Motion City Soundtrack / Farewell / Eons @ NYC 9/18

September 19, 2007

MySpace.com hosts free shows from time to time across the country, and thankfully New York City’s Knitting Factory was chosen to host Motion City Soundtrack on the day Even If It Kills Me hit stores. I arrived early to ensure I’d get in (in fact, three hours before the first band took the stage) and grabbed one of the last wristbands available. The venue is tiny (the free posters handed out after the show were hand-numbered up to 450, though I suspect the venue’s size is closer to 250), and the sound is always superb.

Even with the intimate setting and strong acoustics, openers Eons were still anything but special. My friend described them as “awkward”, which is a kind way of explaining how terrible their performance was. The songs were weak and lacked any sort of lead guitar playing, despite having two guitarist on stage. The cheesy effects and terrible guitar tones, coupled with a very weak frontman, made this band a chore to listen to. Thankfully, though, they kept their set short and left the stage after about twenty minutes.

Farewell followed Eons; they can best be described as a typical, uninspired punk-pop/emocore blend band that can be lumped into any of a hundred other bands that combine “edgy” sound and dual vocals with a completely unnecessary synthesizer. Though much better than the first act, the band isn’t anything special or worth listening to.

All boredom from the previous bands was immediately erased when Motion City Soundtrack took the stage at nearly 10PM. The band wasted no time getting into Even If It Kills Me–something I’m happy about, since I’ve heard nearly every song from their first two albums more times that I can count–with “Fell In Love Without You”. In fact, nearly half the new album was showcased this evening, and the band played each song flawlessly, aside from the single “Broken Heart”, during which Justin Pierre botched a few lines. The band played a full seventeen-song set (not in order):

Throw Down
The Future Freaks Me Out
My Favorite Accident
Capital H
Attractive Today
Everything Is Alright
Make Out Kids
Time Turned Fragile
L.G. FUAD
Better Open The Door
Hold Me Down
Fell In Love Without You
This Is For Real
It Had To Be You
Broken Heart
Point Of Extinction
Antonia

Only four songs came from pre-2005, but at least dance-ready “Throwdown” was in the mix as the final song before the encore (which would feature Commit This To Memory kick-off track “Attractive Today” and the band’s essential “The Future Freaks Me Out”). While I’ll certainly miss some incredible songs from I Am The Movie, I’ve been lucky enough to hear them many times and it’s very refreshing to hear the new material.

Motion City Soundtrack goes on a two month tour between mid-October and mid-December, and I’ll definitely be seeing them once again at some point in November, as they continue to showcase why they are one of the top live acts in the game today.


Motion City Soundtrack / Sherwood / The Higher / The Forecast @ Philadelphia 7/23

July 24, 2007

On a surprisingly cool summer night in Philadelphia, I arrived at the TLA in time to catch the first band, The Forecast. I thought Sherwood was the first opener, but it seems they moved up in the world and were now direct support. In any case, The Forecast were stunning; I had never heard of the band prior to this show, so I didn’t know what to expect at all. Bassist Shannon Burns seemed to split vocal duties with guitarist Dustin Addis, and the pair harmonized well and effectively used the female/male combination of vocals to its full potential. Songs ranged from mid-tempo to all-out punk blasts, each song sounding unique and certainly enjoyable. This band is not a typical Victory Records band, I’ll definitely be checking out more of their material.

The Higher followed and didn’t live up to The Forecast by any means. Their music is very synth-driven, but it was all just sampled into the PA–a huge turnoff to live shows, in my opinion (now-famous Panic! At The Disco used to do this on their early tours, and it just turned me off immediately). Although very The Academy Is…-influenced ( unfortunately without the lyrical wit, catchy hooks, or musicianship), the band struggles live. It all comes off very stale, and very boring. Little girls definitely eat it up, though; a group of girls in front of me from what had to be middle school were attempting to dance to this the entire show. Mix in a mash-up cover of Akon and R. Kelly, and you have the perfect recipe for the type of band I’m absolutely sick of.

AbsolutePunk.net’s oft-plugged Sherwood took the stage next. To be completely honest, I didn’t buy into the AP-hype, and never really listened to these guys. That was a mistake. Sherwood came out swinging, with live synth, pummeling punk-pop guitars, and a “Grounded For Life”-era Donal Logue lookalike frontman with an amazing set of pipes and demanding stage presence. Sherwood was performing the new wave of punk-pop flawlessly, and I was along for the ride. I don’t think I’ve enjoyed a band I didn’t know ANY words to as much as I did Sherwood in quite some time. I hope they’re as energetic and sound as good on CD, because I’ll definitely be picking up their material.

Minneapolis, Minnesota based Motion City Soundtrack finally took the stage, coming out to a party beat of heavy bass and dance-styled music playing over the PA (quite a change from a band who just one year ago came out to the first track from Refused’s The Shape Of Punk To Come). I’ve seen this band more times than I have fingers (and perhaps toes, as well), and the setlist has been basically the same for the six years, so I was excited to see how they would perform the new songs live.

For those keeping score at home, the band played:

Throwdown
The Future Freaks Me Out
My Favorite Accident
Perfect Teeth
Modern Chemistry
Capital H
Mary Without Sound
Attractive Today
Everything Is Alright
Make Out Kids
Time Turned Fragile
LG Fuad
Better Open The Door
Hold Me Down
Fell in Love Without You
This Is For Real
Broken Heart

You Wouldn’t Like Me (Tegan and Sara Cover)

Those seventeen songs should be correct (but are obviously out of order). The new material sounded great. Frontman Justin Pierre was as quirky as ever, this time giving out his cell phone number (or actually, “Tom’s cell phone number”), through a sign flip-book that also contained other sayings, including “YES”, “NO”, “LET’S CHAT”, and other random things. If you get to this tour, you’ll understand what I mean. He may be off the drugs, but his elevator still doesn’t go to the top floor.

The band sounded exceptionally tight (as always); drummer Tony Thaxton is a core part of their live shows, and very under-rated in the world of punk-pop. He kept perfect timing through the band’s chaotic frenzy of dual guitars and Moog, and it’s really amazing how consistently well the band performs live.

Motion City Soundtrack channeled an energy into the crowd that feeds off their own performance; they’re genuinely loving and enjoying every second of the performance, and the crowd feels it. I remember sitting with the band on their tour bus the first time they saw themselves on MTV, and their emotional reaction was very similar to The Wonders’s hysteria when they learn “That Thing You Do!” is on the radio.

Definitely pick up Even If It Kills Me come September, and if this tour rolls through your town, don’t miss it.


The Bamboozle 5/5 & 5/7

May 17, 2007

Every year, northern New Jersey hosts a festival currently known as The Bamboozle, a multi-day event. It’s origins lay in mixed areas: The Great Bamboozle and Skate & Surf, festivals started in the early 2000s. Last year’s The Bamboozle was the first to settle down in East Rutherford at Giants Stadium with a giant bill of primarily punk, hardcore, ska, indie, emocore, and alternative-influenced acts. The Bamboozle 2007 would be the second year of the two twelve-hour day events.

I’ll preface this review of the evening by noting that I tend to get up close for most of the bands, usually near the rails or in the closest pit possible–so the reviews you’re getting are, for the most part, up-close-and-personal, not written from a hundred yard away point of view. Also, I will acknowledge missing a lot of bands–a lot of good bands, actually. Unfortunately, due to scheduling, there were a lot of overlaps. I made game-time decisions and picked the bands I wanted to see when conflicts arose.

I arrived early Saturday to scout the area, locating each stage. A similar setup to previous years, there were two main stages, and two areas of two sets of of side stages. Additionally, there was a small MySpace-sponsored stage and a stage inside the Giants practice dome that was filmed all day. I met some AbsolutePunk.net forum members at their tent, and scored whatever free samplers and stickers I could from the tents around the premises.

Main stage act The Receiving End Of Sirens kicked the day off for me, and they played exceptionally well. This was my first experience with the band since the departure of vocalist/programmer Casey Crescenzo. Brian Southall, his replacement, competently fills in however, and the band rocked through songs from their debut LP, Between the Heart and the Synapse, and their upcoming follow-up, The Earth Sings Mi Fa Mi. The set’s highlight was “Planning A Prison Break”, my favorite song from their debut. The Boston act set the tone for the day well, attracting a surprisingly large number of fans and playing near flawlessly for thirty minutes.

Texas’s Daniel Hunter, and his project PlayRadioPlay! were next on my list, so I wandered away from the main stage to the Macbeth side stage to check him out. They played well, though I didn’t know much of his material (to my knowledge, he only has a handful of songs posted online) and left to meet up with some friends. I ran into Kenny Bridges of Moneen and got his autograph on my ticket. Unfortunately, their set time conflicted with Motion City Soundtrack and I didn’t get to see them.

Bayside played next, and their set was quite solid as to be expected. One of the few main stage acts to draw out primarily hardcore fans, they played a nice mix of older material and some new songs. They didn’t play my favorite songs from the new album, unfortunately, but they did play “Duality”, “I And I”, and “Dear Your Holiness”. “Montauk”, “Blame It On Bad Luck”, “Existing In A Crisis”, and “Devotion and Desire” from their 2005 self-titled album rounded out a great set from the boys from Queens.

I elected to see Oakland’s The Matches at 3PM next, in part because I forgot they’d be playing tomorrow and in part because I was hoping to be up front for Thrice’s s 3:50 set. In doing so I missed out a handful of bands I would have liked to have seen including Paramore, Men Women & Children, Silverstein, and Manchester Orchestra, although there was practically a four-way conflict there anyway. Under their old name, The Locals, The Matches performed a set primarily of songs from E. Von Dahl Killed the Locals, an album recorded under that previous moniker. Shawn Harris is one of the most passionate frontmen in the genre, and he truely showed it during this performance, which was taped for Bamboozle TV. I managed to catch his guitar pick, and briefly spoke with him afterward to get it signed and congratulate him on the great set while he epitomized the punk DIY scene they rose from, walking about the crowd selling copies of their album for $10 from a cardboard box.

Thrice was due next, and though I was stoked to be in front on the rail for their performance, security quickly whisked me away, claiming they had to evacuate the bubble before Thrice came on. I re-entered for their set, showing my credentials (which were required for this set and also for Jack’s Mannequin’s set the next day), and sat down on the Astroturf, learning that Dustin Kensrue and Teppei Teranishi would be playing an acoustic set. When they finally took the stage, though, I stood up and watched what would be one of the best sets of the weekend. The duo kicked it off with The Artist In The Ambulance’s “Under A Killing Moon” and also played two others from that 2003 release including the title track and “Stare At The Sun”. More importantly, they played a couple of brand new songs (which were absolutely stellar) from the Earth-themed disc of their upcoming four-disc album. They closed the set with a solid cover of The Beatles’s “The Ballad Of John And Yoko”. Afterwards, I got to speak with Dustin and Teppei, who signed the back of my ticket and assured me they would be playing another new song on Sunday from the Fire-themed disc. Due to complications with Thrice’s equipment, their set ended much later than scheduled and I crossed Cartel off my list of bands to see.

I stuck around inside the bubble to The Sleeping under their Biker Women guise. The crowd was made up primarily of die hard The Sleeping fans, which made songs like “If Your Heart Was Broken, You Would Be Dead” even better. As Biker Women (dressed in Harley-influenced garments you’d expect), the band put on an interesting “show”, singing about whiskey and biker girls breaking their hearts in between “covers” of songs by The Sleeping. They joked about “emo bands being pussies” and “The Sleeping suck[ing]“–it was entirely comical, but the actual The Sleeping songs were solid. Other bands would get into their secret names somewhat, but The Sleeping certainly went above-and-beyond.

Thursday was due up next on my list, so I rushed across the parking lot to the Saints And Sinners side stage to catch the end of Hit The Lights and gain a rail position for Thursday. Hit The Lights closed with “Bodybag”, one of the few songs I somewhat enjoy by them, so it wasn’t too bad sitting through their set to get a rail spot for Thursday. After listening to This Providence play the side stage to the left (from what I heard of their set, they played pretty well; at the end of their set they even proudly proclaimed themselves true Christians, unlike many other Christians who give true ones a bad name).

Wearing bear masks, and under the codename Bearfort, Thursday took the stage opening with “Autobearography Of A Nation”. They followed into “Understanding In A Bear Fort“, and continued their flawless performance with one of my favorite live songs, “How Long Is The Night?”. Geoff Rickly noted that this was the first show of their new lives (now being without a record label) and that they couldn’t be more excited to start fresh. They played “Signals Over The Air” next, and then gave shoutouts to their friends on stage. Geoff kept repeating/asking if his friends we’re “okay” before kicking straight into “At This Velocity”. “Divison St.” followed before the band closed with “Jet Black New Year”. Thursday performed extremely well and put on what I consider the best performance of the weekend.

Motion City Soundtrack played the side stage to the left, and came out to Trey Parker and his band, DVDA’s “America, Fuck Yeah”, the theme from Team America: World Police. As The Great American Freedom Machine, Motion City Soundtrack came out describing themselves as a band from Mexico City, New Mexico, at one point and Paris, France, at another. They played a set primarily of tracks from Commit This Memory: “Attactive Today”, “Makeout Kids” into “Time Turned Fragile”, “LG Fuad”, and “Everything Is Alright”; they also played a brand new song that was much mellower than their older material. They closed their great set with “The Future Freaks Me Out”.

My Chemical Romance and The Black Parade was next on my list, so we took a little break before their set and checked out various merch tents and scored free Monster beverages. At the end of Hellogoodbye (who were horrendous), we rushed to the front of the main stage to wait for My Chemical Romance. A little after 9PM My Chemical Romance took the stage as The Black Parade and performed that album spot-on from start-to-finish, including the Monty Python-influenced hidden track, “Blood”. The set include no shortage of stunning pyrotechnics and a rotating drum platform. Their encore was a short set of five Three Cheers For Sweet Revenge tracks, finally ending Saturday evening with “Helena”.

Sunday began slightly earlier, with Long Island’s Brand New taking the opening slot at 12:05 on the main stage. The band kicked off with “Degausser” and then lead into “Sowing Season”. The band appeared to be upset at playing this festival, or at least playing so early, making remarks along the lines of “there must be some better way to spend your Sunday mornings” and “there must be some better way to spend your money”. “Luca” followed, and the band seemed to be playing pretty well, despite their attitude towards the set. I was actually somewhat proud of the band for a moment–they appeared to be playing what they wanted to play, despite the crowd wanting only to hear “Seventy Times Seven”.

This took a turn in the wrong direction though when Jesse announced something like, “I think I want to play this one again”, and performed “Degausser” once more, this time changing the lyrics and replacing the words with drug-related themes, such as “goodbye to drugs” as the first line of the song. It was apparent he didn’t want to be on stage, clearly messing around with the song this time around. “You Won’t Know” followed, but it was hard to respect the band at this point, even though their performance was still pretty spot on. The band moved on to “Welcome To Bangkok”, performing their ritual and destroying the set and banging on drums with their friends as the song climaxed. The band left the stage, but returned a minute later with “Seventy Times Seven”. Jesse laughed while playing the song, apparently disgusted that this is still the band’s most requested tune.

I had wanted to see Jedi Mind Tricks, but opted to see Anberlin instead. Anberlin was a polar opposite to Brand New, very grateful to be on stage and energetic through their entire set. The band opened with “A Whisper And A Clamor” and then followed with their punchy 2005 single, “Never Take Friendship Personal” which energized the crowd. The band continued with songs from their most recent albums, including “Adelaide” with its huge chorus and the sing-along “Dismantle.Repair”, closing with “Godspeed” to end their extremely solid performance.

The Matches were next, and I nearly caught guitarist Shawn Harris’s pick for the second day in a row. The band played a similar set to Saturday’s TV performance, and they played just as well this time.

Drive-Thru Records’s Halifax were next on my list–a band I’m not necessarily a big fan of, but I was very impressed with how fun their live show was at last year’s Bamboozle. They played well, with the crowd certainly getting into it. The set consisted of staples from The Inevitability Of A Strange World but also mixed it up with old songs such as “Sydney” from their debut EP.

I left Halifax’s set a bit early to see Circa Survive, who put on a solid live performance. The band played primarily songs from Juturna, but vocalist Anthony Green announced midway through the set that they would try out some new material (which sounded great) from their upcoming full-length, On Letting Go. The band closed their set with “In Fear And Faith”, my personal favorite Circa Survive song.

I ventured over to the bubble, showed my credentials to enter the “private” performance, and relaxed to check out Andrew McMahon and Bobby Anderson of Jack’s Mannequin play an acoustic set for BamboozleTV. Before playing, though, vocalist/pianist McMahon was interviewed for the television segment, and the crowd go to ask him some questions. Unfortunately, the questions were either softballs (how do you feel today?) or irrelevant (will you donate money to my charity?).. I would have liked to asked him if bassist Jay “Dr. J” McMillan is indeed a doctor or holds a PhD (McMahon once stated that Dr. J was “the only man on stage with a degree in medicine”).

The interview aside, Jack’s Mannequin played an absolutely stellar acoustic set. McMahon noted that since they were playing electric later, they’d use this more intimate set to play some cover songs. I’ve had the pleasure of seeing the band perform nearly ten different covers over the past few years at different shows, so I was hoping they’d surprise me with something new, and they didn’t disappoint. They covered Bruce Springsteen’s “I’m On Fire” (a song they originally tried at the Stone Pony in Springsteen’s home town, Asbury Park) much cleaner, and even threw in “A Friend Of The Devil” by The Grateful Dead, a song I hadn’t heard them do yet. A cover of “The Astronaut”, from Something Corporate, was also thrown into the set. It wasn’t just covers, though, as the band performed songs from Everything In Transit such as “Rescued” and “Holiday From Real”.

Jack’s Mannequin’s performance ran late, so the next band I was able to catch was Yellowcard on the main stage. Props to this band for playing exactly the kind of setlist a festival like Bamboozle demands: their punk-pop sing-a-longs, such as “Ocean Avenue”, “Breathing”, “Rough Landing Holly”, and “Way Away”. The band also played “Fighting” off their upcoming follow-up to Lights And Sounds, a track that would fit more into the Ocean Avenue-era of the band.

Perhaps one of the highlights of the second day is Thrice, who played next on the opposing main stage. With only an acoustic tease the day before, I was heavily anticipating the return of Thrice full-band and electric. The band kicked off with “Under A Killing Moon” from The Artist In The Ambulance, an excellent live song that showcases the band’s ability to write meaningful lyrics and mix melody with hardcore. Vheissu’s “Image Of The Invisible” followed. The crowd was certainly getting into things with some of the best pits of the weekend.

Title track from their 2003 LP “The Artist In The Ambulance” was next, and the band performed the song near perfectly. The tightly wound, speeding guitar riff is no small feat, but Teppei Teranishi makes it look all too easy. As promised, the band played a new song from the Fire-theme disc, and it did not disappoint. The set slowed down for only a few moments with “Atlantic” before kicking back into the heavy hitting riffs of “Deadbolt”, a fan favorite that always receives extra treatment live during its outro.

“Stare At The Sun” was next, and it was nice to hear this song performed electric for the first time in many years. Usually performed acoustic to slow down their set, the band opted to perform this song full-force. Epic “Red Sky” calmed the crowd, and Dustin Kensrue’s voice haunted those who listened during the final chorus and key change. Closing with prison-break inspired and chain-gang chanting “The Earth Will Shake”, Thrice whet the appetite for more but that would be their last song of the evening.

It would be nearly impossible to follow such an incredible set, but Jack’s Manequin did the best anyone could do all day. Also one of the finest live acts to be playing this weekend, the band didn’t hold back and captivated the crowd with their pop driven piano-rock. Although the band could pick nearly any combination of songs from their catalog (essentially just their debut LP, Everything In Transit) and still play an amazing set, the songs they chose were excellent and executed flawlessly. “Dark Blue” was in full form, including the extended introduction. “La Lie Lie” was the perfect sing-a-long, and it was great to hear the original version of this song (with harmonica bridge) after hearing the band perform its demo “West Coast Winter” most of the past year. My favorite from the record, “Bruised”, was spot-on, and it was great to see the fans (and the parents!) jumping along to the chorus.

The band closed with “MFEO”, and it was about this time that Jack’s Mannequin took full control of the Bamboozle crowd as if they were the show’s headliner. Andrew McMahon is unquestionably one of the most powerful and charismatic frontmen the weekend would see. Playing both halves to “MFEO”, with the standard mini-U2 cover of “With Or Without You” thrown into the mix, drummer Jonathan Sullivan pounded the skins during the song’s final minutes while McMahon held the crowd’s attention perfectly with his spot-on vocal delivery.

Next on the list, and last band of the weekend I truly wanted to see, was Taking Back Sunday. Interestingly, the band’s songs have gotten weaker in time (2002’s Tell All Your Friends is arguably their best work from start to finish), but their live show was improve greatly: gone are the immature and sloppy vocals of Adam Lazzara, a vocalist who has improved his live show immensely since earlier in the decade. The set was primarily a Louder Now showcase with half of the songs coming from their latest album, though they did manage to throw in the obligatory “Cute Without The ‘E’ (Cut From Team)”, “You’re So Last Summer”, and “Set Phasers To Sun”. It’s unfortunate that so many great songs from their younger years are excluded to make room for new material, but the band did perform their chosen material quite well live. “Error Operator” is a blast live, and the band executes the driving riff pretty well. Taking Back Sunday closed with what is perhaps their biggest radio hit (as “Cute” would be their biggest “fan hit”), “A Decade Under The Influence”.

Weird Al Yankovic performed on the opposing stage; I caught parts of it as I picked up some t-shits from the SSE Tent (the Syrentha Savio Endowment non-profit organization provides financial assistance to underprivileged women who cannot afford the expense of fighting breast cancer–it’s a great cause and many great bands put out some cool looking shirts for charity).

Around 9PM Linkin Park arrived on the now-heavily decorated main stage and closed the evening and the entire Bamboozle affair. The band played many songs from their first, and strongest disc, Hybrid Theory, including opener “One Step Closer”. The band played a few new songs from Minutes To Midnight, as well as from Meteora. The band slowed down the setlist near the end, with a keyboard-only version of “Pushing Me Away”; unfortunately, Linkin Park excels when they are fast and brash, so the set suffered during these slower moments. The band did pick things up with songs like “Crawling” before leaving, to encore with their biggest hit, “In The End” and then closing with “Faint”.

The entire weekend was a great time, with many great performances by some of the best bands in the scene today. Unfortunately, I missed a lot of bands due to scheduling conflicts, but I did manage to catch all of my favorites. Any comments, suggestions, corrections, or questions about this article are welcome.


Warped Tour 2006: Camden, NJ

August 8, 2006

Like clockwork, every August the Vans Warped Tour rolls into southern New Jersey. Billed as a “Philadelphia date” due to Camden’s proximity to The City of Brotherly Love, the Camden Warped Tour takes place at the Tweeter Center At The Waterfront and its surrounding parking lots. This year’s event showcased some of my favorite bands, such as Thursday, Motion City Soundtrack, The Academy Is…, and Billy Talent.

Warped Tour is great because it offers a chance to see many bands over the course of about ten hours for only $30. Upon arriving, I checked the time board to see when my favorite bands were playing; oddly enough, a few bands (such as Cartel) were absent from the main list, but I later learned they were playing some of the smaller stages. I would have guessed that Cartel could have been on a main stage, but that wasn’t the case. In fact, they were in direct conflict with a few other bands, namely Halifax and Thursday.

I decided I would see Thursday instead (since they are far superior to both Cartel and Halifax), wrote down the set times, and then walked around to locate each of the stages so that I could find them when the time came. The main stages are quite obvious, but some of the side stages are almost hidden in corners of the parking lot. The first band I saw was Chicago’s The Academy Is…, located at the Hurley Stage, far away from any other stages and merch booths.

Much to my surprise, the crowd for Fueled By Ramen’s five-piece punk-pop band was fairly small as I waited for the set to begin. The age-group, however, was not surprising–the crowd was filled primarily with younger girls. The Academy Is…’s setlist was absolutely stellar; seven songs from Almost Here and “The Fever” off of From The Carpet EP. The band’s performance was on the money, and vocalist William Beckett sounded spot on.

At the conclusion of their set, I made my way to the front barrier to wait for Ontario punks Billy Talent. During the wait, I luckily grabbed a setlist from The Academy Is…; my brother ended up with a guitar pick.

Billy Talent opened with their newest single, “Devil In A Midnight Mass” and continued to play three more from Billy Talent II and four from Billy Talent, “Line And Sinker” and “River Below”. The crowd was slightly larger than I expected, but most of the people in attendance didn’t really know the band. I did run into a few girls and guys who absolutely loved Billy Talent, which was definitely cool. The band performed with the energy I expected and hopefully won over a large amount of new fans through their excellent performance. I managed to score Billy Talent’s setlist, too, and then ventured across the parking lot to see Thursday. I passed through some side stages on the way and caught parts of a few sets, most notably Moneen, another Canadian band that I highly recommend.

The waiting crowd for Thursday was indeed small, too–this was beginning to seem very strange, as last year’s Warped Tour was completely packed all day and all night. I soon realized that last year’s Warped Tour had huge draws from MTV-break out stars My Chemical Romance and Fall Out Boy; this year’s biggest draws were veteran punks NOFX and underground favorites Thursday.

I managed to reach the barrier for Thursday, and the band exploded with “For The Workforce, Drowning”. Incredible as always, Thursday’s set was easily the best of the day, filled primarily with songs from A City By The Light Divided such as “Other Side Of The Crash/Over And Out (Of Control)”, though they did throw in its prequel, “Understanding In A Car Crash”, from Full Collapse.

Vocalist Geoff Rickley prefaced “At This Velocity” with the story behind the song’s meaning, but cut the explanation short and used it as an intro to jump straight into the song’s brutal opening. As explained many times, the song is about the band’s flight to Australia, with Poison The Well and The Mars Volta, that nearly crashed into the ground.

The band performed “Signals Over The Air”, a song Rickley dedicated to the women of the crowd and a sexual revolution. As winner’s of the Energizer contest, the band performed a little longer than normal, throwing in “Into The Blinding Light”, a song I had never had the oppurtunity to hear live. Though not one of my favorite Thursday songs, it’s apparent the band absolutely loves playing this one.

“Counting 5-4-3-2-1″ was dedicated to bands like Rise Against and Every Time I Die, bands Rickley proclaimed help keep us all free from generic MTV music. Rickley also went on to say that even if you don’t have the money to purchase Thursday’s albums today, please go download them from the Internet, as music shouldn’t be just for those with money but should be a part of everyone’s life, like the air that you breathe.

Rickley also announced that bassist Tim Payne was absent from the lineup so that he could be with his family–his wife was having a baby. At one point, Rickley also encouraged the crowd to stop doing the typical Warped Tour punk circle pits and open up an old-school New Jersey “kickboxing style” pit.

Thursday finished their set with “Jet Black New Year”, a “party song” according Rickley. A crowd favorite, everyone hung onto every word and savored each moment as the slowed, climatic New Year’s countdown near the song’s close just beckoned a followup blast of energy. As tradition continued, the band ended the song with lines from Prince, echoing “and we’ll party like its 1999″.

Despite being nearly dehydrated and completely exhausted, I remained at the barrier hoping to get another setlist. I called to one of the stage crew workers who handed me a setlist, but, to my displeasure, it was a setlist from Anti-Flag who had played earlier and not from Thursday.

HORSE The Band was next on the list; I walked over to their set (which began slightly early, apparently) in the middle of their first song, The Mechanical Hand’s “Birdo”. HORSE The Band, as many people don’t know, is a Nintendo-influenced hardcore band. Many songs and themes come from video games; their synthesizer is practically lifted from the 8-bit and 16-bit days of gaming. HORSE The Band kept their fans laughing with their outrageous comments between songs, such as yelling at a girl on a nearby acoustic stage, joking about taking song requests, and telling everyone checking out their merch booth to stop looking and come watch.

HORSE The Band’s set included a new song from their upcoming EP, and also “House Of Boo”, a song inspired by the Super Mario World Ghost Houses. The familiar haunting theme runs through the song. About to play their final song, HORSE The Band announced “this is a new one”, but actually played my favorite HORSE The Band song: “Cutsman”, a breakdown-filled hardcore song inspired by Mega Man I’s Cut Man. Their most known and respected song, the crowd even took to mounting fake scissors on their heads with their hands, mimicking the super villain upon which the song is based. I was glad to catch HORSE The Band, because I got to see my favorite songs live; I don’t anticipate getting another chance to see them anytime soon.

The Sleeping were going to be playing soon, but I had wanted to see Motion City Soundtrack and so went to wait for them; Rise Against was playing their stage first, so I made my way to front for their set–a comment that deserves a short aside:

Normally, I spend most of my Warped Tour time running from band to band, but this year’s lineup didn’t really force me to run from set to set, as there weren’t as many bands I had wanted to see. Also, due to the usual volume of people, I’m often stuck in the middle of crowds, nowhere near front, for most of the day. Today’s Warped Tour was completely the opposite; I spent most of the day as close as possible to each of the band’s. This was somewhat of a different experience than spending the day dancing in the pits that fill the middle of the crowds.

But I digress.

I’ve always proclaimed Rise Against as one of the loudest bands I’ve ever experienced, and this was no exception. With a set filled with old songs and new songs, Rise Against was as potent as ever. Absent from the set was their biggest radio hit, “Swing Life Away”; but it was apparent that they weren’t trying to showcase their softer side. Some favorites from the set included “Ready To Fall” and “Dancing For Rain”. At the end of the set, vocalist Tim McIlrath climbed into the crowd and passed the mic around. We clenched hands and shared the mic many times, certainly one of the more memorable experiences of the day.

Motion City Soundtrack came on next to play a stellar set that even included Back To The Beat EP’s “Throwdown”. Despite a few problems with Jesse Johnson’s Moog synthesizer, Motion City Soundtrack ruled the crowd for a solid thirty minutes, inspiring a non-stop flood of crowd surfing. Vocalist Justin Pierre’s quirky comments and mannerisms set the mood for the band’s especially strange and quirky songs; the set included songs from Commit This To Memory such as “Attractive Today”, “Everything Is Alright”, “LG Fuad”, and “Better Open The Door” and songs from I Am The Movie such as fan-favorites “Capital H” and “The Future Freaks Me Out”.

Every Time I Die was next on my list, but their set was nearly over when I made it across the parking lot to the isolated corner that had The Academy Is… and Billy Talent about six hours earlier. I did manage to catch a few songs, though, and it was obvious that the band wasn’t settling for anything less than giant hardcore pits for their songs.

The evening was coming to a close, so I walked around the merch booths. Moneen was at their booth, and I got to speak with vocalist Kenny Bridges for quite some time. I asked him about The Red Tree’s hidden track, and he said he put the track on there at the last minute and that the band didn’t even know it was there until a few months after it was pressed. This quite a contract to Armor For Sleep’s What To Do When You Are Dead, which featured a bonus track that the band really didn’t have any say about. Bridges and the rest of the band signed my oversized Warped Tour pre-sale ticket and mentioned an upcoming tour with Alexisonfire this fall.

I ventured around some more, checking out merch from other bands; my brother purchased a Billy Talent hat that was actually pretty cool. Most of the bands didn’t have any merch that impressed me, but I’ll note a few cool designs that stuck in my head:

HORSE The Band’s Cutsman t-shirt, with a picture of Cut Man himself. If it wasn’t baby-blue, I probably would have got it. Moneen had a few cool shirts, but they were sold out of L and XL sizes. There was a Philadelphia hardcore SSE shirts pack with bands like The Loved Ones, but it was all sized S. Motion City Soundtrack’s merch was weak as always; Armor For Sleep had the same designs I’ve seen for the last two or three years–none of them any good.

As I said before, all this “free time to wander” is a new experience for me at Warped Tour, as I’m usually running from stages to stage to catch the different bands. Less bands I want to see, coupled with a few scheduling issues, lead me to a much more relaxed day, however. I ran into a broken cardboard box filled with Thursday posters, so I grabbed those. Despite a few people thinking I was distributing them, I managed to walk away with what looks like over one hundred thick Thursday posters. Maybe I’ll wallpaper my apartment.

Armor For Sleep was the last band of the evening; my brother isn’t a huge fan of them, so he stood in the back with the posters and I made my way to the front. Again, this is quite a difference from past Warped Tours: the last band of the night is almost certainly packed with people; making your way to the front is a near impossible feat at any point during the day, but it’s especially impossible near the end!

New Jersey’s Armor For Sleep played nearly all the songs I had expected/wanted them to, including “Dream To Make Believe” and “The Truth About Heaven”, though their live sound isn’t as tight as some of the other bands I saw earlier. During “Stay On The Ground” the band encouraged everyone to crowd surf, daring them to “break the record of nine people in the crowd at once”. We lifted every girl we could into the air, easily shattering the weak “record of nine”.

As Armor For Sleep finished the day, I met up with my friends, grabbed my posters, and walked back to my car. It’s worth noting some other bands I caught parts of during the day:

Joan Jett And The Blackhearts: I caught a few songs from this Philadelphia native, notably “Bad Reputation” and The Arrows’s cover “I Love Rock ‘N Roll”.

NOFX: Fat mike was complaining about different things as always. The band didn’t sound that bad, though, surprisingly.

The Bouncing Souls: I was on my way to catch another band at the time, but The Bouncing Souls sounded fabulous.

Vaux: Denver’s hardrockers sounded pretty good, I caught part of their set walking through the ampitheatre.

I had wanted to see Silverstein, Emanuel, Halifax, and Cartel, but scheduling conflicts prevented it. I also wouldn’t have minded seeing Alexisonfire, Gatsby’s American Dream, and Saves The Day.

A few other odds and ends:

I’m glad that From First To Last dropped off the tour, because they were unfortunately winning the Energizer contest for ten extra minutes. With them gone, Thursday narrowly edged out Saves The Day. I was hoping to see Underoath, but they dropped off the Warped Tour only a few days earlier. Chiodos was on a few dates around Camden, but were not at Camden’s date, sadly. AFI was on only a handful of Warped Tour dates, but not Camden anyway.

I learned a few neat facts about Moneen; I confirmed my belief that Thursday is my favorite band and also the best live band I’ve ever seen, and that Geoff Rickley and Thursday are some of the most honest, passionate musicians in the industry; I got a few setlists; I experienced my first Warped Tour that didn’t involve most of the day in pits, but actually in the front row; I noticed that this year’s event didn’t draw a big crowd at all compared to last year’s.

An obvious comparison comes up; Warped Tour 2006 versus Bamboozle 2006, the latter wins without question–either day of Bamboozle simply had more bands that I wanted to see, and Bamboozle as a whole is a much better festival.

I usually hate writing so informally, but I think it was the best way to describe the day’s events. Any comments and questions, please leave them below. You do not need to be registered to post; anonymous posting IS allowed!