Dashboard Confessional / River City Extension / Cory Branan / John Lefler @ NYC 12/7/2010

December 7, 2010

Celebrating the ten year anniversary of The Swiss Army Romance, Chris Carrabba embarked on national tour to perform the album its entirety each night. Support varied from show to show or leg to leg, but New York City may have gotten the sweetest package with River City Extension, Cory Branan, and John Lefler opening the evening at Webster Hall.

John Lefler

John Lefler

Carrabba’s Dashboard Confessional bandmate John Lefler performed first, using just acoustic guitar or piano for a brief twenty-five minute set. Lefler’s six simple songs were generally easy-going and enjoyable, showcasing a side of the talented songwriter often overshadowed by Carrabba in Dashboard Confessional. Though the set began with a brand new song, the rest of the selections came from 2009′s Better By Design, including the title track that went last just before 8PM.

(new song)
Afraid Anymore
Dream Your Life Away
Ordinary Guy
Lucy
Better By Design

Cory Branan

Cory Branan

Cory Branan brought his acoustic guitar on stage a few minutes later, demonstrating his incredible singer-songwriter skills to a very receptive crowd. Adept at storytelling, “Prettiest Waitress in Memphis” was immediately likeable and forced the sold out Webster Hall audience to pay close attention to the Mississippi native. “Tall Green Grass”, often covered by Carrabba, sounded wonderful. Mesmerizing finger-picking and slap guitar playing carried Branan’s Southern stories, while his distinct voice and ability to hold notes in a wide range brought the tales to life. “A Girl Named GO”, the first track from 12 Songs, concluded Branan’s excellent twenty-five minute set.

Prettiest Waitress in Memphis
Tall Green Grass
Freefall
Sour Mash
The Corner
A Girl Named GO

River City Extension

River City Extension

To fit with the evening’s theme of acoustic performances, a stripped down version of River City Extension took the stage at 8:45PM. Primary songwriter Joseph Michelini lead the way on guitar, backed by vocalist Sam Tacon, drummer Mike Costaney, cellist Jenn Fantaccione, and trumpeter Dan Melius. With three members absent, the New Jersey band performed slightly different takes on songs from their 2010 debut and used the occasion to perform a few non-album songs more suited for the unplugged atmosphere.

River City Extension

River City Extension

“Today, I Feel Like I’m Evolving” was fairly straight-forward, the introspective cut already a largely acoustic number; Fantaccione’s subtle cello parts do a nice job of complementing Michelini’s fingerpicking.  “Something Salty, Something Sweet” and “Adrienne” work better with a full band, but the somewhat softer approach to these songs was still quite pleasant. Guitarist Nick Cucci joined for “Waiting in the Airport”, helping flesh out the …And the Unmistakable Man closing track. New songs “Welcome to Pittsburgh” and “Ballad of Oregon” sounded great, the latter closing River City Extension’s tightly-executed forty-five minute set.

Today, I Feel Like I’m Evolving
Something Salty, Something Sweet
Adrienne
Welcome to Pittsburgh
Friends and Family
Waiting in the Airport
South for the Winter
Ballad of Oregon

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional

Armed with just an acoustic guitar, Chris Carrabba began tackling his first Dashboard Confessional album at 10PM. The oddly tuned “Screaming Infidelities” had the entire crowd singing along from the song’s first words, a smiling Carrabba struggling to sing above the audience. Introduced as a song about a pickup truck and a bad girlfriend, “The Sharp Hint of New Tears” went next, followed by the very rarely played “Living in Your Letters”. The Swiss Army Romance title track ended in a full singalong, as it often does during most Dashboard Confessional concerts. Audience participation continued on “A Plain Morning”, with the sold out Webster Hall contributing the “again” harmonies to the song’s final moments. Carrabba used “Ender Will Save Us All” as a thank-you to Amy Fleisher, the founder of Fiddler Records who originally took a chance on Dashboard Confessional ten years ago.

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional

After “Shirts and Gloves”, Carrabba continued into another set of Dashboard Confessional rarities and favorites that concluded with The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most closer “This Bitter Pill”. After a short break, “Best Deceptions” lead a four-song encore that included 2006′s “Stolen” and “a song about Peter Parker”. Obligatory closer “Hands Down” took Carrabba off the stage, a satisfied crowd singing in unison: “And I knew that you meant it / that you meant it.”

Screaming Infidelities
The Sharp Hint of New Tears
Living In Your Letters
The Swiss Army Romance
Turpentine Chaser
A Plain Morning
Age Six Racer
Again I Go Unnoticed
Ender Will Save Us All
Shirts and Gloves
Ghost of a Good Thing
The Places You Have Come To Fear The Most
The Brilliant Dance
The Good Fight
Remember To Breathe
Get Me Right
This Bitter Pill
Best Deceptions
Stolen
Vindicated
Hands Down

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional

Carrabba’s vocals could not have sounded better during his ninety-minute setlist, performing decade-old songs with the urgency and passion of a wet-eared teenage musician. Alone with just an acoustic guitar for twenty-one songs, the Dashboard Confessional frontman showcased his remarkable command of not just the stringed instrument but also his voice. Constantly appreciative of and thankful for his fans, Carrabba’s undeniable charm and charisma enhanced a great performance of truly well-written songs.


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.


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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