other heads stuck in replay-mode: expand your horizons and get with the program. You don’t have to like everything; but you should be trying to listening to as much as possible.

If we don’t make the effort, the bands won’t come over here and play. Then we won’t get to see incredible performers like Tarja. It’s all cause and effect. So buckle down and start hitting MySpace and Itunes like you mean it.

Yes, this is a bit of a bitch slap. Sorry If I hurt your feelings, but get over it. We don’t have the advantages the Euros have with their festival culture and the larger Continental fan-base. We really have to try stateside. And there’s nothing wrong with that. Hell, it’s better than working, right?


Tarja Turunen Website: http://www.tarjaturunen.com/index_en.php

Tarja Turunen MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/tarjaturunen

Video: Die Alive, from My Winter Storm

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Mastodon - Live

I posted this video for the sole reason that it's one of the best live metal videos I've ever seen. Mastodon rules.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Concert Review, Blackest of the Black Tour, NYC, Oct 15, 2008


Bands:

Danizg
Dimmu Borgir
Moonspell
Winds of Plague
Skeletonwitch

What can I say about the Blackest of the Black Tour, except that Skeletonwitch pretty much blew everyone away? I thank the black gods that I showed up nice and early to catch their twenty minute set. Otherwise, the evening would have been a complete blow-out. I WILL catch them the next time they come around. Bank on it.

As for the rest:

Winds of Plague proved that they have a few more tours ahead of them to hone their live skills. I'm not going to be too hard on them. They're new, and I don't like to be unfair. Let's see how they do next time around.

Moonspell's dose of goth-metal proved why they're not too popular beyond their native Portugal. Middle of the road at best. Ho-hum. Next . . .

Ah, Dimmu Borgir . . . the kings of corporate Black Metal. Dimmu delivered a truly average set, with signature average musicianship. I'm not against the face-paint and the costumes, like a lot of Americans. I know it's all about show-biz, but they lean on the visuals a bit much - and the visuals aren't even that interesting. They just pretty much stand there like angry Norwegians. I measured my interest in the time it took me to go out and have a smoke. Three songs. Not a good follow up to their best album in a while (at least in my opinion). I didn't expect much anyway.

Danzig . . . Someone needs to tell Glenn it's time to ditch the see-through mesh shirt. Either that, or it's time for Atkins. Seriously though, Danizg always bored the shit out of me. I'm not much into stripper metal, which is what Danzig really is. I spent most of the Danzig set wandering around looking at faux goth chicks and girls dressed like they were out to pick up meatheads. Ah yes, the five boroughs were out in force!!

Was my thirty bucks wasted! Hell no. Skeletonwitch ROCKED!! Just to give them respect, I'm providing a link to their MySpace page - and no one else's.

Skeletonwitch
http://www.myspace.com/skeletonwitch

Friday, September 19, 2008

Concert Review: Opeth, Nokia Theater, NYC, Sept 18, 2008



After two long years of being out of town or screwed over ticket-wise whenever Opeth came around, I finally got the chance to see them at Nokia Theater last night in NYC. I must say that from the bottom of my blackened soul it was worth the wait.

My first live experience with Opeth was at Gigantour, 2006, when I realized that I would much rather see Opeth play a nice, long set than sit through yet ANOTHER mammoth hour and a half of Lamb of God. Since the majority of Opeth’s tracks are seven plus minutes, Opeth as an opener gets you about five songs, including an abridged version of Mikael Akerfeldt’s hilarious and urbane stage banter. Last night I got my wish, with a long and well-chosen set list that opened with Heir Apparent, moved into Grand Conjuration, surprised with Serenity Painted Death, and finally ended with a crowd favorite, Demon of the Fall. A pristine encore of Drapery Falls (my personal favorite) rounded out the evening.

Thirty dollars well spent, my friends . . .

An Opeth show is a rich brew of seriousness, humor and traditional metal jubilation. The music is so eloquent at times and, well, important, while a the same time so very listenable and satisfying in a primal metal sense, that it’s hard for even the most jaded fan not to be impressed. One would think that any band might have a hard time translating multiple influences into a live metal show, but Opeth does so effortlessly. This is, in a very real sense, what makes an Opeth concert more of an event than a mere performance, and is probably the reason why Opeth continually draws a capacity crowd.

As always, I spent a certain amount of time watching the audience. The first half of the show, I found myself smashed against the stage with the young rabble. I eventually dragged my aged self to the convenient second level (that Nokia Theater is a well-designed venue) with the chin-scratchers and the musicians, all listening very intently as if to the description of a homework assignment. I smiled inwardly as I heard things like, “Did you hear that passage into the Diminished 7th? Frigging amazing man!” I love that stuff.

I was not surprised at the HUGE reception for Fredrik Åkesson. I was one of the many who exclaimed “Holy shit, who is that guy?!!” when I saw him with Arch Enemy at Gigantour in 2006. The man has indeed claimed his rightful place in the victory circle. Real, uncompromising talent always wins out in the end.

As far as Martin Mendez, Martin Axenrot and Per Wiberg are concerned, you could have bounced a quarter off that foundation. Precise is too weak a word to describe it. Razor-sharp, perhaps? Thunderous? And Mikael? We do so love that pioneering mixture of death metal growl and clear, plaintive vocals, as well as the austere (and not over-played) slow leads dropped in precisely the right places – all delivered with gothic aplomb. Plus, NO ONE delivers better stage banter than Mr. Åkerfeldt.

All in all, THE best show of the year so far. Let’s see if anyone can top it. I have my doubts.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Note to Mainstream Journalists from a Metal Fan: PISS OFF


Normally I try to present a fairly positive voice on this blog no matter what I write about. But with the new Metallica album out, I have to sound off on the negative.

A few weeks ago, the NY Times had a huge cover story in their Sunday arts section about Metallica. Of course, being a long-time metal fan, and being altogether sick of reading about credit woes and failing banks, I had to read the entire thing. About halfway through the article, I felt this gnawing pain that I always feel when reading about metal in the mainstream press. The pain has always been there, like a thorn in the back of my mind, splitting me into a newer and blacker level of consciousness every time I pick up a USA Today or a NY Times and see the words ‘Heavy Metal’ in a sub-header. It’s the pain of reading something written by an asshole that has NO IDEA what the fuck he’s talking about. It’s the sheer agony of listening to drivel being offered to the world as holy writ because it’s in Times New Roman and it wouldn’t be there if it weren’t absolute gospel.

I’m talking about mainstream critics – the kind you find in the NY Times, The Village Voice, the Boston Globe, et. al. Don’t you just love how these idiots babble on for five paragraphs just to show how smart they are before they actually get to the album? I know, we’re all supposed to be impressed that they graduated from Amherst College with a 3.4. We’re supposed to be floored by the unreadable run-on sentences filled with knee-jerk postmodern theory, as if Roland Barthes himself descended from heaven to let us know that heavy metal was finally important enough to not mean anything. We’re supposed to love that, right? Well, not me. I tell you, I’d like to stick one of my size thirteen engineering boots up every editor’s ass each time he or she shuffled one of these moronic screeds into print. Fuck!!

It always goes this way: reviewer Sidney Snide starts out with the ‘heavy metal is no longer just for parking lots and trailer parks anymore’ routine. (This might or might not be preceded by two paragraphs of filler straight from the pages of Art Forum, depending on the snob-level of the periodical.) Then he saunters into a bit of an historical recounting of the band’s history pulled straight from Wikipedia. Just to show some street-cred, he compares the album to Vulgar Display of Power or something he might have heard ten years ago at a party while he was trying to pick up an undergrad anthropology major. He does a song-by-song blow, which is unnecessary, not only because he doesn’t know what he’s talking about, but because we only want to know his overall impression of the album and if we wanted particulars we’d listen to the whole fucking album ourselves. Then he trails off into some sociological cant that he’ll repeat for his next review of music he doesn’t listen to or know anything about.

Do we care about any of this? No. All we care about is whether or not the reviewer thinks the album is good, and, briefly, why. That’s all we want. And if he doesn’t know anything about the genre or respect it, he shouldn’t be reviewing it. That goes for ALL critics. There’s nothing worse than reading a review by a writer who clearly does not like or understand the genre he’s writing about. I don’t write about emo here, because I don’t like it, I don’t listen to it, and I don’t know much about it. Sounds simple, eh? Let’s call it a rule.

Do you want my review of the new Metallica Album? Do you really want it? OK, here it is. IT SUCKS. It’s a run-of-the-mill effort with Rick Rubin’s lazy imprimatur all over it. Sure, Rubin was a king-maker in the past - basically a modern day Ahmet Ertegun. We’ll never, ever forget what he did for Slayer and Anthrax, but post Red Hot Chili Peppers, Rubin really doesn’t have anything to offer the metal community anymore. They’d have been better off using someone like Erik Rutan, who I think is one of the best metal producers out there right now. On top of this, within thirty seconds, it sounded like Metallica hasn’t really listened to any metal besides themselves in the past ten years or so. There are bands that are simply light years ahead of Metallica today (there have been since the Black album), and you’d be better off listening to them. I mean, come on! How can you come off of At the Gates or Skinless and not feel like you’re listening to a souped up version of Staind when you put on Death Magnetic?!!

As always, I respect Metallica from a historical perspective. Like those of us who were floored by Whiplash the first time we heard it on a fifth generation cassette tape, I pay my respects - as required. But there are simply better musicians making better music right now, and as I work for a living and have about a half an hour a day to really listen to music, I’ll choose them. Listening to Metallica’s new album for me is the equivalent of opening the refrigerator and expecting to find a bucket of KFC that wasn’t there thirty seconds ago. That shit just ‘aint gonna happen the way I want, so the hell with it.

As far as the critics who pretend to write about metal, go back to writing about Hot Chip or Pavement from your apartment in Williamsburg, the LES, or whatever arrondissement you inhabit. We don’t need you to tell us that we’re now culturally viable (thank you so much for that), and we ESPECIALLY don’t need any half-baked sociological treatises to explain us to ourselves. We know who we are, we’ve been who we are for a very long time, and we don’t need your help. We don’t listen to metal because it’s ironic. We listen to metal because we LIKE IT. We don’t wear Slayer shirts because they’re hip. We wear Slayer shirts because we like Slayer. We’ll be here long after the next fad has come and gone and you’re scrounging for a part-time teaching gig at the local YMCA. We’re like fucking roaches. We’ll be here FOREVER. We’ve survived without your go-ahead, and we’ll continue to do so. As a matter of fact, just to keep things interesting, we’re going to make our music even more heavy and extreme, just to give you something new to grimace about. How’s that sound?

In short, go gaze at your shoelaces somewhere else. Go to a Saviours concert and meet your friends. Compare beards while you drink Stella Artois. Just get the hell out of here.

Thank God we have our own publications anyway.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Review: Metal Masters Tour, Aug. 9th, PNC Arena, Holmdel, NJ


On August 9th, 2008, in what is inarguably one of the worst sounding arenas on the east coast, I had the privilege to witness the Metal Masters Tour.

The Crowd

The happiest bunch of regular, hard working people I’ve seen in a long, long time. Beer, beer and more beer flowed. Many horns were raised. Even security and concession stand workers were in high spirits. Fathers and sons banged heads together in a Super bowl of metal. It was a beautiful thing, kind of like listening to a tag-team lecture on Metal given by a group of venerable professors.

Testament

What can I say about one of the original thrash bands, besides the fact that Alex Skolnick fucking kicked ass? Unfortunately, the acoustics at PNC Arena render thrash into an unholy disaster, so I had a hard time picking out what Testament was playing. But there was no mistaking when they launched into New World Order and Practice What You Preach; the crowd went nuts. On the whole, and despite the poor sound, their set was legendary, but short. With three major acts to follow, I wasn’t surprised.

It was great to see Chuck Billy up there as well. Not many people survive cancer to do what he does. More power to him.

Motorhead

Surprisingly long set, delivered with Lemmy-esque aplomb. Does it really mater what songs they play? They’re Motorhead, and as long as Lemmy is craning his head back to hit those scratchy notes, everything is good. Godamn, was it fun! Motorhead is like seeing your favorite bar band play Motorhead, except that, well, they really are Motorhead. Plus, the head sound guy must have woken up, because they sounded incredible. They guy next to me remarked that they sounded just as good as they did in 1980 at L’Amours in Brooklyn. And he wasn’t even that drunk yet.

Heaven and Hell

Circles and rings, dragons and kings, and a really short, sixty six year old guy that still belts it out better than any metal vocalist alive. In addition to the the fact that he is super, super appreciative of the people who come to see him, RJD is still the master orator. Emit whatever sacrilege you want about ‘Sabbath: The Dio Years’; hearing Heaven and Hell open with the Mob Rules is highlight number one of the fucking century.

Song two, Children of the Sea; the first power chord, and the place goes completely insane in a collective Proustian moment of joy. I could sense the memories in the air of that first joint smoked while listening to Heaven and Hell for the first time back in 1980.

Interestingly enough, Heaven and Hell is the same Sabbath lineup I saw during the Mob Rules tour in 1982. All things eventually come full circle. I could have listened to these guys for five or six hours; it wouldn’t have been enough.

Judas Priest

Priest opened with Nostradamus, and I was immediately terrified that they would offer an entire rendition of their disastrous new album. My fears were assuaged when they launched into Metal Gods. Clad in a hilarious, glistening, full-length metal coat, and crouching over his mic, a bearded Halford sounded just as incredible and searing as he did on the Screaming for Vengeance tour. Tipton and Downing . . . still unbelievable. All solos played note-for-note from the original.

The problem with seeing Priest is that the catalogue is just too massive. You can hear Devil’s Child, but be upset that there’s no Desert Plains. You can hear Hell Bent for Leather, but yearn for Solar Angels. I suppose it’s a good problem to have. And I was not entirely surprised that there was nothing from Sad Wings of Destiny. There are just not enough hours in the evening. I would have loved a nice, long Victim of Changes, though.

Highlight of the set: Dissident Aggressor.

One of the best parts of Priest’s show was when Ian Hill came up to the crowd to exchange hand-slaps and shoulder nudges with the audience. It’s obvious that even the reserved Mr. Hill has attained the status of legend. Very heart-warming.

Highlight

About halfway through Priest’s set, I turned around and saw Alex Skolnick standing behind me in the general population. He was MOBBED by admirers and enjoying every minute of it. Good for him.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Late Heavy Metal in Baghdad Review


Everyone else has reviewed it, so I might as well. Heavy Metal in Baghdad, produced and directed by Eddy Moretti and Suroosh Alvi and presented by VBS.TV’s Vice Films, is an extremely vital document for everyone to see – not just metal fans. If you ever took your freedom of cultural expression for granted, you won’t after seeing this film.

H.M.I.B. features the Iraqi metal band Acrassicauda (Latin for ‘black scorpion’) in war-torn Baghdad from the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003 to the present day. Playing metal in muslim countries has always been difficult, but with fall of Hussein, Acrassicauda had a brief moment in which freedom of expression seemed possible. Those hopes were dashed when Iraq collapsed into bloody insurgency and the streets around them devolved into chaos. The band fought to stay alive, eventually fleeing to Syria and then Istanbul, where they now struggle to maintain a meager existence.

For a person like me, who thinks nothing of walking into a church or shopping mall with a Slayer shirt on, this film was a true eye-opener. How often have I taken my own freedoms for granted? How often have I lost sight of the freedom of expression that I mindlessly exercise in my own culture, with no thought to the responsibility that entails? I can’t help asking myself these questions while I witness the sheer balls with which the members of Acrassicauda lead their lives. Everything has a price, and Acrassicauda is paying it.

One of the most powerful aspects of H.M.I.B. is its honest, street-level portrayal of life in present-day war-torn Iraq. The absence of sanitization and mainstream media vetting is truly energizing. Moretti and Alvi really dig down into the personalized aspects of war and do so without becoming ham-fisted or overly sentimental. Aditionally, the sheer D.I.Y. courage of H.M.I.B.’s entire production team cannot be lauded enough, which ads further testament to their achievement. Who else but true metal fans would literally con their way into a war-zone to tell such a story? If anybody is living the metal ethos, it’s Acrissicauda and the H.M.I.B team.

Acrassicauda's MySpace page: http://www.myspace.com/wwwacrassicaudas5com

Film Website: www.heavymetalinbaghdad.com