Bamboozle Day 1 @ East Rutherford 5/2

June 9, 2009

With Cartel’s “Luckie Street” bouncing off the Giants Stadium parking deck walls, I walked with anticipation to the first day of The Bamboozle, returning to East Rutherford just hours after Hoodwink had ended. Arriving slightly late to the festival, I unfortunately missed The Cab (who surprised me with an impressive Queen cover-set last night) and The Ataris.

I did catch the tail end of Cartel’s set, which included “Say Anything (Else)” into “Honestly”. Along with “Luckie Street”, these are three of Cartel’s bests songs, epitomizing the band’s penchant for punk-pop influenced pop-rock. Vocalist Will Pugh sounded great, and the guitars were bright and crisp. Although their  sophomore full-length–a self-titled Dr. Pepper sponsored debacle–would indicate otherwise, Cartel can write tremendous hooks with songs begging to be played on a summer day. It was great to hear a nice selection of Chroma cuts during the brief time I caught the band.

Edna's Goldfish

Edna's Goldfish

The reunion performance of Edna’s Goldfish was next. The Long Island ska band hardly missed a beat, even if frontman Brian Diz was noticeably short of breath through most of the set; he joked that the entire band was out of shape from their decade-long hiatus. In a weekend that would be overrun with techno beats, auto-tune, and neon boy bands, Edna’s Goldfish was a nice glimpse into the pre-MySpace past. Songs including “I’m Your Destiny”, “Story”, “Avoiding the Swerve”, “This is Not Here”, “Invincible”, and “Veronica Sawyer” made up an excellent set.

Bayside

Bayside

Opening with “Masterpiece”, Bayside sounded great. Sticking to mostly singles (such as The Walking Wounded’s title track, the newer “Boy”, and the obligatory closer “Devotion and Desire”), Bayside played a predictable but enjoyable set. The band’s sound is clearly built for intimate clubs, but they always manage to sound great outdoors–a good thing, since the band tends to play summer festivals every year.

I wandered over to catch a bit of Bloodhound Gang who played essentials like “Fire Water Burn” and “The Bad Touch”. The Pennsylvania natives traded dares and Jackass-inspired acts (such as drinking vomit) throughout the set. Unfortunately, the mix was poor, and it was hard to make out anything being said throughout the set. I caught a bit of These Green Eyes; the band doesn’t do anything new or groundbreaking, but they were enjoyable enough to listen to while waiting in line for the restrooms.

I met up with my friends in Latin for Truth, a punk-pop/punk-hardcore hybrid band from Alabama. The band wasn’t billed for the weekend–they ventured all the way up to New Jersey just to promote their new record, a DIY tactic right out of the Lifetime playbook (a band who’s sound they attempt to channel on their debut, Eleven Eleven). The band actually suffered a bit of bad luck recently and totaled their van and all their gear; I’d encourage you help them out or at least check out their record if you’re into bands like Set Your Goals or Kid Dynamite.

Gavin Rossdale performed on the mainstage around 2PM. I walked over to find him covering a few cuts from his old bands Bush and Institute, in addition to his new solo material. The crowd clearly went for the Bush cuts; the full set:

Gavin Rossdale

Gavin Rossdale

Machinehead (Bush cover)
Frontline
Boombox [Institute]
Love Remains The Same
Everything Zen (Bush cover)
Adrenaline
This Is Happiness
The People That We Love (Bush cover)
Comedown (Bush cover)

Boys Like Girls took the opposite mainstage, amassing the biggest crowd thus far into the weekend. The band sounded spot-on, but their songs lack any punch; they are not a gripping live act and ultimately remained forgettable. Worse, the band stuck strictly to cuts from their lone album, a 2006 self-titled debut. Four years as a band, I expected to hear something new: the band’s excuse for their meager four song acoustic offering the night before was that they were too busy in the studio to learn any full-band cover songs. The band’s six-song Bamboozle set:

Boys Like Girls

Boys Like Girls

Hero/Heroine
5 Minutes To Midnight
Dance Hall Drug
Heels Over Head
Thunder
The Great Escape

Stripping down from their International Superheroes of Hardcore outfits, New Found Glory topped Boys Like Girls’s crowd size, drawing most of the Bamboozle attendees for their 3PM set. At one point the band stopped to “Tweet”; interestingly, this was about the same time I was updating my own Bamboozle Twitter account. The band sounded great, playing obligatory singles (”Hit or Miss”, “All Downhill from Here”) and new songs from Not Without a Fight (”Don’t Let Her Pull You Down”, “Listen To My Friends”) before closing with the crowd-arousing fan-favorite from Sticks and Stones, “My Friends Over You”.

New Found Glory

New Found Glory

Hit Or Miss
Understatement
Listen To My Friends
All Downhill From Here
Failure’s Not Flattering
Don’t Let Her Pull You Down
Sincerely, Me
Forget My Name
Kiss Me
Intro
My Friends Over You

Set Your Goals

Set Your Goals

New Found Glory tourmates Set Your Goals played on a sidestage across the lot. The thirty-minute Bamboozle set appeared to be my last chance to see a bulk of their excellent debut Mutiny, and I couldn’t miss this set. I’ve seen the California punk-pop band a few times, but never as themselves for a full set (caught them once performing The Movielife songs, once performing Dave Grohl songs, and once in part opening for Paramore).  The band played well, tossing in “Goonies Never Say Die!” and a new song into the Mutiny-dominated setlist. Still, I was expecting the something more from the band. I’ll have to reserve judgement until I see them headline, because their Bamboozle set just didn’t click like I expected it to.

The Get Up Kids returned to New Jersey with a triumphant nine-song setlist celebrating the band’s entire career, digging back to 1996 with “Woodson”. The first crowd of the weekend not packed with girls still fighting to reach puberty (and a spot on the front rail), it was a nice change of pace to stand and enjoy the Kansas City Kids with a respectful audience. Vocalist Matt Pryor sounded tight, and the entire band clicked in a way that few of the weekend’s acts would match. In a catalog filled with incredible songs, the band managed to pick nice set of songs, although “Out of Reach”, “Overdue”, and “Campfire Kansas” seemed to be glaring omissions. The full set:

The Get Up Kids

The Get Up Kids

Coming Clean
Action and Action
The One You Want
Holiday
Woodson
Mass Pike
I’m a Loner Dottie, A Rebel
Don’t Hate Me
Ten Minutes

I passed All Time Low and caught a bit of Parkway Drive. Night began to fall, so I decided to shop for some discount merchandise, always a highlight of the Bamboozle experience. The Eyeball Records tent had boxes of great shirts for just five dollars; I grabbed a rare Thursday (Bearfort) shirt and some New London Fire tees (what happened to that band?). I looked for United Nations merch with no luck.

Razia's Shadow as performed by Forgive Durden

Razia's Shadow as performed by Forgive Durden

At some point Journey joined the festival as a secret guest; I learned of this midway through their brief set, catching the mega-hit “Don’t Stop Believing”. With nothing else going on I walked to Razia’s Shadow as performed by Forgive Durden. I’m admittedly unfamiliar with the album, but the concept intrigued me. I sat down and caught the show, enjoying myself for the next hour as ringleader Thomas Dutton paraded guests onto the stage:

Greta Salpeter (The Hush Sound)
Bob Morris (The Hush Sound)
Dan Young (This Providence)
Casey Crescenzo (The Dear Hunter)
Fred Mascherino (The Color Fred)
Sierra Kusterbeck (VersaEmerge)
Dave Melillo (Cute is What We Aim For)

Dutton is working around the clock to promote his musical; community centers and schools can even perform Razia’s Shadow royalty-free by signing up here.

The final band Saturday was Fall Out Boy, who took the stage at 10PM with an elaborate setup. I stuck around for a few songs, but ultimately decided that Fall Out Boy is not a band with an extensive catalog of good songs. They have a few shining moments spread thin throughout their discography (”Dance, Dance” is likely the best song they’ve penned, and most of Infinity on High is fairly strong), but to stand through a twenty-song setlist seems somewhat unbearable. That’s not to say the band didn’t play well and sound tight; it’s clear they are a top-notch pop-rock act. The full set (with two covers):

Fall Out Boy

Fall Out Boy

Disloyal Order Of Water Buffaloes
Thriller
A Little Less Sixteen Candles, A Little More Touch Me
Sugar, We’re Goin Down
I Don’t Care
I Slept With Someone In Fall Out Boy And All I Got Was This Stupid Song Written About Me
This Ain’t A Scene, It’s An Arms Race
Headfirst Slide Into Coopestown On A Bad Bet
What A Catch, Donnie
Coffee’s For Closers
Grand Theft Autumn / Where Is Your Boy
She’s My Winona
Beat It (Michael Jackson cover)
America’s Suiteharts
Thnks Fr Th Mmrs
Tiffany Blews
Hey Ya (Outkast cover)
Dance, Dance
Saturday

Concluding the first day of Bamboozle, it was quite apparent than most of the bands performing were completely throwaway (a list that includes a barrage of auto-tuned atrocities and fad-act failures such as Cash Cash, Forever the Sickest Kids, Metro Station, We the Kings, Cobra Starship, Attack Attack, The Friday Night Boys, NeverShoutNever!, Shwayze, Asher Roth, and Sonny). Still, the festival managed to stay strong with two excellent reunion performances (Edna’s Goldfish and The Get Up Kids) and quality sets from some veterans (Bayside and New Found Glory).

More veterans, and some up-and-coming acts, would play on Sunday. That review is coming up next.

Photos by incredible photographers: angelxshoe, lullabysounds, n1njadrum, catchphrases, ilikehugs, waitingforconcerts, boycottlove


Hoodwink @ East Rutherford 5/1

May 11, 2009

“When it rains it pours” is not just a clever jibe at the weekend’s wet weather. Rather, it references a plethora of shows in the New York City region on Friday night; to name a few: The Get Up Kids and Brand New in Manhattan, Taking Back Sunday on Long Island, and Rutgersfest featuring NERD and Motion City Soundtrack. That’s not to mention the Hoodwink Festival, featuring nearly twenty bands performing full cover sets.

The first band I caught was Push Play, performing a set featuring music of Muse. Skeptical of any band being able to do Muse justice–let alone a seemingly generic punk-pop/pop-rock band from Long Island–I approached with caution. To much delight, the band played extremely well, touching on songs like “Time is Running Out” and “Hysteria” throughout their half-hour set. The band exuded confidence–frontman CJ Baran encouraged YouTube bootlegs, letting the whole world judge just how well the band payed tribute to one of England’s best acts–but did not come off as arrogant.

NeverShoutNever! performing one of Christofer Ingle's older songs.

NeverShoutNever! performing one of Christofer Ingle's older songs.

Speaking with Baran after the set, he remarked that Muse is Push Play’s favorite band; he did his best to hit Matt Bellamy’s notes, and succeeded more often than not. It was perhaps bassist Nick DeTurris and guitarist Steve Scarola that solidified the performance, however, with trembling bass lines and piercing guitars on songs like “Starlight”.

The same praise cannot be bestowed on NeverShoutNever!, a band tackling another British act–The Beatles. With less than impressive takes on “Hey Jude” and “I Wanna Hold Your Hand”, the band threw in one of their own disappointing songs yet still only played for about half of their scheduled thirty minutes. Luckily, this gave me a chance to check out another 1960s set across the parking lot: Inward Eye tackling The Who, complete with Pete Townshend windmills. I only caught a few songs, but the band sounded very good.

Set Your Goals performing Nirvana and Foo Fighters material as "Set Your Grohls".

Set Your Goals performing Nirvana and Foo Fighters material as "Set Your Grohls".

Set Your Goals, as Set Your Grohls, took on Nirvana and Foo Fighters for one of the more interesting sets of the evening. Vocalists Matt Wilson and Jordan Brown traded lines from Dave Grohl’s catalog. On tracks like “In Bloom” it was refreshing, breathing life into a song two decades old; one would start the verse (”He’s the one!”) while the other finished the line (”Who likes all our pretty songs!”). Definitely a good performance, with the emphasis on “having fun” over the exact recreation of some of the radio’s biggest hits.

We the Kings failed to capture Jimmy Eat World's incredible stage prescence.

We the Kings failed to capture Jimmy Eat World's incredible stage prescence.

We the Kings followed, paying tribute to Jimmy Eat World. Having seen the Clarity Tour just a month ago, I wasn’t expecting a bland pop-rock band to do justice to the Arizona quartet, and, unfortunately, I was correct. I’m not exactly sure where the problems stemmed from, though I’d tend to place it on their drummer–Zach Lind’s drumming is spectacular, and We the Kings’s Danny Duncan just couldn’t keep up. The vocals presented another problem: Travis Clark tried, but he just didn’t deliver like Jim Adkins (but, then again, I’m not sure too many can). The setlist focused on the twenty-first century Jimmy Eat World, beginning with “Pain” and ending with “The Middle”, tossing in other hits like “Sweetness”, “Bleed American”, and “Big Casino” along the way.

The Cab's Ian Crawford

The Cab's Ian Crawford

I didn’t expect things to get any better on the next stage, as The Cab was set to cover Queen. If Jim Adkins is a difficult vocalist to pull off, then can Freddie Mercury even be attempted? Luckily, Alex DeLeon didn’t try to be the Queen vocalist and instead the band did it’s own take (and even a few medleys) of the 1970s rock legends. Taking liberties on nearly every song (on “Bohemian Rhaposy” the entire “Galileo” verse’s vocals were replaced by guitar voicings), The Cab managed to make the set enjoyable at the very least, which is likely more a testament to how good Queen’s songs are more than anything else.

I caught brief snippets of Mercey Mercedes performing Midtown, Bayside performing NOFX, and Boys Like Girls taking on four Coldplay singles acoustic (”Viva La Vida”, “The Scientist”, “Yellow”, and “Fix You”). From across the lot I could hear Forever the Sickest Kids whining about their Avril Lavigne set (vocalist Jonathan Cook: “this will probably be the shittiest thing you hear all weekend”).

For some reason I passed up The Ataris performing The Misfits in favor of Sum 41’s Metallica setlist, which was being professionally filmed for perhaps a DVD. Sum 41’s Deryck Whibley spent an equal amount of time “interacting with the crowd” (read: dropping f-bombs) and playing Metallica songs (including staples such as “Enter Sandman” and “Master of Puppets”), none of which came off with the intensity necessary to pay proper tribute to metal’s most important band.

Some of the songs were just parts (”Battery”), and Queen’s “Stone Cold Crazy”, the b-side of Metallica’s 1991 “Enter Sandman” single, was also tossed into the mix. Whibley’s vocals weren’t up to par, and the guitars just didn’t crunch like they needed to. The band finished with their own “Still Waiting”, a song they described as “definitely influenced by Metallica” before getting off stage. The full set:

Deryck Whibley doing his James Hetfield.

Deryck Whibley doing his James Hetfield.

Battery
Blackened
Enter Sandman
Motor Breath
Where Ever I May roam
For Whom the Bell Tolls
Stone Cold Crazy (Queen cover)
Master of Puppets
Still Waiting

Now living in Green Day’s home state, but originally based out of South Florida, New Found Glory played next, performing as pre-American Idiot Green Day. Jordan Pundik appeared to channel a younger Billie Joe Armstrong, the band faithfully reproducing songs not even Green Day has played in years. Aside from a few songs sliding away from the California punk-pop vibe and into a more punk-hardcore vibe that Green Day certainly never intended, each song paid excellent tribute to the Berkley trio. The setlist consisted of fourteen songs, including “J.A.R.”, from the Angus soundtrack:

Burnout
Welcome to Paradise
Nice Guys Finish Last
Armatage Shanks
The Brat
Longview
Waiting
2000 Light Years Away
She
Geek Stink Breath
J.A.R.
Basketcase
When I Come Around,
Jaded
Good Riddance (Time Of Your Life)

The band effortlessly recreated Green Day’s early sound, and it was clear that they loved playing these songs. Some songs came with a story, often an introduction of why they chose to play a particular song or how the song had impacted their life. Pundik spoke briefly about Cartel’s earlier set–the Atlanta pop-rock group covered the Floridians–praising their live harmonies. After finishing up the electric portion of their set, Chad Gilbert and Pundik returned, taking on “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)”–the perfect way to close a near-perfect set.

nti-Flag's setlist of The Clash songs.

Anti-Flag's setlist of The Clash songs.

I hurried over to see Anti-Flag’s The Clash set, well across the parking lot. To perhaps the best crowd of the entire evening, Anti-Flag delivered stellar covers of the English punk band. No set all evening was more sincere, with Justin Sane, Chris #2, and Chris Head constantly showing appreciation for the ability to play the “songs they grew up listening to in their bedroom” to an audience. Essentials like “I’m So Bored With the USA” and “White Riot” were phenomenal. Covering a song that The Clash themselves covered, Anti-Flag finished with “I Fought the Law”, a perfect fusion of both Anti-Flag and The Clash’s messages. The full set:

London Calling
Police on My Back
Career Opportunities
Bored with the USA
Clash City Rockers
White Riot
Janie Jones
Should I Stay or Should I Go
Safe European Home
The Guns of Brixton
I Fought the Law (Sonny Curtis cover)

The final act of the night was already twenty minutes into their setlist when I got to the stage. Nationally renowned tribute act Badfish’s mission statement is simple: “Keep Sublime Alive”. Too young to have seen the So-Cal trio live–frontman Bradley Nowell died of an overdose before I was even a teenager–I can’t compare Badfish’s live act to Sublime’s. I can tell you that Badfish sounded absolutely phenomenal, however, tackling not only the band’s biggest singles with spunk (and precision, down to Nowell’s signature voicings) but also many older, lesser known cuts.

A surprisingly strong take of “Ramble On” and a rant to check out Led Zeppelin preceded “Smoke Two Joints”, which was packed with brass and guitar solos. “Date Rape”, Sublime’s first radio hit, was worked out masterfully. The band’s final song was a Pennywise jam, “Bro Hymn”. For over an hour on a wet Jersey night, Sublime was indeed alive.

Though cold and wet for most of the night, Friday’s Hoodwink Festival was excellent, and many of the bands had special merchandise for the event (Bayside’s “It’s My Job To Keep Punk Rock Elite” shirt or Set Your Goals’s Nevermind-type shirt). The crowds were extremely small, making it not too difficult to get up close for any of the bands. New Found Glory may have had the biggest audience, and they certainly stole the show, but Anti-Flag’s set was also great.

Continue to check out inTuneMusic for reviews, photos, setlists, and more from the two-day Bamboozle festival.

If you would like to contribute a video, setlist, photo, or anything else, please do not hesitate to contact us! We are always looking for contributors!

Photos by incredible photographers: angelxshoe, lullabysounds, n1njadrum.


The Bamboozle (Day One) 5/3

May 6, 2008

Since 2006, The Bamboozle festival has grounded itself outside Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Each year, over one hundred bands play for two days over the course of the first weekend in May. Beginning around noon and ending near midnight, the festival showcases the smallest, unsigned bands to the most popular acts in the country. It’s normally a humid affair–this time, however, the weather was cold and rainy.

I arrived on Saturday around noon to check out the first day of The Bamboozle, heading to the 5 Gum side stage to check out Long Island’s The Sleeping. A post-hardcore act that I’ve caught at Bamboozle in the past, the band performed with Sebastian Bach (ex-Skid Row), playing a solid set featuring some of Bach’s material in addition to The Sleeping staples such as “If Your Heart Was Broken”. Though later in the evening after fatigue set in I’d chill out to some pop-rock acts, The Sleeping were a great way to kick off the weekend with a crowd that was certainly ready to dance. The band sounded tight; guitarist Cameron Keym’s metal-inspired licks were sharper than ever, and vocalist Douglas Robinson captured the crowd.

Story of the Year were next on my list at 2PM, so I ventured to the Asbury Park main stage. Let it be known that the sound, for both Day One and Day Two, was terrible on the Asbury Park stage–unfortunate because about half of the bands I saw during the weekend set up on that stage. As I’m not a professional audio engineer, I’m not exactly sure what the problem was but the sound was never consistent: bass was either muddy or non-existent, and microphones never maintained the same volume, often cutting out nearly entirely for seconds at a time.

Despite common sound issues that would plague nearly twenty bands on that stage, Story of the Year sounded excellent for the duration of their set. It’s been some time since i caught the band on tour, but their live show had always been their strongest point; it’s great to see they’ve only improved over time. Their set:

And the Hero Will Drown
The Antidote
Anthem of Our Dying Day
Wake Up
In the Shadows
Until the Day I Die
Is This My Fate? He Asked Them

Over half of their set came from their debut Page Avenue, but the band unfortunately included two of their lesser songs from that release in “Anthem of Our Dying Day” and “Under the Day I Die” but did include two of the strongest, opener “And the Hero Will Drown” and “In the Shadows”. The new songs from The Black Swan (”The Antidote”, “Wake Up”) sounded promising, so I’ll need to check out that album soon.

New Jersey ska-stalwarts Streetlight Manifesto were up next on the opposite main stage (which suffered from none of Asbury Park stage’s sound issues). The band played extremely well, with a large selection of songs coming from Somewhere in the Between. The band pleased the crowd with “Dear Sergio”, a song that engaged many people listening who were familiar with Catch 22’s Keasbey Nights but not necassrily Streetlight Manifesto.

At 3:30PM on the Nokia Ticket Rush stage, Vinnie Caruana played a set entirely of The Movielife songs with Set Your Goals as his backing band. Though he stated numerous times throughout the set that “this [wasn't] The Movielife”, you’d be hard pressed to find a single person in the crowd who was concerned with that fact. Vinnie sang like the band hadn’t broken up five years ago, with dead-on delivery of songs nearly a decade old. Set Your Goals’s (a band I wanted to see as well but passed up on to see Saves the Day) guitarists, bassist, and drummer covered each song with precision. Cuts included “Hand Grenade”, “Pinky Swear”, “Hey”, and “Face or Kneecaps” before the near-obligatory closer, “Jamestown”. Vinnie constantly thanked the crowd for giving him the chance to play these songs, but it was really the crowd constantly thanking him for resurrecting the songs of an incredible punk-pop band.

Dressed as cops and coming out to Inner Circle’s “Bad Boys” on the PA, Less Than Jake took the Asbury Park stage at 4PM, opening with “All My Best Friends Are Metalheads”. My first time catching the band live, I was quite impressed with how tight the band sounded. I’m not a huge fan of the band (perhaps getting into them late into their career), but I respect their contributions to the genre and their live show convinced me to give them some more attention. Their full set:

All My Best Friends Are Metalheads
Last One Out Of Liberty City
Overrated
Gainseville Rock City
Johnny Quest Thinks We’re Sellouts
Great American Sharp Shooter
Ghosts Of You And Me
Science Of Selling Yourself Short
Look What Happened

I took an hour break between 4:30 and 5:30 to check out various tents and merchandise, picking up a great Refused Shirts For a Cure tee. SFaC is a great project; all proceeds go to the Syrentha J. Savio Endowment. The SSE provides financial assistance to underprivileged women who cannot afford expensive breast cancer medicine and therapy; there are a lot of shirt designs, I urge you to see if your favorite band is there and to pick one up for just $12.

I caught a little bit of theAUDITION and Bless the Fall, two bands I didn’t have much interest in checking out but stayed at for a little bit while talking to some friends. Chiodos played at 5:50 on the Asbury Park stage, my next destination. The band played a balanced mix between their two full-length albums; they sounded decent, and the crowd was explosive the entire time. The full setlist:

The Undertakers Thirst For Revenge Is Unquenchable (The Final Battle)
There’s No Penguins In Alaska
Baby, You Wouldn’t Last A Minute On The Creek
Teeth The Size Of Piano Keys
Bulls Make Money, Bears Make Money, Pigs Get Slaughtered
The Words ‘Best Friend’ Become Refined
Is It Progression If A Cannibal Uses A Fork

I rushed over to the opposing NowWhat mainstage before Chiodos was finished to catch New Jersey locals Saves the Day, who opened up with Stay What You Are’s “See You”. Chris Conley sounded tremendous: his voice was not only crisp and clear, but he sounded confident and in control of the crowd the entire time. When told the band had time for only one more song (the main stage times were getting increasingly backed up), he asked the crowd to pick between “Ups and Downs” and “Firefly”–”Firefly” apparently was the first thing he heard and played both that and then “At Your Funeral”, upping the count of songs from their 2001 LP to three. The full set:

See You
The End
Anywhere With You
You Vandal
Can’t Stay The Same
Head For The Hills
Shoulder To The Wheel
Firefly
At Your Funeral

It would have been nice to hear “Ups and Downs”, one of my favorite Saves the Day songs, but the band still played a great set nonetheless. The band has too much material to get picky about songs not played, especially when they picked nine great tracks anyway.

Jack’s Mannequin, another casualty of the Asbury Park stage, was next at 6:50; they didn’t start immediately after Saves the Day, so I managed to make it across the parking lot in time to get close to the stage before the band started. “Dark Blue”, with part of the extended introduction, kicked off the setlist which included a song from the upcoming The Glass Passenger (which certainly sounds promising — I was worried after a slew of less-than-stellar post-Everything in Transit tracks) and a cover from Something Corporate’s North. The set:

Dark Blue
Holiday from Real
The Mixed Tape
Suicide Blonde
Bruised
Kill the Messenger
La La Lie
Me and the Moon (Something Corporate cover)
MFEO

The band played well, but their sound was somewhat marred by the stage. Before “Kill the Messenger”, frontman Andrew McMahon commented on the weather; during the song (which features the lyrics “I’m going to send a little rain your way”) the misty rain slowly picked up. Even taking into account projection, the song had never felt so real or so powerful. Aside from the lack of staple “I’m Ready”, I don’t think I could have asked for a better setlist. “MFEO” is an incredible track that stands on its own, but it really works perfectly for closing a set, especially outdoors in the rain, in the parking lot.

Paramore played the Asbury Park stage at 8PM; almost immediately it was obvious just how poor the stage’s sound actually was, as one of the tightest pop-rock acts in the scene today suddenly sounded sloppy and uninteresting. The band kicked off with Riot!’s “Let the Flames Begin”, following it with All We Know is Falling single “Emergency”. Either during that track or during “Stop This Song (Lovesick Melody)”, a b-side from the Riot! sessions, the stage’s sound started to click back together and the band sounded incredible for the rest of their set, which was, in its entirety:

Let the Flames Begin
Emergency
Stop This Song (Lovesick Melody)
Here We Go Again
That’s What You Get
Pressure
For A Pessimist, I’m Pretty Optimistic
crushcrushcrush
Woah
Misery Business

“Here We Go Again” was sans the At The Drive-In mini-cover, instead segueing flawlessly into “That’s What You Get”. Much like an hour ago watching Jack’s Mannequin amongst teenage girls barely (if at all?) old enough to drive, I felt out of place singing along to every word, but it’s always refreshing to catch other guys mouthing the words: this is great pop music, and I’m glad that these young teens are growing up on true pop-rock, not manufactured radio garbage or Britney Spears-esq bubblegum, even if the band is dominating the radio with songs such as “Misery Business”, the set’s closer.

During the aforementioned hit single, I walked out of the crowd to get to Jimmy Eat World, an act I’m almost embarrassed to admit I had never seen live. The band’s performance was unparalleled by any other act all day, and their forty-five minute setlist was incredible:

Big Casino
Sweetness
Work
Always Be
Crush
Here It Goes
A Praise Chorus
Let It Happen
Dizzy
Bleed American
Pain
The Middle

The rain was a constant mist during their performance; it was a little chilly, but incredibly relaxing. There’s not much to be said about the band’s performance other than that their live sound is a near perfect recreation of their studio albums, from the guitar subtleties to the incredible harmonies.

Snoop Dogg closed Day One, coming on around 9:30. I was a little further back than normal (near the soundboard) for his set, but he still sounded pretty good. I had never seen him live, so I wasn’t sure what to expect, but he managed to hold my attention for some time. I left midway through his set to get to a party, but his full set was:

Murder Was The Case
P.I.M.P. (Remix)
Who Am I? (What’s My Name)
That’s That Shit
Gin And Juice
Lodi Dodi
Woof!
I Wanna Fuck You
Snoop’s Upside Ya Head
Beautiful
Nuthin’ But A G Thang
Ain’t No Fun
Deeez Nuuuts
Notorious DPG
Snoop Dogg
My Medicine
Sexual Eruption
Drop It Like It’s Hot

The entire day was great, as I got to see some older bands for the first time live in addition to seeing some of my favorites once again. The weather was great: I’d prefer chilly and rainy to blistering heat and humidity any day. Moreover, cell phone service actually worked, which allowed me to meet up with friends throughout the day. There was room for improvement though: I couldn’t find any time cards (something usually handed out when you walk in), and, to beat a dead horse, the Asbury Park stage sounded terrible. Scheduling was pretty solid: Set Your Goals and Men Women & Children were the only two bands I missed due to conflicting times.

If anyone has any corrections/updates to the setlists I posted (which should be accurate, but there’s always room for error), please post them in the comments.


Paramore / The Starting Line / Set Your Goals @ Sayreville 10/23

October 24, 2007

It’s been some time since I’ve been to a show in which the crowd is composed almost exclusively of teenage girls and parents–the last one that comes to mind was the Nintendo Fusion tour, with headliner Fall Out Boy (and, more importantly, openers including Motion City Soundtrack and Boys Night Out). The show was billed to start at 7:30, and with just three bands, Starland Ballroom shows billed to begin at 7:30 usually begin at 8PM. Perhaps because of the average age–fifteen, excluding the extremes (eight years old and seventy years old)–and it being a “school night”, the show started way early, and I walked in late for the band I have yet to see live and wanted to see most…

Eulogy Records’s Set Your Goals. Sonically, a mixture of Lifetime, The Movielife, New Found Glory, Saves The Day, and CIV, Set Your Goals provides dual vocal punk-pop influenced strongly by elements of hardcore-punk. I only caught their final songs, including “Echoes” and “To Be Continued”, which were absolutely great. The crowd wasn’t into them at all, aside from a small group of dedicated Set Your Goals fans who promptly left the venue after their set.

Philadelphia’s The Starting Line, an act that has sold out Starland Ballroom as headliners at least three times, played next to an enthusiastic crowd. Honestly, I wish the band wrote better songs, because their live show is something that young bands should aspire to match. Though they have some good songs (which they played, including album openers “Up and Go” and “Making Love To The Camera”), as a whole the band doesn’t appeal to me, so I watched from the bar. The band closed with “The Best Of Me”, walking off stage as the crowd alone finished singing the final ten seconds of the song. Big bands that aren’t headlining a show, take note: you don’t have an encore, and this is exactly how to end your set. Very impressive.

Paramore finally took the stage a little before 10PM, and they came out to a documentary snippet (played via video projector behind the band) of what looked like a European riot during the early twentieth century. Kicking off with Riot! opener “For A Pessimist, I’m Pretty Optimistic”, the band wasted no time setting the mood for their set. Riot! closer “Born For This” surprisingly followed–it’s almost the perfect way to end a set–and the band kept rolling, playing their instruments perfectly while vocalist Hayley Williams sang pitch-perfect over them. The fifteen songs played (five from their debut, nine from Riot! including a b-side, and a cover):

Pressure
Emergency
Never Let This Go
Here We Go Again
My Heart
For A Pessimist, I’m Pretty Optimistic
That’s What You Get
Misery Business
When It Rains
Let The Flames Begin
crushcrushcrush
Fences
Born For This
Decoy
Faces In Disguise (Sunny Day Real Estate cover)

The first day of the tour, Hayley was noticeably nervous between songs. At only eighteen years old, however, she is surprisingly mature and strong on stage, and I’m sure after a few dates on this tour she’ll settle into a rhythm. None of this affected her vocal performance, however, as she was pitch-perfect nearly all night.

“Faces In Disguise”, from Sunny Day Real Estate’s final album, The Rising Tide, was an excellent cover featuring Hayley on keyboard. A nice way to slow down the set, the band also used an emotional blend of footage in the background–typical Donnie Darko type blends of passing clouds, maturing flowers, rainfall, and other stock footage. Unfortunately, I may have been one of ten people in crowd of 2000 to know of the seminal emo/indie band, and certainly the only one within my range of vision (which was very good, standing at six feet tall and substantially taller than most of the crowd) to know the song. Hopefully the kids in the audience (who undoubtedly look up to Paramore) put down their Hawthorne Heights and helloGoodbye records and dig back to get Diary and other amazing albums of the early 1990s.

Hard-hitting “crushcrushcrush” followed, cranking the crowd’s energy back up to ten. Once their biggest single, “Pressure” followed; the band showed little sign of slowing down–they continued to perform flawlessly, in fact, getting better with every song before leaving the stage as the fans demanded an encore.

Riot! outtake “Decoy” kicked off the encore which was followed by Hayley hooking up a personal video camera to the video projector, taping the band and the crowd in the process. The camera still in hand for the final song, their current biggest hit to date, “Misery Business”, the band finished with a bang.

I picked up All We Know Is Falling sometime around summer 2005, and I couldn’t be more proud of this band’s progress since that time. Hayley has matured as a singer (and as a frontwoman) greatly since touring at only sixteen years old, and her bandmates are now playing flawlessly live. Transitioning from song to song, you wouldn’t know that the band has only been together for three years. If you’re looking for a pop-rock band with punk-pop influences, Paramore is leaps and bounds ahead of the competition. Their albums are certainly a case for that argument, but the clase-closing evidence is their live show.