Dashboard Confessional @ Jackson 7/25/2010

July 25, 2010

On a humid summer day in Jackson, New Jersey, Dashboard Confessional performed at Six Flags Great Adventure’s Northern Star Arena. Free to anyone who purchased a park ticket, the enormous outdoor arena was nearly empty due to torrential rain that almost cancelled the performance just hours earlier. For those that stuck out the weather, though, the Chris Carrabba-fronted four-piece sounded great from their opening minutes, beginning with the swooning “Don’t Wait”. The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most contributed full-band takes on “The Good Fight” and “Saints and Sailors” before Carrabba tackled the album’s title track with John Lefler using just acoustic guitars.

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional

A few more songs came from that 2001 full-length, including a rousing performance of “Screaming Infidelities” and “Again I Got Unnoticed” back-to-back. Despite a third of the band’s set coming from The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most, the band did manage to sneak in a few new cuts, showing off their more mature songwriting, including “Belle of the Boulevard” with Carrabba on piano. “Everybody Learns from Disaster” was dedicated to an unnamed girl on Friday Night Lights that Carrabba once dated.

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional

Midway through the set, Carrabba emerged alone with just his acoustic guitar, asking the crowd what songs they wanted to hear. In a mind-numbing moment, most of the crowd implausibly screamed for “Hands Down”, to which Carrabba remarked “you’ll get that one last”. The singer-songwriter settled on the title track from his debut (“The Swiss Army Romance”), allowing the crowd to provide vocals for parts of the song. The band once again rejoined Carrabba afterwards, kicking into a well-executed cover of Weezer’s “El Scorcho”.

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional

Lead by drummer Mike Marsh’s thunderous percussion, Dashboard Confessional’s performance of “As Lovers Go” dwarfed the meager studio original. “Vindicated” drew an enormous response from the crowd, the band responding with a flawless performance of one of their most popular songs. The quartet performed the more upbeat version of “Stolen” before wrapping up — as they always do — with “Hands Down”. The audience sang along to the repetition in the the song’s final moments as Dashboard Confessional left the stage: “And I knew that you meant it.”

Don’t Wait
The Good Fight
Saints and Sailors
The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most
Carry This Picture For Luck
Screaming Infidelities
Again I Go Unnoticed
Everybody Learns From Disaster
The Swiss Army Romance
El Scorcho (Weezer cover)
As Lovers Go
Belle of the Boulevard
Summer of ’69 (Bryan Adams cover)
Vindicated
Stolen
Hands Down

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional

Even with rollercoasters bustling not too far away, Dashboard Confessional sounded fantastic for more than sixty minutes, a testament not only to the band’s respectable live show but also the venue’s design. Shifting back and forth between acoustic performances and full-band jams, Dashboard Confessional’s sound never suffered; Northern Star Arena might be one of the best sounding outdoor venues in the area. It’s hard to expect more than a “greatest hits”-styled setlist at a free event inside an amusement park, but with two covers tossed into the sixteen-song performance things stayed fresh throughout the night. The quartet remains a solid example of a well-executed, extremely enjoyable live band.


Warped Tour @ Oceanport 7/18/2010

July 18, 2010

On a hot afternoon in Monmouth County, Vans Warped Tour arrived in Oceanport, New Jersey. Packed with more than seventy bands, the day promised to showcase a variety of genres in the rock spectrum. Warped Tour veterans played alongside newcomers; punk bands alongside neon acts. With overlapping set times, a few great bands would be missed, but managing to catch full sets from Reel Big Fish, The Dillinger Escape Plan, AM Taxi, Face to Face, The Riverboat Gamblers, The Swellers, The Mighty Regis, Alkaline Trio, Motion City Soundtrack, and Set Your Goals made the day overwhelmingly exciting and enjoyable.

Reel Big Fish performed at noon, sticking heavily to their older, most well-known songs. In fact, only two of the band’s eleven songs were written in the last decade despite the band releasing more than fifty original cuts over the last ten years. The band’s sophomore album (issued in 1996, which contains re-recordings from their 1995 debut) contributed five of the set’s eleven songs, including absolutely stellar performances of “Beer” and “Sell Out”. Pretending to walk off stage after every song (“thanks, we’ve been the Reel Big Fish!”) in the first half of the set, the California natives set a jovial, lighthearted tone early.

With songs like “She Has a Girlfriend Now” — sings frontman Aaron Barrett during the song’s potent ending: “I never thought it would end like this just because I’ve got no tits / I’ll shave my legs, I’ll wear a bra, I”ll even cut my dick off for you”) — the band thrives on a playful setting, but doesn’t rely on it. Van Morrison’s “Brown Eyed Girl” was undoubtedly in jest, but the band’s cover of the Norwegian mega-hit “Take On Me” is as solid as any cover recorded in the last twenty years. And there lies Reel Big Fish’s true appeal. While many of their So-Cal peers understand the fun side of music, few execute with Reel Big Fish’s precision and musicianship.

Everything Sucks
Thank You For Not Moshing
Another F.U. Song
Brown Eyed Girl (Van Morrison cover)
Your Guts (I Hate ‘Em)
I Want Your Girlfriend to Be My Girlfriend Too
Snoop Dog, Baby
She Has a Girlfriend Now
Sell Out
Beer
Take On Me (A-Ha cover)

The Dillinger Escape Plan

The Dillinger Escape Plan

Starkly contrasting the ska antics of Reel Big Fish, The Dillinger Escape Plan played a loud, brash, and to-the-point eight song setlist constructed largely from the band’s latest release, Option Paralysis. Beginning with 2004′s “Panasonic Youth”, the New Jersey locals tore through a career-spanning setlist that drew the biggest response with Calculating Infinity‘s “43% Burnt”. There’s no questioning the band’s unbelievable technical ability or vocalist Greg Puciato’s unrestrained vehemence, but it remains to be seen why the frontman ditches his trademark screams for an embarrassing attempt at traditional singing on songs like the closing “Farewell, Mona Lisa”. The Dillinger Escape Plan were likely the most potent heavy act of the day — that is, when the band stays fierce and unrelenting.

Panasonic Youth
Milk Lizard
43% Burnt
Room Full of Eyes
Chinese Whispers
Good Neighbor
Sunshine the Werewolf
Farewell, Mona Lisa

AM Taxi

AM Taxi

The five-piece AM Taxi played next on the nearby side stage, showcasing their blend of Bruce Springsteen-influenced melodic punk rock. Comparable to The Replacements or The Gaslight Anthem, the Chicago natives ripped through a seven song set filled with songs from their recent debut, We Don’t Stand a Chance. Tight guitars, interesting bass lines, and rock-steady percussion backed frontman Adam Grier’s raspy vocals, with occasional keys provided by Luke Schmitt. The band appeared genuine and appreciative of the meager crowd they attracted, and during the penultimate “Shake, Rattle, and Stall” Schmitt traveled down to the audience to sell copies of the band’s album for just five dollars. The unique marketing tactic proved successful, and Schmitt sold every CD he had taken down to the crowd. The keyboardist returned to the stage for the band’s closing song, a solid cover of “Paint it Black”, and AM Taxi wrapped up their set to enormous applause from anyone lucky enough to have caught the up-and-coming act.

Dead Street
Woodpecker
The Mistake
Fed Up
Charissa
Shake, Rattle, and Stall
Paint it Black (The Rolling Stones cover)

Face to Face

Face to Face

Catching all of AM Taxi unfortunately meant missing part of Face to Face‘s setlist. Frontman Trever Keith was characteristically cynical throughout the set, at one point calling out fans of Bring Me the Horizon for idly standing around in the middle of the band’s set. Unquestionably one of the oldest bands in Monmouth Park that day, the California five-piece’s classic ’90s punk-pop was refreshing amongst a backdrop of neon-powered acts on nearby stages. Face to Face’s setlist included “Ordinary”, “Pastel”, “Velocity”, “A-OK”, “Complicated”, and a song from the band’s upcoming full-length, Laugh Now, Laugh Later.

The Riverboat Gamblers

The Riverboat Gamblers

Led by the charismatic Mike Wiebe, The Riverboat Gambers performed on a small sidestage in the mid-afternoon as Face to Face’s set wrapped up. The Texas quintet was exceptionally exciting, gathering a fairly large crowd that grew bigger and bigger as passersby noticed the intense live show. The band played a brand new song (“What Are You Waiting For?”) before wrapping up with Underneath the Owl‘s “Victory Lap” and Something to Crow About‘s “Hey Hey Hey!”; for the latter, Wiebe toppled a nearby trashcan, dragged it across the parking lot to the pit, and then climbed on top, demanding a circle-march around him for the song’s final moments.

The Swellers

The Swellers

The Swellers contractually finished their stint on the Warped Tour before the Oceanport date, but the band still set up a merch tent to make a few extra bucks before heading home to Michigan. In addition, the band teamed up with the Keep-A-Breast non-profit organization to perform a set of acoustic songs at 3PM. Barely miked and quickly improvised, the set consisted of four songs from the band’s latest full-length, Ups and Downsizing. Frontman Nick Diener was overwhelmingly cheerful and lighthearted, coming off extremely relaxed and accessible; his softer takes on normally swift punk-pop songs gave the tracks new life, displaying an honest, sincere vibe that feels missing on the band’s overproduced and lifeless album.

Do You Feel Better Yet?
Ups and Downsizing
Sleeper
Welcome Back Riders

The Mighty Regis

The Mighty Regis

The Mighty Regis, a seven-piece Celtic-punk/folk-punk band from California, was next. Beginning with “Them Bastards” from 2008′s Another Nickel for the Pope, the band played a lengthy six song setlist. “Broken and Battered” was dedicated to Chicago Celtic-punks Flatfoot 56, whose singer Tobin Bawinkel would join the band later for a rousing cover of “Boys from the County Hell”. An unconventional take on “Danny Boy”, featuring Ryan O’Neill on pan flute, finished up The Mighty Regis’s set. Unfortunately, few saw the band put on one of the day’s best sets.

Them Bastards
The Brothers Rafferty
Broken and Battered
Celtic Storm
Boys from the County Hell (The Pogues cover)
Danny Boy

Alkaline Trio

Alkaline Trio

The Flatliners played next, kicking their set off with “July! August! Reno!”. The Canadian punk quartet played a new song, “Common Collection”, next, but I left the sidestage afterwards to catch Alkaline Trio performing across the parking lot.  Opening with the rarely seen “She Took Him to the Lake”, the Chicago three-piece played a respectable collection of early-decade cuts, wisely opting to ignore the less-than-impressive offerings found on 2005′s Crimson and 2008′s Agony and Irony. “My Friend Peter” was a nice surprise, as was a totally unexpected and passionate Nomeansno cover that flew over the head of a crowd not-yet-born when the song was originally recorded in 1989. Alkaline Trio wrapped things up with “97″, tossing in the often-sampled chorus fromRock Master Scott & the Dynamic Three’s “The Roof is On Fire”.

She Took Him to the Lake
Armageddon
Emma
Dine Dine My Darling
My Friend Peter
Blue Carolina
Private Eye
Off the Map
Two Lips, Two Lungs, One Tongue (Nomeansno cover)
97

Motion City Soundtrack

Motion City Soundtrack

Motion City Soundtrack performed the tightest set of the day, but it was unfortunately the exact same collection of songs performed by the Minnesota five-piece just a few months earlier at the nearby Bamboozle festival. Luckily, the songs are some of the band’s best. Things began with “Attractive Today” leading directly into I am the Movie‘s “The Future Freaks Me Out”, the entire crowd singing the song’s opening lines: “I’m on fire / and now I think I’m ready / to bust a move / check it out I’m rockin’ steady!”

With four albums to choose from, Motion City Soundtrack spread things out quite evenly. Tossing in three cuts from the band’s excellent 2010 release, My Dinosaur Life , frontman Justin Pierre was spot-on yet tired, clearly draining the remains of his stamina on the penultimate “Disappear”.  Still, closing track “Everything is Alright” sounded excellent and the crowd roared to the song’s opening riffs. Motion City Soundtrack never disappoints, but it would have been great if the band switched things up from their last New Jersey appearance just a few months earlier.

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

Set Your Goals

Set Your Goals

As the sun began to set, Set Your Goals played a large side-stage. Drawing in fans of all genres, the band opened things with their latest single, the blistering “Gaia Bleeds”, setting the tone of their performance immediately. “Goonies Say Die”, from their debut EP, made an appearance in the nine-song set, and a surprising number of attendees responded to the song. Highlights included “Summer Jam”, a song almost describable as a Warped Tour anthem, and the one-two closing punch of the “Dead Men Tell No Tales” into “Mutiny”. Unfortunately, the band sounded hollow — especially vocalists Matt Wilson and Jordan Brown — a far cry from their normally-outstanding intensity. The rest of the band picked up the slack, though, with crisp leads and rock-solid rhythms anchoring an enjoyable performance.

Gaia Bleeds (Make Way For Man)
The Fallen
This Very Moment
Summer Jam
Goonies Never Say Die
To Be Continued…
Echoes
Dead Men Tell No Tales
Mutiny

Criticisms of Warped Tour’s sixteenth year are often targeted at the overwhelming number of awful bands on the tour. It’s not unfounded. At the Oceanport date alone acts like Alesana, Artist vs Poet, Attack Attack, Breathe Carolina, Breathe Electric, Bring Me the Horizon, Emarosa, Emmure, Four Year Strong, Hey Monday, In Fear and Faith, Mayday Parade, NeverShoutNever, Pierce the Veil, VersaEmerge, and We the Kings undoubtedly cluttered the parking lot with uninteresting tunes, but there were more than enough diamonds in the rough worth checking out. At least one solid band was playing at any given time, including a number of overlaps that meant missing quality acts like Every Time I Die, Fake Problems, and Flatfoot 56. At just $40 per ticket, Warped Tour remains an excellent opportunity to see a large number of favorites in one day. More importantly, it might expose you to your new favorite band.

Photos credit to the amazing Rebecca Sawka.


Weezer @ NYC 7/16/2010

July 16, 2010

With support from Rival Schools and AWOLNATION, Weezer headlined Brooklyn’s premier high-capacity outdoor venue, Williamsburg Waterfront. Performing a similar, familiar setlist at Bamboozle (just a few months earlier), Weezer didn’t stray much from their core group of singles and live staples. Like Weezer’s set began at Bamboozle, things started with a brief introductory jam before the band kicked into “Hash Pipe”, setting the thousands of fans in attendance into a singalong frenzy. The quirky “Troublemaker” followed, keeping much of the crowd interested with its infectious chorus, but “Undone (The Sweater Song)” finally had everyone in attendance singing along to the ’90s radio hit: “If you want to destroy my sweater / hold this thread as I walk away”.

Weezer

Weezer

“Trippin’ Down the Freeway” included part of the rarely seen “Keep Fishin’” from Maladroit; the 2002 album also contributed “Dope Nose”, sung by bassist Scott Shriner. “Say it Ain’t So” was predictably massive, and “Island in the Sun” was transformed midsong from a solo Rivers Cuomo acoustic performance into a full-band jam. The instrumental “Brian’s Theme” lead into “Can’t Stop Partying”, showing off the band’s latest sarcastic offerings and commentary on modern pop music. “El Scorcho” was a pleasant surprise, though Pinkerton was criminally underrepresented in the eighteen-song set. Luckily, the band’s blue album contributed five cuts, including the energetic “My Name is Jonas” which went before the set-closing “Beverly Hills”.

Weezer’s encore began with the opening licks of Van Halen’s “Hot For Teacher” before shifting gears and jumping into 2008′s “Pork and Beans”. A flat and unnecessary cover of MGMT’s “Kids” intertwined with Lady Gaga’s “Poker Face” brought Weezer’s triumphant setlist crashing down, but luckily the excellent “(If You’re Wondering If I Want You To) I Want You To” from the band’s latest effort, Raditude, brought things back to life. As always, Weezer finished with “Buddy Holly”, and the Williamsburg crowd responded with roaring applause.

Hash Pipe
Troublemaker
Undone (The Sweater Song)
Surf Wax America
Trippin’ Down the Freeway
Perfect Situation
Dope Nose
Say It Ain’t So
Island in the Sun
Brian’s Theme
Can’t Stop Partying
El Scorcho
My Name is Jonas
Beverly Hills
Pork and Beans
Kids (MGMT cover)
(If You’re Wondering If I Want You To) I Want You To
Buddy Holly

Predictable yet solid, Weezer stuck primarily to their long-established setlist. Performing away from a nation-wide tour, the Brooklyn venue would have been a good chance to play a slightly different set, but the band opted to take the safe, well-traveled route instead. Thankfully, Weezer’s staples are overwhelmingly a collection of their top cuts, and songs like “Surf Wax America” are always a treat in a live environment. The California quartet is set to issue their eighth full-length, Hurley, on Epitaph Records in 2011 — Williamsburg Waterfront may have been the last performance of some lesser known songs as Weezer undoubtedly retools their setlist to make room for new material.


311 / The Offspring @ Philadelphia 7/13/2010

July 13, 2010

On a hot Tuesday evening in Center City, the Unity Tour arrived at Penn’s Landing Festival Pier. Led by 311, with support from The Offspring and Pepper, the tour’s stop in Philadelphia found the bands playing in front of an 8000-capacity general admission crowd, starkly contrasting the enormous nearly amphitheaters (such as nearby PNC Bank Arts Center in New Jersey) that made up much of the tour.

The Offspring

The Offspring

Performing as a five-piece, The Offspring began with “You’re Gonna Go Far, Kid” from the band’s latest album, Rise and Fall, Rage and Grace. Without hesitation, though, the group kicked back into 1994 with “Bad Habit” and the crowd sang along to the song’s signature climax: “You stupid, dumb shit, god damned motherfucker!” “You Will Find a Way”, a mid-tempo, fairly bland cut from the band’s next album was uninteresting, but the crowd certainly enjoyed the one-two punch of radio hits “Come Out and Play” and “All I Want”.

The Offspring

The Offspring

Dexter Holland performed “Gone Away” alone on a piano, and, coupled with the acoustic “Kristy, Are You Doing Okay?”, slowed The Offspring’s set down to a crawl. The band clearly stutters when they slow down; The Offspring excel when they are fast, witty, and overly sarcastic. A questionable cover of “The Guns of Brixton” and an absolutely unnecessary performance of “Pretty Fly” contributed to the general blandness of the middle of The Offspring’s set, but the finale of “The Kids Aren’t Alright” into “Self-Esteem” reminded the crowd that The Offspring were once a potent rock act.

The Offspring

The Offspring

Playing for just under an hour, The Offspring were somewhat disappointing — Holland seemed to be going through the motions, and even the normally exciting Noodles was barely noticeable on stage.  The band had been playing seventeen songs through most of the tour, but performed just sixteen in Philadelphia, dropping the one “rare” cut that normally fell early in the set (Ignition‘s “Kick Him When He’s Down” was on much of the tour). Still, the band shined when they tore through favorites like “Staring at the Sun” or “Gotta Get Away”, and it’s hard to dismiss a band with so many quality songs.

You’re Gonna Go Far, Kid
Bad Habit
You Will Find A Way
Come Out and Play (Keep ‘Em Separated)
All I Want
Hammerhead
Gone Away
Kristy, Are You Doing Okay?
Gotta Get Away
The Guns of Brixton (The Clash cover)
Why Don’t You Get a Job?
Staring at the Sun
Pretty Fly (for a White Guy)
(Can’t Get My) Head Around You
The Kids Aren’t Alright
Self-Esteem

311

311

311 clearly drew most of the crowd, and the entire pier erupted when the band opened with their breakout single “Down”, the song that launched the band into mainstream recognition in 1996. Nick Hexum and SA Martinez traded vocals through most of the twenty-four song setlist, moving from heavy offerings like “Jackpot” or “Sick Tight” to mellow, more melodic cuts like the reggae-driven “Amber”. The band seemed to genuinely enjoy every moment of the performance; thanking the fans who have supported the band for a long time, “India Ink” was dedicated to those who saw the band perform with The Roots in Philadelphia more than five years ago.

311

311

The Nebraska-born quintet sounded great all evening, but one of the night’s highlights came in “I’ll Be Here a While”. Last performed in 2007, the song was dedicated to Pepper’s Bret Bollinger who convinced the band to perform it this evening. Older Singles “Beautiful Disaster” and “Feels So Good” wrapped up 311′s main performance with a mid-1990s vibe; “Who’s Got Herb?” brought the band back on stage for a chance to close out the evening with a giant performance of Evolver‘s “Creatures”.

Down
Offbeat Bare Ass
Jackpot
All Mixed Up
Wake Your Mind Up
Taiyed
You Wouldn’t Believe
India Ink
Eons
Applied Science
I Like the Way
Full Ride
Come Original
Beyond the Gray Sky
Sick Tight
I’ll Be Here a While
Hydroponic
Livin’ n Rockin’
Amber
Beautiful Disaster
Feels So Good
Who’s Got Herb
Creatures (For a While)

311

311

In addition to the band’s lengthy setlist that touched base on a large part of 311′s multi-decade career, the band also tossed in some surprises like P-Nut Willis’s lengthy bass solo and Chad Sexton’s massive drum solo that transformed into a multi-person percussion jam. It’s hard not to recommend 311′s live show: the band effortlessly flows through a variety of genres across the rock and reggae spectrum, shaking up their setlists on a night-by-night basis.


Minus the Bear / Everest / KeepAway @ Sayreville 7/7/2010

July 7, 2010

Supporting their latest full-length, Omni, Minus the Bear performed in Sayreville, New Jersey, on a warm Wednesday evening. KeepAway and Everest provided support for the Seattle five-piece in front of an empty venue that only began to fill up when Minus the Bear went on stage at 10PM. Those who arrived early, though, caught a pair of interesting, hard-working bands.

KeepAway

KeepAway

Brookyn’s KeepAway started the evening at 8PM with a tribal blend of rock and pop. Combining guitar, keyboard, and various percussion into a a strange-yet-somehow-enjoyable mix, the three-piece entertained the small crowd for just over thirty minutes. The band played songs from their debut, Baby Style EP, released on Lefse Records earlier in the year.

Everest

Everest

By 8:50, the venue began to fill up but still remained fairly empty for California’s Everest. The five-piece’s set started slowly, with a poor house mix that was just too loud to comprehend the band’s tunes. Fortunately, things started sounding better midway through the half-hour set and the band showed promise and drew comparisons to the songwriting styles of ’70s-styled rock like Led Zeppelin. “Rebels in the Roses”, the first song from the band’s debut full-length, Ghost Notes, sounded great. Everest is currently supporting their sophomore effort, On Approach, released through Warner Bros. Records.

Minus the Bear

Minus the Bear

Minus the Bear started their set off with “Drilling”, an excellent cut from their sophomore full-length, Menos el Oso. “Throwin’ Shapes” and “Knights”, two of the stronger tracks from 2007′s Planet of Ice followed. Frontman Jake Snider and keyboardist Alex Rose traded vocals during the synth-powered “My Time” (the band’s latest single from the recently released Omni, issued through Dangerbird Records); “Summer Angel” let Snider explore his voice, swooning characteristically sexy stories about love and desire.

The five-piece equally contribute to Minus the Bear’s grandiose sonic landscapes. Guitarist Dave Knudson played tightly-crafted, technically-sound riffs under the fairly mellow “When We Escape”; “Secret Country” is largely led by the start-and-stop low-pitch rumblings of bassist Cory Murchy. Songs like “Secret Country” are a mixed bag, though: due to the complex and multi-layered percussion, drummer Erin Tate only plays parts of the song while the rest is pumped in through the PA. The only real way to recreate this in a live environment is to add a second drummer — a costly and likely undesirable addition to the already-tight quintet.

Highly Refined Pirates, the band’s debut record from nearly nine years ago, surprisingly contributed three songs to Minus the Bear’s eighteen-song setlist including a tight performance of “Get Me Naked 2: Electric Boogaloo”. “Fine + 2 Pts.”, from the band’s 2004 EP was equally surprising and a much welcomed addition to the setlist. The tapped lead riff to “Pachucha Sunrise” drew a roaring response from the crowd, and the band performed an ever-so-slightly slowed down version of the Menos el Oso favorite. The enchanting “Dayglow Vista Rd.” closed out the band’s scheduled set.

Minus the Bear returned moments later to begin their encore with the 2005′s quirky “The Fix”, the entire crowd singing along to the song’s infectious chorus. Minus the Bear’s most danceable number, “Into the Mirror”, was one of the night’s highlights. A gigantic performance of “Absinthe Party At The Fly Honey Warehouse” closed out the band’s setlist.

Drilling
Throwin’ Shapes
Knights
My Time
Summer Angel
When We Escape
Secret Country
Get Me Naked 2: Electric Boogaloo
Fine + 2 Pts.
Ice Monster
The Thief
Hold Me Down
Spritz!!! Spritz!!!
Pachuca Sunrise
Dayglow Vista Rd.
The Fix
Into the Mirror
Absinthe Party At The Fly Honey Warehouse

Minus the Bear successfully tamed their entire discography, and even though the night was a little light on their best output — the self-titled Menos el Oso — the band’s set selection was solid and stretched back to 2002. Remarkably tight guitars, impassioned drumming, and clean, powerful vocals allowed Minus the Bear to fully express a large collection of songs difficult to recreate outside the studio. A band like Minus the Bear could very easily be stale and lifeless on stage; the group disregarded those notions entirely and sounded fantastic during their lengthy eighteen-song set.


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