Valencia @ South Hackensack 10/1/2010

October 1, 2010

With support from tourmates Automatic Loveletter and local acts Jet Lag Gemini, We the Chosen, and The All Ways, Valencia kicked off the first night of their fall tour supporting the brand new Dancing With a Ghost. The Philadelphia five-piece walked on stage to the light-hearted “Bed Intruder”, jumping right into 2008′s “Holiday”. Despite playing a style of music more closely tied to alternative/pop-rock, the band plays with punk/hardcore passion. Just like any worthwhile punk act, Valencia’s lyrics are potent and meaningful, and the whole band sings along to every song. Even without a microphone, for example, bassist George Ciukurescu is routinely singing every word to every song — that is, when he isn’t down in the crowd himself, engaging fans by opening pits or starting stage dives.

 

Valencia

Valencia

 

Frontman Shane Henderson is the glue that holds the quintet together. A talented singer-songwriter on his own merits, Henderson’s lyrics truly come to life with Brendan Walter and JD Perry’s guitars leading the way. On songs like We All Need a Reason to Believe closer “Free”, the two guitarists drive Henderson’s inspirational words: “Have you been through what I’ve been through / because from the top of the world is where you can finally see / it’s safe to just let go”.

 

Valencia

Valencia

 

We All Need a Reason to Believe cuts exclusively made up the first half of the setlist. The brand new, and much more mellow, “Spinning Out” broke that trend, but the band returned to their 2008 sophomore full-length with “Where Did You Go?” and “Safe to Say”, the latter featuring a random fan pulled on stage to sing the song’s climactic “whoas”. The band encouraged fans to pick up their brand new album, Dancing With a Ghost, and performed the album’s title track to an overwhelmingly positive response. To conclude their fifty minute set, This Could Be a Possibility contributed its leadoff and its closer. The former, “The Space Between”, had the crowd rambunctiously singing along to the fast-paced favorite. “Away We Go”, from Henderson’s solo project (and rerecorded as the closing track on Valencia’s 2005 debut), wrapped things up.

Holiday
Better be Prepared
Free
All At Once
I Can’t See Myself
Spinning Out
Where Did You Go?
Safe to Say
Dancing With a Ghost
The Space Between
Away We Go

 

Valencia

Valencia

 

Valencia scores high for their overwhelming stage presence and rock-solid musicianship. Bonus points for the Philadelphia band’s response to a drunk fan chanting “Let’s Go [New York] Mets!”: Henderson and friends brought a Philadelphia Phillies World Series banner out to silence the fan. Any questions about new drummer Daniel Pawlovich, who replaced the excellent Maxim Soria, can be laid to rest: Pawlovich sounded incredible and barely missed a beat.

 

Valencia

Valencia

 

Unfortunately, the band’s fifty-minute set was way too short for a band now supporting three full-length records, and the pumped in instrumentation during songs like “Spinning Out” and “Where Did You Go?” blemishes an otherwise flawless set. Valencia has the power to identify themselves as leaders of their genre, and it’s no small compliment (or stretch) to compare the band’s live show to Saves the Day or Motion City Soundtrack, two acts Valencia will be supporting this fall. With the experience gained from that upcoming tour, look for Valencia to lengthen their setlist and become a truly must-see live band.


fun. / Steel Train / Jarrod Gorbel @ NYC 9/30/2010

September 30, 2010

The second night of fun.’s tour with Steel Train and Jarrod Gorbel was a free, private show in Brooklyn’s Bell House. With a capacity just under 400, the venue provided yet another intimate chance to catch fun. in New York City. The band’s next tour will be in support of their sophomore full-length (due sometime in 2011); this tour provides one last chance to catch all of the Aim and Ignite favorites before they are replaced with the band’s newer tracks.

 

Jarrod Gorbel

Jarrod Gorbel

 

Jarrod Gorbel, former singer/songwriter of The Honorary Title, started the evening off. Joined by a female violinist who also contributed backing harmonies, Gorbel sounded excellent. Supporting his latest release, Devil’s Made A New Friend, Gorbel stuck primarily to that Burning House Records release. Gorbel concluded his set at 9:30 with “I’ll Do Better”.

 

Steel Train

Steel Train

 

Steel Train began just before 10PM, walking out to Dropkick Murphys’s now-famous “Shipping Up to Boston” blasting through the venue’s PA. Trampoline‘s “I Feel Weird” went first, the quintet exploding out of the gates with unrestrained energy.”Turnpike Ghost”, from the band’s self-released, self-titled 2010 effort followed, with some of the crowd reacting to the album’s first single. More from Steel Train followed (“Bullet” and “You Are Dangerous”), the band using the non-headliner opportunity to play much of their new album.

 

Steel Train

Steel Train

 

Frontman Jack Antonoff spent most of the set running around the stage and engaging the barrier-free crowd in singing along. For 2007′s “Firecracker”, Antonoff’s father joined the band on guitar and backing vocals, the rest of Steel Train embracing the aged (but still rocking) father in the process. Indeed, the band seems to thrive on their friendships: all five members of the band joined together, arms in each others’ arms, to sing “Road Song” with just Antonoff on clean guitar. An exciting (though somewhat sloppy) cover of “American Girl” was enjoyable, and the band closed their forty minute set with a tight performance of “SOG Burning Hell”.

I Feel Weird
Turnpike Ghost
Bullet
You Are Dangerous
Alone on the Sea
Firecracker
Road song
American Girl (Tom Petty cover)
SOG Burning Hell

 

fun.

fun.

 

Following a brief set change, fun. began with “Walking the Dog”, frontman Nate Ruess singing to a rabid audience echoing his every word.  Andrew Dost lead “I Wanna Be the One” with its recognizable piano parts, but it was Ruess who brought the song to life with his passionate vocals. Steel Train’s Jack Antonoff, who is also one of three official fun. members,  took “Light a Roman Candle” to new heights with extra-heavy guitars midway through the song, providing dynamics to a normally-straightforward pop song.

 

fun.

fun.

 

“All the Pretty Girls” was without its standard multiple-harmony live intro, but the song remained backed by the lovely Emily Moore’s acoustic guitar, just one of a number of her contributions to the set throughout the evening. Without question,  fun.’s live show succeeds largely due to the members’ various musical talents; pianist Dost, for example, contributed brass instrumentation to “Barlights”. For a tremendous cover of The Format’s “Dog Problems”, Dost added trumpet parts while Antonoff switched to piano — the band’s members never limiting their roles to just one instrument.

 

fun.

fun.

 

fun. used the second night of their two-month tour to debut a brand new, electric sign sitting behind the drummer. Flashing the band’s name in various colors throughout the set, the “fun sign” also sparked a lengthy banter about Lit, including the band indulging in a brief cover of “My Own Worst Enemy”. The band also promoted the re-release of Aim and Ignite by playing “Stitch Me Up”, a bonus track included on the album’s new Fueled by Ramen pressing.

 

fun.

fun.

 

A touching rendition of “The Gambler” was dedicated to Ruess’s sister and performed by just fun.’s core members (Ruess, Dost, and Antonoff). To break the set’s somber mood, the rest of the band returned for “What the Fuck”, a brand new song that sounded absolutely terrific. The song’s disjointed song structure and jarring, brash instrumentals offered a new side to fun.’s indie-pop antics.

 

fun.

fun.

 

The song seemed to spark some more banter between Ruess and Antonoff, the two recently living together at Antonoff’s parents’ house in New York. As Antonoff explained, Ruess would often steal top-shelf liquor from his room for the purpose of binge-drinking. Besides the obvious tensions arising from stealing a friend’s alcohol, Antonoff was equally discontent with wasting expensive liquor for the sole purpose of getting drunk. Ruess summed up the situation as follows: “Jack likes to buy expensive scotch, and I like to say fuck it to expensive scotch.”

 

fun.

fun.

 

Clearly best friends, Antonoff and Ruess argued about the latter’s habits of getting drunk and watching birds from the porch using a pair of far-too-expensive binoculars; this continued for some time until the band finally kicked into a solid take of “At Least I’m Not as Sad”. The lengthy “Take Your Time” appeared to conclude fun.’s set, but the band returned to cover The Rolling Stones’s “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” with additional keys provided by Steel Train’s Daniel Silbert.

Walking the Dog
I Wanna Be the One
Light a Romance Candle
All the Pretty Girls
Stitch Me Up
Barlights
Dog Problems (The Format cover)
The Gambler
What the Fuck
At Least I’m Not as Sad (As I Used to Be)
Take Your Time (Coming Home)
You Can’t Always Get What You Want (The Rolling Stones cover)

 

fun.

fun.

 

The lineup of Jarrod Gorbel, Steel Train, and fun. is one of the fall’s best touring packages. fun.’s hour-long setlist omitted just two cuts (“Benson Hedges” and “Be Calm”) from Aim and Ignite, but those songs will likely appear in band’s set on the tour’s regularly scheduled dates; the three acts return to New York City in November to perform at the much larger Webster Hall. Don’t miss the absolutely phenomenal fun.


Jimmy Eat World / Brick and Mortar @ Sayreville 9/24/2010

September 24, 2010

Arizona quartet Jimmy Eat World arrived in Sayreville, New Jersey, on a Friday night to support Invented, the band’s latest full-length effort on Interscope Records. Much of the band’s tour supporting the album features standout openers We Were Promised Jetpacks, but the small-town New Jersey date was booked separately from the main tour (which also stops for two nights in New York City in mid-October) with support from local act Brick and Mortar.

Brick and Mortar

Brick and Mortar

Brick and Mortar began just before 8PM, playing cuts from the recently released 7 Years in the Mystic Room EP. The duo, comprised of New Jersey natives Brandon Asraf and John Tacon, combines electronic beats, funky bass lines, and powerful drumming. Unfortunately, the parts are better than the whole, which is all but ruined by Asraf’s vocals. It’s a shame, because individually Tacon’s drumming is absolutely explosive, and Asfraf’s riffs are at least interesting. The pumped in beats take away from the band’s otherwise urgent demeanor, so even when Brick and Mortar look like they might shine, it’s dulled out by the monotonous, pre-recorded loops. It’s hard to believe promoter AEG couldn’t find any better acts to fill thirty minutes.

Jimmy Eat World

Jimmy Eat World

Jimmy Eat World began their set just before 8PM, kicking things off with their latest single, “My Best Theory”. With Invented still unreleased — and rock radio nearly dead in New Jersey — the song generated little excitement from the crowd. “Bleed American” went next, though, the audience immediately jumping around to the 2001 title track. Clarity‘s “Your New Aesthetic” was a welcomed treat, with longtime Jimmy Eat World fans singing along with frontman Jim Adkins’s impassioned cries of “imitate and water down!”

Bleed American contributed a quarter of the setlist, including an absolutely stellar performance of “A Praise Chorus”. Another pre-millennium cut (the second of four songs from 1999′s Clarity) “For Me This Is Heaven” was fantastic, with additional keys and female vocals coming from Courtney Marie Andrews, transforming the rock-and-roll four-piece into a keyboard-backed quintet for a third of Jimmy Eat World’s set. Her voice adds texture to old favorites like “Hear You Me” and new cuts from Invented like “Evidence” and “Movielike”.

“Big Casino” elicited extra elation from the crowd during the chorus (“I’m the one who gets away, I’m a New Jersey success story”), the song coming to life in a form not realizable in its studio version. Similarly, the seemingly feeble “Coffee and Cigarettes” actually works when Adkins breathes life into the song in front of a crowd. “Blister” polarized the crowd: fans only recognizing the band for singles like “The Middle” stood awkwardly next to the older concertgoers as the latter group sang in unison to the song’s repeating, heartbreaking chorus: “How long would it take me to walk across the United States all alone? / The West coast has been traumatized / I think I’m the only one still alive”.

Jimmy Eat World

Jimmy Eat World

A seven minute take on “Goodbye Sky Harbor” beautifully wrapped up Jimmy Eat World’s set with Adkins looping his vocals over the song’s building outro. As the song neared completion, Adkins’s voice filled the sold out Starland Ballroom, yet he stood there silently, lost in a sea of his own looped vocals perfectly fitting the song’s instrumentation. Jimmy Eat World put down their instruments, thanking the crowd while retreating backstage for a deserved moment of rest: the band undoubtedly poured their hearts into their first sixteen songs.

The lengthy “23″ started Jimmy Eat World’s premeditated return, continuing on the placid mood created just before the encore. Futures hit single “Pain” shattered that calm with Zach Lind’s relentless percussion inviting the crowd to once again dance along. “The Middle” kept things moving, with Adkins tearing through the song’s crafty solo. “Sweetness”, with its original demo introduction, ended Jimmy Eat World’s set on the night’s highest note, unquestionably leaving fans wanting more. A classic show business maneuver.

My Best Theory
Bleed American
Your New Aesthetic
A Praise Chorus
Let it Happen
For Me This Is Heaven
Futures
Big Casino
Dizzy
Coffee and Cigarettes
Movielike
Hear You Me
Evidence
Work
Blister
Goodbye Sky Harbor
23
Pain
The Middle
Sweetness

It’s unlikely Jimmy Eat World has ever sounded tighter during their eighteen-year career than they have as part of the Invented tour. The quartet was unrestrained for just under ninety minutes, pouring unbridled emotion into every moment of the setlist, even on now-dated Clarity songs and tired singles. Jimmy Eat World returns to the area for two nights in New York City’s Terminal 5. With the setlist liking shifting to include a few more songs from the excellent Invented, at least one of those nights is a must-see event — even for those who caught the band at Starland Ballroom.


Pavement / Jenny and Johnny @ NYC 9/19/2010

September 19, 2010

Although Pavement disbanded in 1999, frontman Stephen Malkmus has certainly kept busy: performing as Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks, the competent songwriter has released four full-lengths, including 2008′s Real Emotional Trash. Still, none of those offerings has ever lived up to the (well-deserved) aura of Pavement. Pavement’s contributions to the 1990s indie/rock scene are officially numbered at five albums, but their influence has been far-reaching for nearly fifteen years. A decade after disbanding, rumors began to surface that Pavement might get together to play a few shows. Soon, a supporting greatest hits album was announced confirming that the California quintet would indeed return to the stage.  Pavement scheduled four massive nights in New York City’s Central Park, yet quietly added a Brooklyn “warmup” show at the Williamsburg Waterfront.

Jenny and Johnny

Jenny and Johnny

Brooklyn natives Endless Boogie opened the evening, but I arrived only in time for Jenny and Johnny, the moniker under which Jenny Lewis and Johnathan Rice perform material from their lone output, I’m Having Fun Now. Lewis seemed to lead the band, but bassist and co-songwriter Rice contributed lead vocals to a few songs. The duo, backed by guitarist Todd Wisenbaker and drummer Jason Boesel, performed all of that album except for the airy/out-of-place “While Men Are Sleeping”. Some brief banter broke up the set’s eleven songs, but Jenny and Johnny generally wasted little time during their forty-five minutes on stage. The near ten-minute “Next Messiah”, from Lewis’s 2008 solo effort, Acid Tongue, wrapped up an incredible performance.

Scissor Runner
Committed
My Pet Snakes
Just Like Zeus
Straight Edge of the Blade
Slavedriver
Switchblade
Just One of the Guys
Big Wave
Animal
Next Messiah

Pavement

Pavement

After a spectacular opening performance from Jenny and Johnny, Pavement wasted no time demonstrating their own worth to a crowd needing no convincing. “Cut Your Hair” went first, the audience immediately drawn into Stephen Malkmus’s idiosyncratic world. Scott “Spiral Stairs” Kannberg fired back with “Date w/ Ikea”, but Malkmus once again returned to the helm with 1995 single “Rattled by the Rush”. Pavement’s two main songwriters sounded sharp, seamlessly connecting the various styles of the band’s discography to create an enjoyable, flowing setlist loaded with both straightforward rock songs and disjointed indie-influenced cuts alike.

Pavement

Pavement

The venerable Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain contributed more than half of its songs, including rock-solid performances of “Silence Kit and “Unfair” early in the night. Pavement routinely engaged the crowd, with banter about Brooklyn hipster culture and even a Bob Nastanovich dance with a fan during during Zowee Wowee leadoff “We Dance”. The groovy “Infinite Spark”, from 1997′s Brighten the Corners, was clearly one of the evening’s highlights, and it appeared to wrap up Pavement’s set about an hour into the night. Instead, the band played that album’s lead single, “Stereo”, to the excitement of the entire crowd before taking a break backstage.

Pavement

Pavement

The five-piece returned with “Spit on a Stranger”.  “Gold Soundz” was particularly energetic, Malkmus pouring his heart into the song’s clever lyrics. “Range Life” went last, and, surprisingly, was one of the night’s duller moments. Despite being one of Pavement’s best studio cuts, the song sounded thin in a live environment. When the five-minute, alternative-country jam ended, Pavement had played for nearly one hour and forty-five minutes, touching on songs across their entire discography.

Cut Your Hair
Date w/ Ikea
Rattled by the Rush
Elevate Me Later
Grounded
Frontwards
Shady Lane
Unfair
Perfume V
Fight This Generation
Silence Kit
Box Elder
Stop Breathin’
Two States
Father to a Sister of Thought
Heckler / In the Mouth a Desert
We Dance
Summer Babe (Winter Version)
Infinite Spark (fin)
Stereo
Spit on a Stranger
Trigger Cut / Wounded-Kite at :17
Starlings of the Slipstream
Gold Soundz
Kennel District
Range Life

Pavement

Pavement

If Pavement never records another full-length — and it’s unlikely that they will — then their legacy is at least preserved in a timeless collection of five full-lengths and at least twice as many EPs, recorded during a ten year period that saw indie/rock rise from an obscure basement genre to a widely appreciated, radio-backed phenomena. For New York fans that never saw Pavement in that era, the band’s reunion performance provided an excellent glimpse into the heart of one of the 90s’ best rock acts. In a bittersweet moment, the Williamsburg Waterfront concert brought a still-potent band back to life: bitter that the band is no longer turning out material; sweet to be treated one last time to the band’s stellar existing offerings.


Green Day / AFI @ Holmdel 8/14/2010

August 14, 2010

On a tour nearly two decades in the making, Green Day and AFI arrived at New Jersey’s PNC Bank Arts Arena on a cool August evening. Born out of the East Bay, California, punk scene, both bands played similar venues as teenagers; Green Day tasted mainstream success in 1994 (seven years after forming) as AFI was releasing their first full-length. The bands’ paths diverged for quite some time. As Green Day gained mainstream popularity with punk-pop singles and the immensely popular acoustic “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)” through the late 1990s, AFI remained a relatively unknown act that continued to release punk albums year-after-year until 2000.

The bands’ paths nearly converged in 2004, following the release of AFI’s major label debut (Sing the Sorrow) and Green Day’s rock-opera, American Idiot, but once again Green Day far surpassed AFI’s popularity. Fast forward to the present: both bands joined forces to support their latest 2009 releases. The timing seemed to be right: the exponentially more popular Green Day took AFI on a coast-to-coast run of America’s summer theaters, giving the act a chance to gain exposure in front of nearly twenty-thousand fans per night.

AFI

AFI

Beginning promptly at the advertised time of 7PM, AFI opened the evening with “Medicate”, the lead single from 2009′s Crash Love. Amidst a generally stale (yet well-performed) “greatest hits” set, the quartet did manage to play a few interesting cuts, including the rarely seen “I am Trying Very Hard to Be Here” which featured frontman Davey Havok dancing about the stage wearing a pink boa — a gift from a fan. Havok did his best to accommodate a group of loyal AFI fans who came out to see the band’s brief set, encouraging them to turn the seating area in front of the stage into a “GA” standing room affair; the singer even jumped into the crowd to perform, sitting next to fans while singing.

AFI

AFI

To a fairly empty venue, AFI raced through ten tracks in just thirty-five minutes, wasting no time between songs and just once embellishing on a song’s original studio version (“Dancing Through Sunday” featured an extended introduction, extending the brief track’s length to just under three minutes). The seasoned veterans clearly understood their role as an opening band at an 18,000-capacity arena: play some well-known songs to whet the crowd’s appetite, and then quickly make way for the headlining act.

Medicate
Girl’s Not Grey
The Leaving Song Pt. II
I am Trying Very Hard to Be Here
End Transmission
Beautiful Thieves
Dancing Through Sunday
Silver and Cold
Miss Murder
Love Like Winter

Green Day

Green Day

In front of an enormous, elaborate cityline backdrop, Green Day kicked off their pyrotechnics-filled setlist with a four-song barrage of 21st Century Breakdown songs, including the album’s first three songs in order. “East Jesus Nowhere” went fourth, and frontman Billie Joe Armstrong used the song to reenact a a stereotypical Southern United States Christian salvation scene. Acting as a preacher, Armstrong brought a young fan on stage, dramatically placed his hands on the boy’s head, and then expelled all evil from his body, proclaiming that the boy had now been saved.

Green Day

Green Day

“Holiday” pleasantly interrupted the string of 21st Century Breakdown songs and theatrics with Green Day ripping through the song in front of a video background of planes, tanks, and similarly themed war propaganda. “Are We the Waiting” into “St. Jimmy” segued perfectly; more from 2004′s American Idiot followed with a solid performance of “Boulevard of Broken Dreams”, one of the band’s most recognizable tunes.

Green Day

Green Day

Midway through their three-hour set, Green Day shifted gears and dug into their punk-pop catalog of the 1990s. A pair of album-openers led the charge: Dookie‘s “Burnout” and Nimrod‘s “Nice Guys Finished Last”. One of the night’s remarkable highlights came with AFI’s Davey Havok singing on “Who Wrote Holden Caufield”, embarrassing Armstrong’s barely passable vocals in the process. Interestingly, the song was first released on Kerplunk! in 1991 — the same year Havok founded AFI with drummer Adam Carson. Green Day continued to string together songs released decades ago, including “Paper Laterns” and “2000 Light Years Away”, during which Armstrong invited fans to rush on stage and sing along.

Green Day

Green Day

For as good as Green Day’s performance was, the night wasn’t without missteps, the first of these coming in the form of an uninspired and poorly executed medley of Black Sabbath (“Iron Man”), Van Halen (“Ain’t Talkin’ ‘Bout Love”), The Kinks (“You Really Got Me”), Guns N’ Roses (“Sweet Child o’ Mine”), and AC/DC (“Highway to Hell”). The band picked up steam with the radio-recognizable “Brain Stew” and “Jaded” combination, but things kept turning sour with Armstrong’s constant calls for the crowd to echo his “hey-oh” cries during and between many songs. The band brought a few fans on stage for “Longview”, each unsuccessfully attempting to the sing the not-too-difficult tune, but a woman performing the song through American Sign Language ultimately salvaged an otherwise poor performance of what could have been a great song.

Green Day

Green Day

The jovial “King for a Day” quickly transformed into The Isley Brothers’ “Shout”, featuring drummer Tre Cool on lead vocals. Another botched medley from Armstrong once again brought Green Day’s set down to an unbearable crawl, with the singer laying down on the front of the stage while working through bits and pieces of The Doors (“Break On Through (To The Other Side)”), Tom Petty (“Free Fallin’”), The Rolling Stones (“(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”), Bruce Springsteen (“I’m on Fire”), and The Beatles (“Hey Jude”). Luckily, Armstrong followed with a solid solo acoustic performance of “Extraordinary Girl”. The penultimate “21 Guns” was mind-numbingly dull, but “Minority” (the only cut from 2000′s Warning) wrapped up the first part of Green Day’s setlist successfully.

Green Day

Green Day

As part of the first encore, Armstrong walked through the crowd during an extended bridge of “American Idiot” while the band droned through the song’s monotonous three power-chords. The ten-minute “Jesus of Suburbia”, in contrast, was excellent. “When It’s Time”, debuted through the American Idiot musical, began the band’s second encore with just Armstrong alone with a guitar. “Wake Me Up When September Ends” continued to showcase Green Day’s softer side, and Armstrong wrapped the evening up with the band’s biggest hit, “Good Riddance (Time Of Your Life)” and a fireworks display.

Song Of The Century
21st Century Breakdown
Know Your Enemy
East Jesus Nowhere
Holiday
¡Viva la Gloria!
Give Me Novacaine
Letterbomb
Are We the Waiting
St. Jimmy
Boulevard of Broken Dreams
Burnout
Nice Guys Finish Last
Who Wrote Holden Caulfield?
Paper Lanterns
2000 Light Years Away
Hitchin’ A Ride
When I Come Around
(first medley)
Brain Stew
Jaded
Longview
Basket Case
She
King for a Day
Shout (The Isley Brothers cover)
(second medley)
Extraordinary Girl
21 Guns
Minority
American Idiot
Jesus of Suburbia
When It’s Time
Wake Me Up When September Ends
Good Riddance (Time Of Your Life)

Green Day

Green Day

What began as a concert morphed into a carnival, almost spiraling out of control towards boredom and unrestrained excess. Somewhere between drenching fans with a firehose, launching shirts out of an air cannon, and donning various costumes, Green Day managed to play a solid setlist filled with not just their many singles, but also lesser known fan-favorites. Three hours is a long time to play in front of a crowd, but only two-thirds of that time was about playing the band’s music with the rest being theatrics and filler. Still, Green Day deserves much praise for tackling more than thirty songs, largely with unbridled passion and impressive accuracy. Armstrong is a flamboyant frontman who thrives on theatrics; it’s not readily-apparent on Green Day’s albums, but one trip to a Green Day concert reveals that the band is heavily invested in both their music and their stage show alike.


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