Coheed and Cambria / Circa Survive @ Philadelphia 5/21/2010

May 21, 2010

Supporting their latest release on Columbia Records, Year of the Black Rainbow, Coheed and Cambria arrived in The City of Brotherly Love to perform two straight nights at the Electric Factory. With support from locals Circa Survive and Torche, the weekend’s sold-out shows promised to be an extremely enjoyable experience for anyone interested in high-pitched vocals, shredding guitars, and mathy drumming.

Circa Survive

Circa Survive

Circa Survive began slightly after 9PM, walking on stage to an enormous hometown applause. Performing in front of a set of mirrors lining the back part of the stage, Circa Survive’s curious blend of progressive rock and post-hardcore seemed all the more mysterious with the reflective glass. “Get Out” kicked things off with frontman Anthony Green singing: “I can’t get started from the part where I left off yesterday / should have spent my time a little wiser!”. The crowd sang along with Green through most of the set, even on cuts from barely-a-month old Sky Blue Noise.

Circa Survive

Circa Survive

Just a handful of the band’s ten songs came from their latest album; the band’s 2005 debut, Juturna, surprisingly contributed four songs including an excellent performance of “The Glorious Nosebleed” with an extended jam tossed in. On Letting Go chipped in two more cuts, including the spacious “Living Together”. Lead by the winding guitars of Colin Frangicetto and Brendan Ekstrom (both former members of Philadelphia’s This Day Forward), “In the Morning and Amazing” was certainly one of the evening’s highlights.

Circa Survive

Circa Survive

The five-piece’s forty-five minute set neared its end with with the crowd-pleasing “In Fear and Faith”, one of Juturna‘s standout songs . Closer “Imaginary Enemy” offered Green a chance to showcase his range, and the Philadelphia local nailed the opportunity: indeed, Green sounded better than ever, evidence that the singer spent a considerable amount of time fine-tuning his vocals.

Get Out
Glass Arrows
Stop the Fucking Car
In the Morning and Amazing
The Great Golden Baby
Through the Desert Alone
Living Together
The Glorious Nosebleed
In Fear and Faith
Imaginary Enemy

Coheed and Cambria

Coheed and Cambria

Coheed and Cambria began with “One”, the first song on Year of the Black Rainbow. Lead by frontman Claudio Sanchez, Coheed and Cambria sounded as crisp as ever, but also way too loud for the 3000-capacity Electric Factory. Every hit on Chris Pennie’s kickdrum was eardrum-piercing, and songs which featured him wailing away on the double-bass pedal were nearly unlistenable. Moving further away from the stage helped, but the show was still too loud and often muddy. This was unfortunate because guitarist Travis Stever and bassist Michael Todd sounded spot-on but almost inaudible over the percussion.

Coheed and Cambria

Coheed and Cambria

Current single “Here We Are the Juggernaut” was enjoyable, but the band really shined when they executed older cuts like “The Velourium Camper III: Al the Killer” or “Everything Evil” with remarkable precision. In fact, the live performance of the latter The Second Stage Turbine song almost renders the studio cut obsolete: with Pennie on the skins, the song received extra fills making it sound enormous and truly fleshed out. The new “World of Lines”  sounded great, another example of how intricate drumming really enhances Coheed and Cambria’s sound. Conversely, “Made Out of Nothing” was just too cluttered; the song never gets a chance to breathe, and the band could do a better job walking the line between “full” and “overcrowded”. “Three Evils” brought things back to the band’s pop sensibilities; Sanchez masterfully crafts simple lines (“Pull the trigger and the nightmare stops”) into tremendous hooks that force everyone in the crowd to sing along, as if they themselves were held at gunpoint.

Coheed and Cambria

Coheed and Cambria

“Time Consumer” was an excellent surprise, and “No World for Tomorrow” sounded enormous, exactly as the band intended it to. Breakout 2003 single “A Favor House Atlantic”, from the near-perfect In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3, captured the same pop-perfection that “Three Evils” managed; the sold out crowd sang along to the song’s signature lines: “Good eye, sniper / I shoot, and you run”. That album’s title track closed the first part of Coheed and Cambria’s set, building an enormous energy and tension that boiled over into chants demanding an encore. Of course the band’s “encore” was staged, but wrapping up the first sixty minutes of their setlist with an epic ten-minute performance was quite powerful.

Coheed and Cambria

Coheed and Cambria

The simple, industrial-influenced “Far” began Coheed and Cambria’s three-song encore. “Welcome Home” was predictably incredible and the night’s shining moment; this generation’s “War Pigs” or “Highway Star”, the song is a technical-yet-melodic gem. Rush-inspired “21:13″ properly wrapped up the band’s ninety-minute setlist, taking the crowd through various movements that ultimately culminated in an eerie reprise of The Second Stage Turbine Blade‘s “IRO-Bot”.

One
The Broken
Here We Are Juggernaut
The Velourium Camper III: Al the Killer
Everything Evil
World of Lines
Made Out of Nothing (All That I Am)
Three Evils (Embodied In Love and Shadow)
Pearl of the Stars
Time Consumer
No World for Tomorrow
Guns of Summer
A Favor House Atlantic
In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3
Far
Welcome Home
21:13

Supporting the brand new Year of the Black Rainbow, eight of the album’s twelve tracks predictably made up the seventeen-song setlist. Though the album is far from Coheed and Cambria’s best, it still contains a handful of very enjoyable tracks in a live setting. Joined by touring keyboardist Wes Styles, the Poughkeepsie four-piece sounded precise the entire evening, and, with the addition of some of the band’s strongest older cuts  into the setlist– bonus points for including five songs from 2003′s In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3 — the night was excellent. Support from Circa Survive iced the already sweet cake. Don’t miss the chance to catch either of these bands on any future tours in the area, as it seems they each get better and better every year.


Recover @ NYC 5/7/2010

May 7, 2010

With support from Love Automatic and Bombers, Recover played Webster Hall’s basement (officially, The Studio at Webster Hall) on a Friday evening in New York City. Just Recover’s second show in New York City since calling it quits in 2005, the tiny cellar was fairly packed with fans looking to see if Recover still had the fire that made them such an essential live act in the earlier part of the decade.

Recover

Recover

Recover began at 10:30PM, opening with “Night of the Creeps” from their farewell full-length, This May be the Year I Disappear. “Fuck Me For Free” went next, and the band sounded as crisp as always. “Bad Timing” from the band’s Ceci N’est Pas Recover EP was particularly solid; two new songs went in the middle of the set, with guitarist Robert Mann providing lead vocals on both cuts. Frontman Dan Keyes returned to the microphone on an explosive performance of “Push Push”.

Recover

Recover

“Downtown”, a deep cut only on a rare disc known as Challenger, was surprising well-received by a crowd that clearly missed the Texas four-piece. As if to say thanks for the longtime support, the band dug back to their 2001 Fueled by Ramen debut and ripped through “Dialogue from a Film”, recalling the days when the band was more closely associated with the hardcore music scene. The back-to-back punches of “Sleeper” and “My Only Cure” just after 11PM were clearly the night’s highlights and also spectacular reminders of why Recover has been so dearly missed.

Night of the Creeps
Fuck Me For Free
LA
Bad Timing
Clouds Higher than Any Bird
No Big Deal
Push Push
Downtown
Dialogue from a Film
Sleeper
My Only Cure
Pardon the Wait

Recover

Recover

The band left the stage briefly, but returned with the decade-old “Pardon the Wait” from Rodeo and Picasso. Keyes climbed onto the ceiling’s pipes and dangled upside-down, screaming through the songs’s opening words: “Pardon the hate and the animosity towards your belief system and your hypocrisy!” The crowd rushed forward for the two-minute cut, grabbing at the hanging singer and singing along to every word. By the time Recover finished their twelve-song set, the crowd called for more but ultimately settled on the pleasant news that a new album is coming soon.


Set Your Goals / Comeback Kid @ Farmingdale 5/4/2010

May 4, 2010

Long Island’s Crazy Donkey packed a walloping lineup into its tiny bar on a weeknight: new and old bands; American and Canadian roots; punk-pop/hardcore and true punk/hardcore. The full lineup was Set Your Goals, Comeback Kid, Title Fight, Smart Bomb, and Valet Parking, but due to a glitch in Google Maps, I unfortunately arrived at the venue to catch just Comeback Kid and Set Your Goals. I was looking forward to Title Fight, especially, after their strong Bamboozle performance.

Comeback Kid

Comeback Kid

Long running Comeback Kid kicked things off with Wake the Dead‘s “Partners in Crime”: “I did this to myself, the summer air burning in my lungs / One more glance till I come undone, let’s stop this rising sun”. With those opening lines, frontman Andrew Neufeld demanded crowd participation and rowdiness. Likely the most well-known Canadian punk/hardcore act, the five-piece tore through an excellent setlist loaded with cuts from their strongest effort, 2005′s Wake the Dead, and the packed crowd responded appropriately with singalongs, pits, and stage rushes.

Comeback Kid

Comeback Kid

The older songs (like followup “Talk is Cheap” or the much older “Die Tonight” from the band’s 2003 debut, Turn it Around) received the best response, and indeed it seems like the band knows that their latest effort Broadcasting…, was a giant step backwards: Comeback Kid picked just two cuts (“Hailing on Me” and the title track) from that 2007 effort for their thirteen-song, forty minute set. An upcoming cut from Symptoms and Cures, due out this fall on Distory Records, followed “Trouble I Love”; album-closer “Final Goodbye” was the penultimate song, and the band finished with single and title track “Wake the Dead” at 9:15.

Partners in Crime
Talk Is Cheap
Hailing on Me
Die Tonight
Broadcasting
Our Distance
All in a Year
The Trouble I Love
(New song)
False Idols Fall
Step Ahead
Final Goodbye
Wake the Dead

Set Your Goals

Set Your Goals

When Set Your Goals arrived on stage a half-hour later, the band announced that they would be playing the longest set of their career. It’s not hard to doubt that statement: the California six-piece dug through their entire discography, playing twenty songs across sixty minutes, much more than their last area headline gig. The band’s self-titled 2005 EP contributed the first three songs (in order), building excitement with the instrumental “Reset” and culminating in fan-favorite “Goonies Never Say Die”. The one-two explosive punch of “Work in Progress” and “We Do It for the Money, Obviously!” sent the crowd into a frenzy: “My life: a constant work in a progress / I wouldn’t have it any other way!”

Set Your Goals

Set Your Goals

This Will Be the Death of Us contributed six songs, including the crushing “Gaia Bleeds” and the ever-playful “Summer Jam”, the latter of which found vocalists Jordan Brown and Matt Wilson trading lines about the band’s tour experiences over the last five years. “The Few that Remain” was expectantly absent as the song features guest vocals from Paramore’s Hayley Williams, but Set Your Goals has performed the song in a live setting without her before, and it would have been an awesome addition to an otherwise flawless set selection.

Set Your Goals

Set Your Goals

The fairly rare “An Old Book Misread” was a treat; in fact, the band played all of their excellent 2005 debut full-length, Mutiny, aside from the minute-long “Don’t Let This Win Over You”. Jawbreaker’s “Do you Still Hate Me?” was an unexpected yet welcomed addition to the setlist, as well. Comeback Kid’s Neufeld joined Set Your Goals for “Our Ethos”, which preceded the powerful combination of “Dead Men Tell No Tales” directly into “Mutiny”. A rousing performance of “To Be Continued…” wrapped up the evening just after 10:30PM.

Reset
How ‘Bout No, Scott?
Goonies Never Say Die
Work in Progress
We Do It for the Money, Obviously!
An Old Book Misread
Look Closer
This Will Be the Death of Us
Echoes
Do You Still Hate Me? (Jawbreaker cover)
Flight of the Navigator
The Fallen…
Gaia Bleeds (Make Way for Man)
Summer Jam
This Very Moment
This Song Is Definitely NOT About a Girl
Our Ethos: A Legacy to Pass On
Dead Men Tell No Tales
Mutiny
To Be Continued

Set Your Goals had always been a solid live act, but something has seemed to always hold them back. Tonight, however, the band simply exploded and proved they are the unquestionable leaders of the punk-pop meets hardcore genre, a style that is more than overwhelmed with less than adequate or just downright embarrassing acts. It’s great to see the band take out excellent bands like veterans Comeback Kid or up-and-comers Title Fight; a good tour package goes a long way. Set Your Goals is unfortunately joining the weak Warped Tour lineup this year, but expect them to come back around before 2010 ends — don’t miss out.


Bamboozle Day 2 @ East Rutherford 5/2/2010

May 2, 2010

Sunday concluded the weekend long Bamboozle festival; you can read about Saturday, Day 1, here.

All the Day Holiday

All the Day Holiday

All the Day Holiday kicked things off just after noon with selections from The Things We’ve Grown to Love, the band’s stellar debut full-length released on Linc Star Records last year. Opening with the airy “Cheers (You Still Love Me)”, the four-piece explored intricate and spacious melodies but remained grounded by the rock-solid percussion of drummer Mark Ventura. The band’s soaring vocals were provided only by rhythm guitarist Daniel Simmons, who managed to sound not only pitch-perfect throughout the set but also enormous — it’s hard to believe no one else is contributing backing harmonies. “Cities” closed the band’s excellent set, and before the clock even struck 1PM the bar was already set high for remaining bands.

Cheers (You Still Love Me)
Autumn
Real Time
Greener
2000 Winters
Cities

Steel Train

Steel Train

New Jersey natives Steel Train took the Skate and Surf Stage next, though it was unfortunately difficult to hear the band for most of the set, making normally-solid songs such as “Firecrackers” and “Kill Monsters in the Rain” a chore to listen to. Even a cover of “Dancing in the Dark”, which should have been a great moment being performed right outside Giants Stadium (the de facto home of Bruce Springsteen) was tough to get into. The band closed with a brand new song from their upcoming album and failed to connect with the crowd during their thirty minute set.

(Unidentified song)
Turnpike Ghost
Firecrackers
Dancing in the Dark (Bruce Springsteen cover)
Alone on the Sea
Kill Monsters in the Rain
(New song)

fun.

fun.

Following Steel Train’s set, frontman Jack Antonoff raced to the Sony Stage to perform with his other band, fun. The six-piece began with “Walking the Dog” but didn’t fall into rhythm until their second song, “I Wanna Be the One”. Excellent harmonies anchored pop-masterpiece “All the Pretty Girls”; “Barlights” had the crowd singing along to the band’s bouncy beats. Frontman Nate Ruess gave one of the best performances of the entire weekend, but the band inexplicably cut their set short and closed with “At Least I’m Not as Sad (As I Used to Be)”.

Walking the Dog
I Wanna Be the One
All the Pretty Girls
Barlights
At Least I’m Not as Sad (As I Used to Be)

MC Chris

MC Chris

While taking a break from the excessive heat, I caught geek-rapper MC Chris on the Zumiez South Stage. Aside from plugs about his association to Aqua Teen Hunger Force, MC Chris’s set included cuts across his decade-spanning discography including “Drinkin’ Blunts”, “Wiid is By My Side”, “Nrrrd Grrrl”, “006″, and “Fette’s Vette”. Certainly not an act to take seriously, the performance would have been much more enjoyable if the geek-rapper didn’t rely so heavily on sampling throughout his set — it wasn’t just choruses, even verses were piped in with MC Chris just rapping along with himself on tape.

Polar Bear Club

Polar Bear Club

Upstate New York’s Polar Bear Club played at 2:45 on the side stage to a fairly small crowd. Frontman Jimmy Stadt poured his heart into the set, which drew across both of their full-length albums but focused primarily on Chasing Hamburg, the band’s sophomore effort released by Bridge Nine Records in 2009. Songs like “Another Night in the Rock”, “Boxes”, “Election Day”, and “Burned Out in a Jar” showcased the band’s blend of melodic hardcore and post-hardcore rock. “Living Saints”, the band’s latest single, finished Polar Bear Club’s enjoyable set.

Good Old War

Good Old War

Good Old War played next on the Zumiez North Stage, opening with “Window” from their 2008 debut, Only Way To Be Alone. “Weak Man” was well-performed, and “Breaking Down”, a rare cut found on a split with Cast Spells, was an interesting surprise. “Coney Island”, the band’s very first single, received deservedly roaring applause. Anchored by the band members’ excellent voices and complementing harmonies, Good Old War somehow manages to sound even better in a live environment than they do on their excellent studio output.

Good Old War

Good Old War

Guitarist Dan Schwartz switched between an electric guitar and an acoustic guitar throughout the set; Tim Arnold’s keys and additional guitar fleshed out the surprisingly big sound the Philadelphia three-piece creates. Good Old War’s self-titled album, for sale in June, contributed three songs to the band’s solid eight-song setlist, including “My Own Sinking Ship”, which featured drummer Tim Arnold stepping out from behind the kit and playing accordion.

Window
Weak Man
Breaking Down
I Should Go
Looking for Shelter
Here Are the Problems
Coney Island
My Own Sinking Ship

Minus the Bear

Minus the Bear

Minus the Bear took the stage at 4:40PM, beginning with two cuts from 2007′s Planet of Ice: “Knights” and “Throwin’ Shapes”. “Pachuca Sunrise” was enjoyable, and Omni lead single “My Time” sounded great. Indeed, the Seattle five-piece sounded crisp and experienced during their seven-song setlist. Unfortunately, though, song selection left much to be desired with new, unreleased (and largely unheard) songs taking up about half of the band’s set time. Thankfully, the band dug back to their debut full-length (the exciting Highly Refined Pirates) to close their set with “Absinthe Party at the Fly Honey Warehouse”.

Knights
Throwin’ Shapes
Into the Mirror
Pachuca Sunrise
Hold Me Down
My Time
Absinthe Party at the Fly Honey Warehouse

Motion City Soundtrack

Motion City Soundtrack

Motion City Soundtrack‘s set began as it has since the release of the excellent My Dinosaur Life, with Justin Pierre reciting the album’s first lines: “It’s been a good year, a good new beginning / I’m through with the old school, so let’s commence the winning / I’ve been a good little worker bee / I deserve a gold star”, but on drummer Tony Thaxton’s cue the band quickly abandoned “Worker Bee” and cut straight into I am the Movie‘s “The Future Freaks Me Out”. The crowd was hardly phased by the transition and was actually quite ready to sing along to every word of the old favorite. “My Favorite Accident”, another song from the band’s quirky 2002 debut, quickly followed and Pierre had the crowd in his palm.

Motion City Soundtrack

Motion City Soundtrack

Current-single “Her Words Destroyed My Planet” briefly slowed things down, but the song’s infectious chorus soon had the crowd bouncing around once again. Even at the band’s weakest moments — Even if it Kills Me cuts “This is for Real” and “Broken Heart” — Motion City Soundtrack still outperformed most of the day’s acts. At their best, such as on Commit This to Memory tracks “Attractive Today” and set-closer “Everything is Alright”, Motion City Soundtrack is punk-pop perfection.

Motion City Soundtrack

Motion City Soundtrack

The Minnesota six-piece’s Moog-powered set flew by, even though the band performed for thirty-five minutes across ten songs. It was good to see newer songs like “A Lifeless Ordinary (Need a Little Help)” and “Disappear” making the cut, even if it meant pushing out former festival staples such as “Throwdown” and “Capital H”. Pierre was clearly losing his voice by the penultimate “L.G. Fuad”, but the band’s intimate connection with the crowd carried Motion City Soundtrack to the finish line.

The Future Freaks Me Out
My Favorite Accident
Her Words Destroyed My Planet
This is for Real
Attractive Today
A Lifeless Ordinary (Need a Little Help)
Broken Heart
Disappear
L.G. Fuad
Everything Is Alright

Mutemath

Mutemath

Louisiana’s Mutemath began with drummer Darren King duct-taping headphone monitors to his head, allowing him go rock out as hard as he wanted while still hearing the foldback. The tactic proved not to be strictly theatrical — on “The Nerve”, the first song from their latest effort, Armistice, King flailed around on the kit and barely kept the adhered headset in place. The album’s title track followed before Mutemath played a lengthy instrumental, “Reset”, from the band’s debut EP of that same name.

Mutemath

Mutemath

A plethora of instruments found their way into frontman Paul Meany’s hands, including a keytar and a homemade device known only as “The Atari”. Singles “Typical” and “Spotlight” were the biggest crowd pleasers, and the band wrapped things up with a fairly lengthy rendition of “Break the Same”.

The Nerve
Armistice
Reset
Typical
Spotlight
Break the Same

Piebald

Piebald

To promote a series of reissues, Piebald reunited for Bamboozle to play all of their 2002 full-length, We Are the Only Friends We Have, unquestionably the band’s strongest album. “King of the Road” started the nostalgic trip down memory lane with frontman Travis Shettel recounting the band’s status circa 2002: “Andy went back to school, he got sick of Newbury Comics / Aaron still rides a lot, except now he’s just fatter / Alex took over for Alex Van Halen, after his major surgery / Jon, well, he got married to Laura and I teach their kid in first grade”. And with those opening lines Piebald was off to the races, attempting to fit the entire album into a brief time slot on the Zumiez North Stage.

Piebald

Piebald

Spoiler alert, Piebald rolled through everything but “It’s Going to Get Worse Before it Gets Better” in front of an audience almost exclusively filled with fans old enough to legally consume alcohol — the first and only time such a crowd would assemble all weekend. Everyone pushed to the front for a chance to share the microphone on fan-favorites like “Just a Simple Plan” and “American Hearts”; The Hope Conspiracy’s Jim Carroll filled in on guitar for part of the set, allowing Shettel to leap into the crowd as necessary.

Piebald

Piebald

By the time album-closer “Sex Sells and (Unfortunately) I’m Buying” ended, two things became readily apparent. It was obvious that Piebald was a fun, personal band that can put on an extremely high-energy and engaging performance. However, it was also clear that Piebald never again approached the high bar set with We Are the Only Friends We Have during the remainder of their career. This made the one-off Bamboozle set even sweeter: a great live band performing only their greatest material.

King of the Road
Just a Simple Plan
American Hearts
Long Nights
Fear and Loathing on Cape Cod
The Monkey Versus the Robot
Karate Chops for Everyone But Us
Rich People Can Breed
The Stalker
Look, I Just Don’t Like You
Sex Sells and (Unfortunately) I’m Buying

Kevin Devine

Kevin Devine

Kevin Devine and the Goddamn Band had the difficult task of following Piebald. “Cotton Crush” started things off on the right foot, and “Just Stay” finds Devine at his best, but the noisy noodling on tracks from his latest effort, Brother’s Blood, is just self-indulgent and largely unenjoyable. “Carnival” is too long, too unguided; “Another Bag of Bones” and “Brother’s Blood” would have been great in a more focused, even acoustic, attack. Devine routinely leaves his backing band behind, it’s unfortunate that this was not the case at Bamboozle: the singer-songwriter is one of the genre’s best, and he is a much better live act alone with his just his guitar.

Cotton Crush
I Could Be with Anyone
Carnival
Another Bag of Bones
Just Stay
Brother’s Blood

Girl Talk

Girl Talk

On the opposite end of the parking lot, mashup artist Gregg Gillis — Girl Talk — was throwing a massive dance party. Seamlessly combining classic rock and modern pop hits, Girl Talk had the entire Sony Stage singing and dancing for forty minutes. Not content with spinning just his records, Girl Talk’s live show is a mash of the familiar tunes found on his albums and also a ton of other radio favorites. Girl Talk executes like a veteran DJ, feeling the crowd and adjusting the mixes appropriately, all while inviting dozens of fans on stage with him to dance along and, interestingly, to fire toilet paper into the crowd. Pool toys and other inflatable devices were launched into the audience near the set’s end, and, after forty minutes of nonstop dancing, grinding, and crowd-surfing, the general consensus was exhaustion — and a desire for much, much more.

Weezer

Weezer

Following a set by MGMT, Weezer closed out the Bamboozle weekend. The hard-hitting “Hash Pipe” went first, followed by the comedic yet ridiculously catchy “Troublemaker”. Frontman Rivers Cuomo was genuinely entertaining through the entire set, even running through the crowd and high-fiving fans before climbing up the soundtent rafters behind the crowd. Weezer’s world-wide tour experience shows: the band understands how to make going to a concert a truly enjoyable experience.

Weezer

Weezer

Two cuts from the band’s masterpiece, 1994′s “blue album”, went back to back: surprise radio-hit “Undone – The Sweater Song” received adlibbed interludes; “Surf Wax America” is an an absolute blast in a live environment. When the band moved into their newer material they did so with grace, selecting only the strongest cuts such as “Let It All Hang Out”. While the band’s newer material is not quite up to the standards set with albums like Pinkerton, it is quite enjoyable in concert.

Weezer

Weezer

“Dope Nose”, from the criminally under-appreciated Maladroit, was an awesome surprise; bassist Scott Shriner provided lead vocals on the rare cut. “Why Bother?”, another rare song, also made the setlist with guitarist Brian Bell singing instead of Cuomo. “Say It Ain’t So” was absolutely massive and received an enormous applause from the crowd. “Can’t Stop Partying” wonderfully mocked the current auto-tune/dance genre. “(If You’re Wondering If I Want You To) I Want You To” is the best song Weezer has written in five years and was one of the night’s highlights.

Weezer

Weezer

Things wrapped up with a great performance of “My Name is Jonas” and a crowd singalong to “Beverly Hills”. The band returned for their first encore with riffs of Van Halen’s “Hot for Teacher”, and “Pork and Beans” was solid, but a shaky cover of MGMT’s “Kids” (with parts of Lady Gaga’s “Poker Face”) dented an otherwise top-notch set. MGMT had just performed the song an hour earlier — did it need another treatment?

Weezer

Weezer

The second encore began with Cuomo looping parts of “Island in the Sun” together and performing the song — drum, bass, and guitars included — by himself until the chorus. It’s definitely a strange way to perform the song, but it offered the crowd a different take on a decade-old song. Weezer closed the set properly by reaching back into their 1994 debut and tearing through “Buddy Holly”.

Hash Pipe
Troublemaker
Undone – The Sweater Song
Surf Wax America
Let It All Hang Out
Perfect Situation
Dope Nose
Say It Ain’t So
Can’t Stop Partying
Why Bother?
(If You’re Wondering If I Want You To) I Want You To
My Name is Jonas
Beverly Hills
Pork and Beans
Kids (MGMT cover)
Island in the Sun
Buddy Holly

Weezer finished the Bamboozle festival on a high note, leaving everyone excited for the possibilities of next year’s lineup. A reunion set from Piebald in addition to superb sets from Motion City Soundtrack,  Good Old War, All the Day Holiday, and Girl Talk were great parts of the day. I unfortunately missed MGMT, The Dear Hunter, and Moving Mountains — evidence of the number of quality bands playing Sunday afternoon. As the parking lot emptied, it was evident that it is hard to find a better two-day experience on the east coast for contemporary punk and indie influenced rock and roll.

All photographs by the excellent Dan Gonyea.


Bamboozle Day 1 @ East Rutherford 5/1/2010

May 1, 2010

Now in its fifth year as a parking lot festival in swampy East Rutherford, New Jersey, Bamboozle remains as strong as ever. With a potent lineup featuring a slew of New Jersey natives, pop power-houses, and scene stalwarts, there is hardly a better weekend in New Jersey for fans of contemporary punk and indie influenced rock and roll. The weekend began on Saturday, May 1, around noon and concluded late Sunday evening.

Title Fight

Title Fight

Pennsylvania’s Title Fight was the first band I caught, playing earlier than scheduled on the Zumiez South Stage at 12:50PM. The four-piece’s take on melodic hardcore and punk-pop was enjoyable and refreshing in a genre that seems to be teeming with uninspired and bland acts (see: Four Year Strong, The Wonder Years, This Time Next Year). Sticking heavily to the solid The Last Thing You Forget released last year on Run For Cover Records, the band ripped through songs such as “No One Stays at the Top Forever”, “Memorial Field”, and album-closer “Western Haikus”, and properly energized the small crowd who caught their set early in the Bamboozle schedule.

The Pretty Reckless

The Pretty Reckless

While walking over to see The Pretty Reckless, I caught pieces of Score 24; the Long Island punk-pop band probably deserves a second glance, unlike The Pretty Reckless who were bland and motionless on stage. Fronted by sixteen year old Gossip Girl star Taylor Momsen (but really anchored by a backing band of far superior musicians and singers), The Pretty Reckless sang Gothic-inspired songs that seemed to drag without any hooks or memorable choruses. It’s disappointing but not inaccurate to sum up the band’s set with one of their own song titles: “Dull and Void”.

Relient K

Relient K

Matt Thiessen-fronted Relient K played on the Sony Stage next, opening with “Who I Am Hates Who I’ve Been” from 2004′s Gold-certified Mmhmm. The band sounded crisp and experienced — the way a pop band touring for more than a decade should. Despite an enormous collection of seven full-length albums, the Ohio five-piece stuck almost entirely to their latest effort, Forget and Not Slow Down, including Thiessen’s favorite song, “Sahara”, which he described as being about lion cubs being eaten by birds of prey.

Who I Am Hates Who I’ve Been
Forget and Not Slow Down
I Don’t Need a Soul
Sahara
Flare
Candlelight
Devastation and Reform

The Aquabats

The Aquabats

The Aquabats win any award for most entertaining band of the day — skin-tight matching superhero costumes that certainly didn’t flatter a band in their late thirties; a battle of good versus evil that featured The Aquabats fighting a team of men in crab costumes; and a song about the joys of pizza and why eating slices after 9PM for so many years lead to the first issue of unflattering costumes. The veteran Orange County, California, six-piece started with “Fashion Zombies” and rolled through a string of comical songs such as “Super Rad”, “Pizza Day”, and “Look at Me (I’m a Winner)” before closing with Myths, Legends, and Other Amazing Adventures, Volume 2‘s “Pool Party”, featuring inflatable pool toys tossed and ridden into the crowd. A fun cover of “Suburban Home” went largely unappreciated, leaving me to wonder if anyone in the crowd had ever heard Descendents’s essential Mile Goes to College — probably not.

The tail end (“Flowers and Fireworks, “Cities”) of All the Day Holiday’s set on the smaller Aquarian Stage sounded solid, but it was the stark contrast of Jersey locals Float Face Down on the opposite stage just moments later that captured my attention with their surprisingly large fan base and absolutely brutal metal/hardcore hybrid. Enormous pits of hardcore dancing spanned both stages in what must have amounted to being one of the largest pits in Bamboozle’s five-year history outside Giants Stadium.

Against Me!

Against Me!

Under the guise of Gegen Mich, Against Me! began a thirty-minute set on the Zumiez South Stage around 5PM with “High Pressure Low”, the first of four songs from the band’s solid White Crosses, an album to be released in early June on Sire Records. The album’s title track — described by frontman Tom Gabel as a pro-choice anthem — preceded an excellent performance of “Pints of Guinness Make You Strong” from 2oo2′s Reinventing Axl Rose. The small crowd, intimate singalongs, and top-notch performances by Gabel, guitarist Andrew Seward, bassist James Bowman, and drummer George Rebelo made Against Me! easily one of the day’s strongest acts.

High Pressure Low
Don’t Lose Touch
New Wave
White Crosses
Pints of Guinness Make You Strong
I Was A Teenage Anarchist
Suffocation
White People for Peace
Thrash Unreal

Saves the Day

Saves the Day

Saves the Day began with Through Being Cool lead-off “All-Star Me” and stuck with thirteen of the band’s strongest songs during their thirty-five minute set. A string of the band’s better cuts from In Reverie, Sound the Alarm, and Under the Boards were enjoyable, but it wasn’t until the band returned to older material such as “Firefly” and “Holly Hox, Forget Me Nots” that the crowd really responded. As if to contradict 2001′s Stay What You Are, though, the band played the much more recent “Can’t Stay the Same”. Throughout the set, bandleader Chris Conley sounded great, hitting even some of the more difficult notes that seem to be more prevalent on the band’s newer songs. Unfortunately, after the blasts of energy from “Shoulder to the Wheel” and the penultimate “At Your Funeral”, “Kaleidoscope” closed the set and reminded the crowd that Saves the Day no longer writes the fast-paced anthems that they were once-known and renowned for.

All-Star Me
The End
Radio
Anywhere With You
Firefly
Holly Hox, Forget Me Nots
Can’t Stay the Same
Eulogy
Freakish
Shoulder to the Wheel
At Your Funeral
Kaleidoscope

Something Corporate

Something Corporate

The most anticipated moment of the day had to be  Something Corporate‘s first New Jersey set in five years, and, to cut right to it, Andrew McMahon and friends absolutely delivered. The beautiful opening riffs of “Hurricane” started the band’s nine-song set with McMahon’s crooning: “Shake down you make me break for goodness sake..”. North‘s “21 and Invincible” was fun, but the return to Leaving Through the Window with “I Woke Up in a Car” was one of the set’s  strongest moments. “If You C Jordan” started to show its age — really, the song’s subject matter puts McMahon back into the late 1990s — but was still enjoyable, especially with the energetic frontman jumping on the piano’s keys.

Something Corporate

Something Corporate

Undeniably the highlight of the band’s forty-five minute set was the ten-minute ballad, “Konstantine”. The song exposes McMahon’s soul and puts him alone in front of a piano to tell a story of lost love. A fairly simple composition, the song’s true beauty comes from its raw emotion and painstakingly honest lyrics. By the time McMahon addresses the song’s namesake character with the haunting “Did you know I miss you?” near the end of the song, it’s hard not to feel the songwriter’s entire emotional burden.

Something Corporate

Something Corporate

“Punk Rock Princess” rounded out the nine-song set, leaving an enormous Bamboozle crowd wanting much, much more at 8PM on Saturday evening. McMahon’s elegant performance and stage presence (paraphrased, “Bamboozle, it’s a beautiful thing to play the sun out of the sky for you”) is just too charming to not want a full tour out of Something Corporate, who performed as a five-piece that also included Josh Partington, Clutch Page,  Brian Ireland, and Jack’s Mannequin guitarist Bobby Anderson.

Hurricane
21 and Invincible
I Woke Up in a Car
Me and the Moon
Fall
Space
If You C Jordan
Konstantine
Punk Rock Princess

Chiodos

Chiodos

Chiodos played on the Zumiez South Stage, sorely missing former lead singer Craig Owens. The band played a fairly standard set that included “Baby, You Wouldn’t Last a Minute on the Creek”, “The Undertaker’s Thirst For Revenge Is Unquenchable (The Final Battle)”, and “Is it a Progression if a Cannibal Uses a Fork”, and “The Words Best Friend Become Redefined”, but replacement vocalist Brandon Bolmer lacks the vocal qualities that once made Chiodos an enjoyable listen. The songs hit hard, but Bolmer’s mix of high-pitched screaming and singing is far too unbalanced and lacking in melody. It doesn’t help, either, that Bolmer came in following the subpar Bone Palace Ballet, a collection of songs that hardly finds Chiodos at their best considering their much stronger back catalog.

Paramore

Paramore

By 9:50PM the night was almost over and only one band remained: headlining act Paramore. The Tennessee five-piece opened with a lengthy introductory jam and then moved right into “Looking Up”, the first of seven songs from their excellent 2009 full-length, Brand New Eyes. Frontwoman Hayley Williams was extremely energetic, invoking the crowd to sing along to the big choruses of “That’s What You Get”. “Playing God” sounded great; the hooks on Williams’s lines “but the way I, way I see it” are amongst the band’s most catchy moments.

Paramore

Paramore

The crunchy guitars of Josh Farro and Taylor York lead the way on “Pressure”, a fast-paced cut from the band’s 2005 debut, All We Know is Falling.”Turn it Off” and “The Only Exception” (the latter described by Williams as a love song) slowed the set down tremendously, but  “Whoa” — which Williams joked was written in just five minutes, due to its simplicity — once again found the frontwoman singing huge choruses and instructing the crowd to do the same.

Paramore

Paramore

Bassist Jeremy Davis and drummer Zac Farro locked together for “crushcrushcrush”, a predictable yet excellent part of the band’s set. “Let the Flames Begin” received an extended outro, before the band closed out their set exclusively with Brand New Eyes material including hit singles “Ignorance”, “Careful”, and “Brick by Boring Brick”. “Where the Lines Overlap”, a song that begs for live treatment, sounded great and was dedicated to the Williams’s recently deceased grandmother.

Paramore

Paramore

“Misery Business” went last in the evening as part of the band’s encore, no surprise to anyone who has seen the band perform since that single propelled Paramore into the mainstream world-wide. A big surprise, however, came when Williams invited a random girl from the crowd onstage to sing the song’s bridge, taking a play right out of the playbook of local hero Bruce Springsteen (who often invites random kids onstage to sing “Waitin’ on a Sunny Day”. The biggest surprise of all, though, came when the girl invited on stage absolutely nailed the vocal part and continued to sing with Williams side by side until the song’s end. With the exception of “Decode” (possibly the band’s weakest song to date), set selection was flawless:

Looking Up
That’s What You Get
Playing God
Pressure
For a Pessimist, I’m Pretty Optimistic
Turn It Off
The Only Exception
Whoa
crushcrushcrush
Let the Flames Begin
Ignorance
Where the Lines Overlap
Careful
Brick by Boring Brick
Decode
Misery Business

Paramore

Paramore

With their seventy-minute setlist, Paramore did their headlining duties by trumping every other band through the day: Williams sounded as strong as ever through the set’s duration, evidence that her time with a vocal coach is paying off tremendously. Instrumentally, the band was as close to perfect as possible, even while running around the stage and doing flips off of each other. Paramore was genuinely appreciative of their chance to headline Bamboozle, moving up from an unknown side-stage act just a few years earlier.

Though Saturday featured a plethora of throwaway acts (including Drake, Kesha, Four Year Strong, Escape the Fate, Angels and Airwaves, VersaEmerge, The Maine, The Ready Set, The Word Alive, Of Mice and Men, Asking Alexandria, Attack Attack, Emmure, and I Set My Friends on Fire to name just a few), there were more than enough gems in the rough to completely occupy the festival’s ten hours. Even rushing from stage to stage for most of the evening, I still missed a few promising acts such as Hanson, The Bled, and Protest the Hero.

The top performances of Saturday’s Bamboozle belong to Paramore and Something Corporate, two bands who are clearly leaps and bounds ahead of their peers in terms of stage presence and live execution.

All photographs by the excellent Dan Gonyea.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.