Alkaline Trio / Cursive / The Dear and Departed @ NYC 3/12/10

March 12, 2010

In support of their newest album on Epitaph Records, Chicago’s Alkaline Trio took Cursive and The Dear and Departed on a nationwide tour of mid-size venues. The tour arrived in New York City on March 12 at Nokia Theatre; the band had a lot to prove after a string of less-than-impressive albums (Crimson, Agony and Irony, and their latest, This Addiction) and a sub-par performance on their tour two years ago with heavyweights Rise Against, Thrice, and The Gaslight Anthem down the street at Roseland. Could Alkaline Trio somehow muster up enough inner-pain to return to their tortured origins?

The Dear & Departed

The Dear & Departed

The Dear and Departed opened the evening, playing a relatively unexciting blend of new wave and Gothic rock. Frontman Dan Smith (you may have seen him on LA Ink) did his best to entertain the crowd, but the four-piece did little to differentiate themselves from a plethora of similar-sounding modern British pop and rock acts. The band played selections form their Equal Vision Records debut, Chapters EP, as well as songs such as “Hometown Hero” from their older full-length, Something Quite Peculiar.

Cursive

Cursive

Nebraska’s Cursive opened with “Dorothy at Forty”, seemingly dragging through the first few songs of their eleven-song setlist. Even the jagged staple, “Butcher the Song”, wasn’t as powerful as it has been. This all seemed strange for a band featuring three of Saddle Creek Records’s most prolific musicians — frontman Tim Kasher, guitarist Ted Stevens, and bassist Matt McGinn — who have been touring together for more than a decade.

Cursive

Cursive

Thankfully, Kasher stepped things up with their latest single, “From the Hips”, and the band seemed to click from there out. “Art is Hard” and “The Martyr”, back-to-back, were the band’s strongest moments — it’s unfortunate that their two best albums were so overlooked in the setlist selection. Patrick Newberry provided solid horns and keys to “Big Bang” and indeed the whole set, greatly expanding Cursive’s sound. The near-hour set concluded with a strong performance of Mama, I’m Swollen‘s “I Couldn’t Love You Anymore”, setting the bar quite high for Alkaline Trio to follow.

Dorothy at Forty
Mama I’m Swollen
Butcher the Song
Retreat!
From the Hips
A Gentleman Caller
Let Me Up
Art is Hard
The Martyr
Big Bang
I Couldn’t Love You

Alkaline Trio

Alkaline Trio

Alkaline Trio began their set in an interesting order, with the first half following this pattern: the first song (and namesake) from the brand new This Addiction, a few old songs; second song from This Addiction; old songs. This pattern continued through the album’s fourth track, “Dead on the Floor”, before “Mercy Me” broke the trend. Guitarist Matt Skiba identified “Dine, Dine My Darling” as his favorite cut from the new album; Cursive’s Patrick Newmann contributed horns to “Lead Poisoning”.

Alkaline Trio

Alkaline Trio

The band wisely stayed away from This Addiction for the rest of the set until album-closer “Fine” started the encore, making room for large portion of their far-superior back catalog throughout the night. Good Mourning thankfully received heavy treatment, with about one third of the band’s set coming from the 2003 full-length including an excellent performance of “We’ve Had Enough”. “Nose Over Tail” preceded “97″ as it does on the band’s 2000 self-titled album, which also contributed “Goodbye Forever”.

This Addiction
Armageddon
Emma
Dine, Dine My Darling
We’ve Had Enough
Lead Poisoning ft Patrick cursive on horns
Mr. Chainsaw
Dead on the Floor
Fatally Yours
Crawl
Mercy Me
Goodbye Forever
In Vein
Continental
Blue Carolina
Sadie
Nose Over Tail
97
Fine
Attitude (Misfits cover)
Blue in the Face

Aside from a poor performance of hit single “Mercy Me”, Alkaline Trio sounded sharp for their entire set. Misfits cover “Attitude” found the band switching instruments, with Skiba jumping on the skins and drummer Derek Grant stepping out from behind the kit and leading the charge. “Blue in the Face” finally wrapped up the band’s great performance, and Alkaline Trio left the stage victorious, having proven that they are an incredibly worthwhile live act.


Jack’s Mannequin / fun. / Vedera @ Philadelphia 3/1/10

March 1, 2010

Proving that pop music isn’t just near-naked, big-breasted blondes singing about bad romances, Jack’s Mannequin stopped in Philadelphia to demonstrate that the genre still has substance. With support from two other like-minded pop acts and a sold-out crowd, the California four-piece was equipped to defend the genre.

Vedera

Vedera

Kansas quartet Vedera kicked off the evening with “Loving Ghosts”, the first of six songs from their sophomore and latest full-length, Stages. Effortlessly switching from rhythm guitar to piano throughout the set while also providing powerful lead vocals, frontwoman Kristen May caught the attention of the sold out Philadelphia crowd. May’s husband and co-songwriter, Brian Little, provided excellent leads; drummer Drew Little and bassist Jason Douglas make up the four-piece’s rocksteady rhythm section. The set’s highlight was “Lover’s Lie” from the band’s superior debut, The Weight of an Empty Room:

Loving Ghosts
Forgive You
A World Apart
Goodbye My Love
Satisfy
Lover’s Lie
We Sing

fun.

fun.

Providing direct support, fun. began their set at 8:30. Things started off shaky, with the excellent “Walking the Dog” plagued with unnecessary use of strange effects. Thankfully, though, the band returned to form on the next song with pop masterpiece “I Wanna Be the One”. Andrew Dost sounded excellent on the piano; touring member Emily Moore’s female vocals helped complete the band’s  soaring harmonies. Touring bassist Michael Newsted backed a riveting performance of “All the Pretty Girls on a Saturday Night”, while “Barlights” showcased frontman Nate Ruess’s intimate storytelling. A heartwarming performance of “Take Your Time (Coming Home)” finished fun.’s wonderful seven-song setlist.

Walking the Dog
I Wanna Be the One
All the Pretty Girls on a Saturday Night
Barlights
The Gambler
At Least I’m Not As Sad (As I Used to Be)
Take Your Time (Coming Home)

As Jack’s Mannequin frontman Andrew McMahon walked on stage, the crowd erupted in applause and the band jumped into a great performance of “Holiday from Real”. Guitarist Bobby Anderson slammed the first few chords of “The Mixed Tape” to kick off the hit single, with the band then moving onto the first two tracks from their latest album, The Glass Passenger. “Kill the Messenger” was injected with bits of The Police’s “Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic”; “The Resolution” was a full-crowd singalong.

Jack's Mannequin

Jack's Mannequin

Slowing things down, “Hammers and Strings (A Lullaby)” found McMahon offering farewell to his very first piano while remembering the amazing memories associated with it. The song’s haunting piano echoed through the Electric Factory, silencing the sold-out crowd while McMahon lamented, “My friend calls me up with her heart heavy still, she says, Andy, the doctors prescribed me the pills but I know I’m not crazy. I just lost my will. So why am I taking them still?”

Things didn’t stay somber for long, though, with pounding performances of “Bloodshot”, “I’m Ready”, and “Bruised” moving the crowd to dance along. A very respectable cover of U2′s “New Year’s Day” was surprisingly well-received by the young crowd. Following a talk about enjoying some of the band’s deep cuts — that is, songs recorded for but not released on a full-length album — Jack’s Mannequin played “Miss California”, a bonus track from The Glass Passenger.

Jack's Mannequin

Jack's Mannequin

Two of the band’s best cuts, “Dark Blue” and “MFEO”, closed out the setlist. Both songs received extended instrumental parts, with the latter featuring an enormous outro lead by drummer Jay McMillan’s rhythmic percussion and McMahon’s swooning vocals: “I said maybe, maybe we were made for each other…where are you now?”

An encore performance began with current single, “Swim”, and ended with “La La Lie”, featuring McMahon on harmonica. The night wasn’t complete, though, until McMahon leapt off stage, into the crowd, and surfed to the sound booth near the back of the venue. Being carried by just the flow of the crowd, McMahon safely made the trip and also the return voyage back to stage.

Holiday from Real
The Mixed Tape
Crashin’
Spinning
Kill the Messenger
The Resolution
Hammers and Strings (A Lullaby)
Bloodshot
I’m Ready
Bruised
New Year’s Day (U2 cover)
Miss California
Dark Blue
MFEO
Swim
La La Lie

Jack’s Mannequin sounded great at the normally-shoddy Electric Factory, putting on an extremely enjoyable show full of singalongs and crowd participation. With such a solid catalog at their disposal, however, it comes as absolutely no surprise. McMahon will be returning to duties in his former band, Something Corporate, over the coming months, but expect a new Jack’s Mannequin album and a tour supporting that album in the near future as the frontman juggles his responsibilities in both pop powerhouses.

All photos by Lindsay Voldandt.


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