Every Avenue / Valencia @ NYC 7/1

July 29, 2009

The Highline Ballroom hosted Every Avenue, Valencia, Cash Cash, Sparks The Rescue, and Phone Calls From Home on a Wednesday night in New York City. Although the opening bands would only receive thirty minutes or less, the $10 price point made the night appealing. With no real desire to catch any of the bands except Valencia, I showed up late to catch only the last few Cash Cash songs, which sounded awful. The band exemplifies the “neon band” trend that is so grossly unappealing.

Valencia

Valencia

Valencia sounded tight, opening with “Better Be Prepared” and leaning heavily on their latest album We All Need a Reason to Believe (including “Holiday”, “The Good Life”, and “Safe to Say”). Bassist George Ciukurescu and vocalist Shane Henderson controlled the crowd, likely picking up a handful of new fans. The band unfortunately did not play “Tenth Street” or “Away We Go” (two of my favorites from This All Could Be a Possibility, their 2005 debut), but still sounded good through most of the set before closing with “The Space Between”.

Every Avenue

Every Avenue

Every Avenue closed the show, playing their blend of pop-rock meets punk-pop surprisingly well. The band engaged the extremely young crowd and were actually entertaining for their forty-five minute set. I’m fairly unfamiliar with their material, but the band did play “Trading Heartbeats”, “Where Were You”, and “One More Song” in addition to a new song not yet released. Following the band’s brief encore, the venue cleared out fairly early, making room for completely seperate concert: a performance by The Roots, one of their many scheduled dates at the Highline Ballroon.

Photos by: Catherine Powell


Anthony Raneri / Vinny Caruana / Destry @ Hoboken 6/18

July 28, 2009

Maxwell’s in Hoboken, NJ, is one of my favorite venues in the area. Host to many great shows over the years, the venue is best known for its intimate atmosphere–the musicians and performers have to walk through the crowd to get to the stage. Drinks flow easily from the bars, and there are no bouncers or rails to guard the stage.

Destry

Destry

Formed in the wake of Michelle DaRosa’s departure from Straylight Run, Destry–playing a blend of folk and rock–opened the evening. After collaborating with (and being overshadowed by) her brother John Nolan for years, DaRosa finally got the chance to show her own abilities. Joined by hometown friends from Cassino and Straylight Run (drummer Nico Childrey, guitarist Tyler Odom, and bassist Shaun Cooper), the band’s first show was incredibly promising. Destry mixed a few covers into their brief set (Sam Cooke’s “Chain Gang” and The Everly Brothers’s “All I Have to Do is Dream”), dually showcasing their influences and tight harmonies.

Vinny Caruana

Vinny Caruana

Vinnie Caruana played next. Mixing up covers of both his bands (I Am the Avalanche and the now-defunct The Movielife), Caruana sounded like a wounded punk veteran of the scene. At only thirty, he came off much older–wiser, even. The crowd sang along to some of his back catalog’s staples, such as Forty Hour Train Back To Penn‘s “Hey”.  “I Took a Beating” took on its original acoustic form (found on a split with The Early November), and a number of other songs from I Am the Avalanche’s eponymous debut received solid treatment.

Bayside’s Anthony Raneri headlined the evening with just his acoustic guitar. Raneri sounded great, performing a nice mix of Bayside material and covers, in addition to a brand new song (“The Ballad of Bill The Saint”) to appear on his upcoming solo album. Shudder‘s “The Ghost of St. Valentine” was a nice surprise and the only Bayside song of the evening to not have received prior acoustic treatment on CD. The full setlist, to the best of my recollection:

Anthony Raneri

Anthony Raneri

Good Fucking Bye (Alkaline Trio cover)
Don’t Call Me Peanut
Sorrow (Bad Religion cover)
Landing Feet First
Blame It on Bad Luck
The Ghost of St. Valentine
The Ballad of Bill The Saint
They Looked Like Strong Hands
Duality
Boxcar (Jawbreaker cover)
I and I
I Will Follow You Into the Dark (Death Cab For Cutie cover)
Megan (The Smoking Popes cover)

“Landing Feet First” was dedicated to his wife (in attendance). “Boxcar” was a nice surprise for the few audience members old enough to remember Jawbreaker, while “I Will Follow You Into the Dark” should probably stay with Ben Gibbard. During “Duality”, Raneri joked that Bayside finally became a “legit” band due to the song–more specifically, the song’s intro riff on guitar that allows him to address the crowd before songs like “all the other legit bands”.

The evening was brief but quite enjoyable, and it’s always nice to hear some old The Movielife songs whenever possible. Destry was a nice surprise: the band has serious talent and potential, so don’t let them slip by your radar. Anthony Raneri was excellent, proving that even as stripped down acoustic numbers, Bayside has some incredibly well-written songs.

Photos by Devyn Manibo.


Warped Tour @ Oceanport 7/19

July 27, 2009

Warped Tour has gone through many incarnations since its creation in 1995. For the summer tour’s fifteenth birthday, creator Kevin Lyman toned things down–just one main stage and substantially fewer acts. Mainstage acts also now received forty minute setlists, an opportunity for many bands to play two or three more songs than in previous years. For New Jersey fans, the tour also shifted venues from the larger Englishtown Raceway to Monmouth Race Track.

Chiodos

Chiodos

Arriving at noon, I hurriedly searched for the inflatable set-times board. It turned out to be located near the mainstage, where I caught Chiodos. Known for their intense live performances, the Michigan five-piece sounded great but had unfortunately already played half of their first set. Luckily, I did catch two of the band’s best songs: “The Words ‘Best Friend’ Become Redefined” and “There’s No Penguins in Alaska”). Vocalist Craig Owens (pictured left in a Pi Beta Phi shirt–interestingly the letters of a national women’s fraternity) controlled the crowd with ease, encouraging enormous pits and even a wall of death. Even with some weaker cuts from Bone Palace Ballet making the setlist, Chiodos certainly sounded good.

Anti-Flag

Anti-Flag

Anti-Flag took the main stage at 1PM, opening with 2003′s “Turncoat”. The Pittsburgh punks played a set spanning their entire career, reaching back to their debut album with “You’ve Got To Die For The Government” but focusing primarily on songs from For Blood and Empire. The band spoke out against corporate bailouts, expressing disgust that blue-collar workers aren’t being directly assisted. Of course, the band’s spoken messages were echoed by their songs; “Sodom, Gomorrah, Washington D.C. (Sheep in Shepherd’s Clothing)” from their latest album, The People of the Gun, addresses the issue of corporate control in America. The band’s the full set:

Turncoat
I’d Tell You But…
You’ve Got To Die For The Government
Sodom, Gomorrah, Washington D.C. (Sheep in Shepherd’s Clothing)
The Smartest Bomb
One Trillion Dollars
Death Of A Nation
The Press Corpse
This Is The End (For You My Friend)
Should I Stay Or Should I Go (The Clash cover)
Cities Burn

Bayside

Bayside

After Anti-Flag’s incredible performance, I rushed across the parking lot to catch Bayside. Unfortunately, the primary side stage was scheduled to slightly overlap with the mainstage and I only caught the last half of Bayside’s excellent performance.  I did manage to get the get the setlist and it turned out to be a fairly predictable affair, though “Boy” from Shudder was noticeably absent (perhaps to make room for the somewhat rare “Existing In A Crisis (Evelyn)”). The full setlist:

Masterpiece
Carry On
Existing In A Crisis (Evelyn)
The Ghost of St. Valentine
The Walking Wounded
Duality
Montauk
Devotion and Desire

Senses Fail

Senses Fail

While waiting to catch Streetlight Manifesto, I caught parts of The Devil Wears Prada–an Ohio six-piece putting on their take of a hardcore/metal hybrid immitation. Surprisingly, the effort wasn’t awful. Conversely, I also sat through Senses Fail at the Smart Punk Stage; the New Jersey quintet sounded awful. Part of this was due to the Smart Punk Stage’s ongoing sound problems all day, but a larger part can be attributed to band’s poor live show and incredibly weak catalog. Hardly memorable, much of the set blurred together like a bad night of drinking. The only bright spot during thirty minute performance was  “Bite to Break Skin”, clearly one of the only decent cuts in the band’s discography since their 2002 From Depths to Dreams EP.

Streetlight Manifesto

Streetlight Manifesto

Ska powerhouse Streetlight Manifesto took the Hurley.com Stage next, promptly removing the awful taste of Senses Fail from anyone’s mouth who might have been unlucky enough to sit through that set. Replacing frontman Tom Kalnoky’s guitar was a sling for his broken left arm, but the band nonetheless played a quality set from 2:45 to 3:15. Even without songs from the essential Keasbey Nights (written by Kalnoky’s former band Catch 22 but rerecorded by Streetlight Manifesto in 2006) , the band captured the crowd. Drawing heavily on Somewhere in the Between (including the band’s only single to date, “We Will Fall Together), Streetlight Manifesto sounded excellent. Unfortunately, Underoath was scheduled at the same time I missed the Christian metalcore group’s mainstage set.

Saosin

Saosin

The next band I caught was California’s Saosin. Opening with “Seven Years”, it’s quite evident how, even five years since his departure, the band misses former vocalist Anthony Green–and not just on Green’s songs. Replacement Cove Reber is devoid of the energy and personality that elevated Saosin above their peers in 2003. In 2009, there are simply too many bands doing what Saosin does, yet better. The completely forgettable set consisted of three mediocore songs from the upcoming In Search of Solid Ground in addition a few of the stronger cuts from their debut EP (“Voices”, “Sleepers”).

Less Than Jake

Less Than Jake

I hurried over to the mainstage to see Less Than Jake, who came out to the traditional Star Wars theme. The band joined in on the song’s final moments  before kicking into “Last One Out of Liberty City”. I caught a few more songs before heading to The AKAs tent to say hello to some friends, but the full set is as follows:

Last One Out Of Liberty City
Automatic
Johnny Quest Thinks We’re Sellouts
Ghosts Of You and Me
Sobriety Is A Serious Business And Business Ain’t So Good
Help Save The Youth Of America From Exploding
Never Going Back To New Jersey
Plastic Cup Politics
Science of Selling Yourself Short
Sugar In Your Gastank
Does The Lion City Still Roar?
Look What Happened
All My Best Friends are Metalheads

Gallows

Gallows

Gallows was playing across the parking lot, and so we rushed to see the British hardcore punk outfit. Frontman Frank Carter took the band’s set to epic proportions, singing from the crowd the entire time. To be clear: to say he was singing from the crowd doesn’t mean he spent some time on the barricade, returning to the stage between songs. No, Carter was in the pit for the set’s duration, even starting the day’s biggest circle that would surround the stage’s sound tent. Gallows was loud, fast, and abrasive–and, as they put it, “sick of playing car parks” and Warped Tour dates.

The band’s passionate hardcore engaged the crowd, and even the band itself; midway through a sixty second song dedicated to “all the fake bands on this tour”, Carter threw the microphone and abruptly joined in on the giant circle pit. On a hot Sunday in New Jersey, with angst-filled youth and extreme energy, Gallows managed to top even the best of punk veterans and put on the best show of the day.

NOFX

NOFX

Warped Tour veterans NOFX played next. Clearly drunk, frontman Fat Mike spent much of the set telling offensive jokes (“Arming The Proletariat With Potato Guns”) and stumbling through three minute punk songs. The band touched on classics such as “Linoleum” (1994) and “It’s My Job To Keep Punk Rock Elite” (1998) and more recent cuts such as “We Called It America” from 2009′s Coaster. The band took stabs at everyone, including the fans (“Fuck Da Kids”) and even themselves for thirty minutes. “Eat the Meek” featured Fishbone’s Angelo Moore on saxophone and lead vocals. The full set:

Seeing Double At The Triple Rock
Murder the Gov’t
It’s My Job To Keep Punk Rock Elite
Mattersville
Fuck Da Kids
Linoleum
Arming The Proletariat With Potato Guns
Louise
Eat The Meek
Don’t Call Me White
We Called It America
Franco Un-American
Whoops I Od’d

Before giving up the stage, Fat Mike joked “thanks for coming to see us…and Underoath”–a nod towards the feud between the two bands over Underoath’s Christian beliefs and prayer sessions. Each band also issued a limited edition tour shirt in response to the situation: NOFX’s “Noah FX” shirt, designed with Underoath’s signature miniscule (“Ø”; Underoath’s “Underoath Loves Fat Dinosaurs” shirt, with a dinosaur personified as Fat Mike.

Flogging Molly

Flogging Molly

I managed to catch the end of Alexisonfire (who sounded great) before Celtic-punks Flogging Molly took the mainstage and put on an excellent performance. Written in honor of frontman David King’s father, “What’s Left of the Flag” was dedicated to King’s mother, who turned 81 that day. The band’s performance drew a lot of other bands, including Anti-Flags Justin Sane who joined on stage and Gallows’s Carter, who–more appropriately–could be seen navigating the pits. The full set, which drew from each of the band’s full-length albums:

Paddy’s Lament
The Likes Of You Again
Requiem For A Dying Song
Selfish Man
Drunken Lullabies
Float
Devil’s Dance Floor
Salty Dog
What’s Left Of The Flag
Seven Deadly Sins

After Flogging Molly, I wandered around catching parts of some other bands, including A Skylit Drive (just one song, “Wires and the Concept of Breathing”) at the Smart Punk stage. I also listened to some of Boston’s Westbound Train, who played an appealing blend of ska and rock but ultimately fell victim to a scheduling conflict that pitted them against Bad Religion, the next and final band on my list.

Bad Religion

Bad Religion

As the sun set on the mainstage at around 7PM, punk veterans Bad Religion started their set. The scene might have worked as a metaphor: the sun setting on the band after thirty years of touring and fourteen full-length albums. Indeed, it’s difficult to picture many of the bands on the 2009 Warped Tour existing without Bad Religion or their related projects (Circle Jerks, Minor Threat, Government Issue, Dag Nasty,and  Suicidal Tendencies–to name just a few). For Bad Religion, however, this was anything but goodbye. The band sounded angry and discontent with the modern world and modern music scene, and for forty minutes expressed these views through three-minute So-Cal flavored punk numbers:

Do What You Want
No Control
Social Suicide
Requiem For Dissent
Anesthesia
Generator
The Defense
I Want To Conquer The World
21st Century Digital Boy
Sorrow
Them and Us
Infected
American Jesus
Fuck Armageddon… This Is Hell

I left Monmouth Race Track after Bad Religion’s set, satisfied that I had done my best to see a large selection of quality bands during the eight-hour day. With few exceptions (Bayside, Underoath, Alexisonfire), scheduling conflicts were not a big issue–a nice benefit of the toned down Warped Tour. Even with a plethora of throwaway acts crowding the bill (including A Day to Remember, Attack Attack, Breath Carolina, Brokencyde, Dance Gavin Dance, Escape the Fate, Hit the Lights, I Set My Friends on Fire, Jeffree Stars, Meg and Dia, Millionaires, and The Maine), Warped Tour 2009 managed to impress thanks to give-it-all performances from new acts (Gallows) and veterans (Bad Religion, Flogging Molly, Anti-Flag) alike.

Photos by: Alexandra Tinder, Joshua Lowe, Danxcore, Dani Drainpipe


INTERVIEW: Latin for Truth

July 22, 2009

inTuneMusicOnline got the chance to sit down with Alabama’s Latin for Truth for an extensive interview about the band’s history,  future plans, and insight into the current state of music. As an added bonus, you can download Latin for Truth’s We Are Sick of Not Having the Courage to be Absolute Nobodies EP completely free! Recommended for fans of Lifetime, Kid Dynamite, or Set Your Goals.

Read the full interview right here or download the EP!


United Nations / Acid Tiger @ NYC 5/23

July 14, 2009

Located in the heart of Manhattan’s Lower East Side, The Delancey hosted a 1000 Knives presentation of United Nations, Acid Tiger, and Gay for Johnny Depp on a cool Saturday night. (According to United Nations frontman Geoff Rickly, Bad Brains was supposed to be the night’s special guest.) The venue is split into an upstairs club and a punk rock basement; the latter held the night’s hardcore acts.

Acid Tiger

Acid Tiger

I didn’t catch Gay for Johnny Depp, but Acid Tiger was ferocious. Fronted by the enormous J. Rattlesnake, the band also features two tour members of United Nations (drummer Ben Koller, guitarist Lukas Previn) and bassist Michael Celli. Rooted in a mixture of hardcore and metal, the four piece ripped through their set, pausing only to thank promoter Rich Hall for the chance to play the show.

As the lone guitairst, Previn smoothly alternated lead and rhythm riffs to Koller’s ridiculous drumming; indeed, you could spend the entire set just watching Koller’s excellent percussion abilities. Best known for his work in Converge, he consistently kept Acid Tiger interesting through the entire set.  The tiny crowd was surprisingly responsive yet were clearly in attendance for United Nations.

The self-described “emo power-violence” supergroup United Nations set up immediately following Acid Tiger. Koller remained on drums, and Previn shifted to bass guitar joining lead guitarist Jonah Bayer (The Lovekill), screamer Ryan Bland (Home 33), and rhythm guitarist/vocalist Geoff Rickly (Thursday). A motley crew–even by punk standards, the band looked like a group of high school friends still wet behind the ears and ready to to play a fire hall or VFW.

United Nations

United Nations

Limited to only one thirty-minute album of material, United Nations played an incredibly short set. Starting out slowly, it took a handful of songs before the crowd was ready to reciprocate the band’s energy. Midway through the set, however, things broke loose: Rickly lunged into the crowd, offering the microphone to anyone who knew the words. When not flailing in the crowd’s receptive arms, Rickly fell all over the stage in between passionate vocal deliveries.

United Nations clicked surprisingly well for a group of musicians that found themselves on stage together for just the third time. In a completely sweat-soaked Gorilla Biscuits shirt, Bland demanded the crowd’s attention, and the songs are incredibly well crafted and executed in a live setting. Still, Rickly was often sloppy on guitar, in fact abandoning the instrument altogether before the last song after he couldn’t get it in tune. It turned out, however, that it really didn’t matter. Without being tethered to a stationary amplifier on stage, Rickly spent the final minutes of the show in the crowd, a reminder of what punk rock shows are about: bands coexisting on the same plane as the fans. For a half hour, in an awful-smelling damp basement, United Nations played themselves into exhaustion, channeling the energy of a plethora of Ebullition Records artists and an early ’90s hardcore scene. If this band makes a rare stop in your city, do not miss them. The full setlist:

Revolutions In Graphic Design
My Cold War
The Shape of Punk That Never Came
Resolution 9
The Spinning Heart of the Yo-Yo Lobby
No Sympathy for a Sinking Ship
Subliminal Testing
Model UN

Photos by Gabe Molnar, ZenaMetalz


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