Thursday / Converge / Touche Amore / Lewd Acts @ Philadelphia 4/30/10

April 30, 2010

“I know with Thursday we’re supposed to be this sad emo band, but we want you guys to have fun at our concerts so we bring out bands like Converge,” a paraphrased Geoff Rickly said to the crowd in Philadelphia’s Trocadero Theatre on a warm April night. It wasn’t just Converge, though, that Rickly was referring to; openers Lewd Acts and Touche Amore both play a style of music not readily associated to that of Thursday.

Lewd Acts

Lewd Acts

Lewd Acts kicked off the evening with a twenty-minute blast of non-stop intensity. The California four-piece tore through hardcore song after hardcore song, with frontman Tyler Densley spending half of the set jumping into the crowd, opening pits on the floor, or climbing onto the upper-level balcony. Clearly interested in exciting the small audience — only about a hundred people made it in time for their 7PM start — the band succeeded in pumping up the crowd for the next few acts.

Touche Amore

Touche Amore

Touche Amore played next, sticking heavily to 2009′s To the Beat of a Dead Horse during their brief twenty-minute set. “Cadence” was particularly solid, and a brand new song from an upcoming split with La Dispute sounded promising. Closing with “Honest Sleep”, frontman Jeremy Bolm came into the crowd to sing along with a passionate group of fans who knew every word. It’s hard to imagine Touche Amore remaining a well-kept secret for long; expect them to be a household name in underground music fairly soon.

Converge

Converge

Hardcore/metal legends Converge took the stage at 8:30PM, with drummer Ben Koller laying down pummeling metal drums for the next hour. Despite a back-catalog that spans two decades, the Massachusetts natives stuck entirely to their post-millennium output, beginning with the excellent Jane Doe leadoff, “Concubine”. “Dark Horse” was punishing, but the string of No Heroes cuts including “Heartache” directly into “Hellbound” was exceptional. Axe to Fall contributed a bulk of the setlist, including the title track and “Wishing Well” into “Damages”.

Converge

Converge

Frontman Jacob Bannon raced around the stage for the duration of Converge’s hour-long set, encouraging anyone who knew the words to sing along, often offering the microphone out to those who got close enough. You Fail Me‘s “First Light” intro began the last part of Converge’s excellent setlist, with the commanding “The Broken Vow” from Jane Doe tossed into a mix of other You Fail Me cuts. “Last Light”, featuring pounding guitars and bass from Kurt Ballou and Nate Newton, respectively, closed out Converge’s solid performance.

Concubine
Dark Hose
Heartache
Hellbound
Lonewolves
Hanging Moon
No Heroes
Reap What You Sow
Cutter
Dead Beat
Orphaned
Axe to Fall
Wishing Well
Damages
First Light
Eagles Become Vultures
The Broken Vow
Dropout
Last Light

Thursday

Thursday

Beginning with the brash “At this Velocity”, Thursday kicked off their setlist at 9:50PM. On drummer Tucker Rule’s cue, “Division St.” followed, with the entire crowd singing along. “Friends in the Armed Forces” was particularly urgent and well-performed, with Geoff Rickly passionately singing his pacifist beliefs. “For the Workforce, Drowning” — normally a rock-solid staple to the band’s live show — was disappointingly sloppy, with Rickly even skipping the song’s entire bridge.

Thursday

Thursday

Full Collapse favorite “Paris in Flames” gave touring-bassist Lukas Previn his first bass solo of the tour; Previn more-than-adequately filled in for Tim Payne on bass, even adding a welcomed youthful demeanor to a band that often finds its guitarists stationary on stage. Thursday’s two “car crash songs” went back-to-back, an interesting but, after five years, totally predictable moment.

Thursday

Thursday

“Beyond the Visible Spectrum” was a very welcomed addition to the setlist, and the band nailed the rarely performed song. Anchored by guitarist Steve Pedulla’s excellent hammering riffs, “Signals Over the Air” sounded great. Common Existence lead-off, “Resuscitation of a Dead Man”, was executed excellently and works much better in a live setting than it does in the studio.

Thursday

Thursday

The next ten minutes found Thursday slowing things down, with keyboardist Andrew Everding leading the way on “Sugar in the Sacrament” and current single “Circuits of Fever”. Neither song is particularly worthwhile in a live setting, and it would have been a much more redeeming experience to have a different Common Existence track — “Subway Funeral”, originally on the printed setlist — instead of “Circuits of Fever”.

Thursday

Thursday

Touche Amore’s Jeremy Bolm shared vocal duties with Rickly on “Jet Black New Year”; Thursday extended the song with Prince’s “1999″, as they have been doing for the last half-decade. “Autobiography of a Nation” wrapped up Thursday’s setlist with Rickly coming into the crowd and letting anyone within arms reach of the microphone sing along.

At this Velocity
Division St.
Friends in the Armed Forces
For the Workforce, Drowning
Paris in Flames
Understanding in a Car Crash
Other Side of the Crash/Over and Out (of Control)
Beyond the Visible Spectrum
Signals Over the Air
Resuscitation of a Dead Man
Sugar in the Sacrament
Circuits of Fever
Jet Black New Year
Autobiography of a Nation

Thursday

Thursday

With the last-minute removal of the rarely seen “Subway Funeral”, Thursday’s song selection was as predictable as ever; the band has stuck to a similar setlist for each of their tours since the release of A City by the Light Divided in 2006. It hurts not to see more songs from Common Existence, such as the aforementioned “Subway Funeral” or “You Were the Cancer”, the latter of which is arguably one of the band’s best songs to date. A few missteps aside (such as guitarist Tom Keeley slipping off-key or Rickly leaving out blocks of lyrics), Thursday was fantastic and an absolute must-see live show for anyone who has yet to see the New Brunswick six-piece. For fans who catch the band on their routine trips around the New Jersey area, though, Thursday’s setlist is becoming stale. The band is set to hit the studio in June to record a followup to Common Existence with producer Dave Fridmann. Before they tour on that album, though, it would be great to see Thursday toss a handful of the rarely seen Common Existence cuts into a show somewhere along the way.


The Hold Steady / J-Roddy Walston and The Business @ NYC 4/17/2010

April 17, 2010

To celebrate the upcoming release of Heaven is Whenever on Vagrant Records, The Hold Steady played an intimate show to a sold out crowd at Lower Manhattan’s Bowery Ballroom on April 17. The band debuted a few new members:  Dan Neustad replaced eccentric keyboardist Franz Nicolay, and Steve Selvidge joined to play guitar, officially making The Hold Steady a six-piece ready to deliver frontman Craig Finn’s spastic street-level stories told through a mix of spoken word and infectious choruses.

J-Roddy Walston and The Business

J-Roddy Walston and The Business

Baltimore’s J-Roddy Walston and The Business provided lone support for The Hold Steady, playing their high-strung blend of Americana and ’70s styled rock and roll. The band’s relentless set went for nearly forty-five minutes, and the four-piece clearly enjoyed every minute of it. Occasionally tossing in piano and slide-guitar, the band generally stuck to the basic formula of two wailing guitars, rhythmic bass, and pounding drums. A small pack of fans sang along to every word, but the entire venue seemed to enjoy the band’s exciting live show.

The Hold Steady

The Hold Steady

The Hold Steady started things “the only way [they] know how”, with “Positive Jam” finding Craig Finn narrating highlights of the past century. The band wasted no time jumping into new material, with current single “Hurricane J” following Boys and Girls in America‘s “Same Kooks”. “Cattle and the Creeping Things” appeased the band’s long-time fans, while newer songs like  “Magazines” and “You Can Make Him Like You” were full-crowd singalongs, with The Hold Steady reciprocating the energy on stage.

The Hold Steady

The Hold Steady

The second of five new songs from Heaven is Whenever, “Rock Problems”, sounded solid but unfortunately unfamiliar as the album was still a few weeks away from retail. On 2004′s “Barfruit Blues” Finn was — even by his standards — exceptionally quirky, name-checking hero Bruce Springsteen while awkwardly flailing his arms around stage. “The Weekenders” and “Chips Ahoy!”, two different songs sharing the same storyline, went back to back with the fan-favorite from Boys and Girls in America receiving the biggest applause of the evening.

The Hold Steady

The Hold Steady

“A Slight Discomfort” displayed a new side of The Hold Steady, with the song biding its energy for a massive climax, while “Stay Positive” was a return to the band’s signature style, both lyrically and musically. “Southtown Girls” featured fantastic dueling solos; a gigantic performance of “How a Resurrection Really Feels” closed out The Hold Steady’s setlist, and the band walked off stage. The premeditated encore started with “Massive Nights” and ended with the booming a cappella “whoa’s” of “Slapped Actress”.

Positive Jam
Same Kooks
Hurricane J
Cattle and the Creeping Things
Magazines
You Can Make Him Like You
Rock Problems
Sequestered in Memphis
Navy Sheets
Soft in the Center
Barfruit Blues
The Weekenders
Chips Ahoy!
Stuck Between Stations
A Slight Discomfort
Stay Positive
Southtown Girls
How a Resurrection Really Feels
Massive Nights
Slapped Actress

The Hold Steady

The Hold Steady

The seventy-five minute set flew by, touching on most of the band’s best songs while still including half of the brand new (and mostly unheard) Heaven is Whenever material. The Hold Steady sounded sharp and capable, as founders Finn, guitarist Tad Kubler, and bassist Galen Polivka clearly spent considerable time with the band’s newer members to make the transition feel seamless. The Hold Steady returns to New York City at the much larger Beacon Theater in October, giving fans plenty of time to get up to speed on the band’s excellent new album.


Dashboard Confessional / Anthony Raneri @ Mahwah 4/9/2010

April 9, 2010

A potent duo of songwriters arrived in Mahwah, New Jersey, at Ramapo College’s Brady Center Arena on April 9: Anthony Raneri, frontman of Bayside, and Chris Carrabba’s Dashboard Confessional. Though the venue — a gym with basketball nets hanging on opposite ends — was certainly not built for a rock show, Ramapo staff did a great job of setting it up properly and working out the inevitable sound issues in a very timely manner.

Anthony Raneri

Anthony Raneri

Anthony Raneri began the night with “Good Fucking Bye”, a song written by Alkaline Trio guitarist Matt Skiba. The extremely personal “Don’t Call Me Peanut”, from Bayside’s 2005 self-titled album, followed, with a surprising number of fans singing along in the crowd. Raneri then worked out a solid acoustic rendition of Bad Religion’s “Sorrow” before playing a cut from Bayside’s latest album, the excellent “The Ghost of St. Valentine”. “The Ballad of Bill the Saint” — an original penned by Raneri for an upcoming solo album –  sounded great and was received warmly by the crowd.

Anthony Raneri

Anthony Raneri

As trippy lights danced on the wall behind the stage, Raneri acknowledged that the student-run stage lighting was more suited for a rock show and not for just one man and a guitar. Still, Raneri sounded great on”I and I” and “Duality” but it wasn’t until he covered Death Cab for Cutie’s hit “I’ll Follow You Into the Dark” that the crowd finally gave due applause. “Meghan”, a Smoking Popes original from 1997′s Destination Failiure — often covered by Bayside — closed the solid forty-five minute outing.

Good Fucking Bye (Matt Skiba cover)
Don’t Call Me Peanut (Bayside cover)
Sorow (Bad Religion cover)
The Ghost of St. Valentine (Bayside cover)
The Ballad of Bill the Saint
I and I (Bayside cover)
Duality (Bayside cover)
I’ll Follow You Into the Dark (Death Cab for Cutie cover)
Meghan (Smoking Popes cover)

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional kicked things off with the soaring “Don’t Wait”, the first song from 2006′s Dusk and Summer. The band’s sound was unfortunately muddy through the first few songs, but by “Saints and Sailors” everything was ironed out. An intimate performance of “The Places You Have Come To Fear The Most” included pieces of Say Anything’s “I Can Get Sexual, Too” before Chris Carrabba retreated behind a piano for “Everybody Learns from Disaster”, the second of just four songs from his latest album, the excellent Alter the Ending.

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional

Fan-favorites “Screaming Infidelities” and “Again I Go Unnoticed” were executed with perfection; Carrabba prefaced “Thick as Thieves” with a story about a former “foxy” kleptomaniac girlfriend. “As Lover’s Go” was one of the evening’s most massive performances, with Mike Marsh’s pounding drums echoing through the gym. “Remember to Breathe” was injected with other artists’ lyrics, including The Hold Steady’s “Steve Nix” and another ode to Say Anything in the form of “Woe”; a respectable cover of “Summer of ’69″ followed. One of Dashboard Confessional’s strongest cuts, “Vindicated”, went flawlessly before the band closed with “Stolen”. Following brief chants for one more song, Carrabba and his band returned on stage for a full-crowd singalong of the band’s signature song, “Hands Down”.

Don’t Wait
The Good Fight
The Motions
Saints and Sailors
The Places You Have Come To Fear The Most
Everybody Learns from Disaster
Screaming Infidelities
Again I Go Unnoticed
The Shade of Poison Trees
Belle of the Boulevard
Thick as Thieves
Tall Green Grass (Cory Branan cover)
As Lover’s Go
The Swiss Army Romance
Remember to Breathe
Get Me Right
Summer of ’69 (Bryan Adams cover)
Vindicated
Stolen
Hands Down

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional

It’s hard to imagine a more well-balanced Dashboard Confessional setlist built for a college crowd: Carrabba hand-picked a nice selection from each of his band’s six full-length albums, even finding room for an acoustic cover of  “Tall Green Grass” which sounded infinitely better than Cory Branan’s original. Carrabba undeniably connected with the crowd of screaming fans, most of whom were barely ten years old when the thirty-five year old singer-songwriter first started penning his emo-driven confessionals. Much has changed since The Swiss Army Romance, but one thing remains the same: Carrabba is an excellent musician with an uncanny ability to drive every girl in the audience absolutely wild with just riff in E-flat.

Dashboard Confessional photographs provided by the excellent Brian Reilly.


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