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.


Something Corporate @ NYC 8/13/2010

August 13, 2010

With no supporting acts, Something Corporate performed in New York City for the first time in more than five years on August 13. Power-pop and piano-rock has never sounded so sincere; frontman and chief songwriter Andrew McMahon’s stories with Something Corporate date back to his teenage years of heartache and heartbreak, and they’re told with a an unbridled passion. The California act’s discography exists in a just a tiny four year window (from 2000′s Ready…Break through 2003′s North), yet the band managed to create a fanbase to sell out the 3500-capacity Roseland without ever releasing a gold record or a top-charting radio single.

Something Corporate

Something Corporate

At 9PM, the quintet (Jack’s Mannequin’s Bobby Anderson joined the band’s four core members) began with the unmistakable opening notes of Leaving Through the Window‘s “I Woke Up in a Car”. “She Paints Me Blue” — a prequel of sorts to Jack’s Mannequin’s “Dark Blue” from McMahon’s 2005 album, Everything in Transit — sounded great. “Straw Dog”, one of the band’s oldest songs, received roaring applause during the song’s instantly recognizable introductory guitar licks. Rare cut “Watch the Sky” was one of the night’s highlights, McMahon swooning words of encouragement that seem to echo his own health struggles: “I will fight: you live the life you’re given with the storms outside”. Interestingly, the song was written years before the singer was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Something Corporate

Something Corporate

For the first time on their month-long reunion tour, “Globes and Maps” made an unlikely appearance with McMahon admitting that he’d need the lyrics printed in front of him to perform the song correctly. The song sounded great, and the band followed with fan-favorite “Cavanaugh Park”. In addition to the McMahon-penned tunes that made up most of the band’s setlist, Something Corporate also tossed in quite a few songs written by guitarist Josh Partington including “Space”, “Fall”, “Only Ashes”, and “Hurricane”, the last being one of the band’s most popular cuts. The juvenile “If You C Jordan” had everyone in the crowd dancing and singing along, and it wrapped up the first part of the band’s setlist with McMahon dancing on top of his grand piano’s keyboard.

Something Corporate

Something Corporate

In contrast to the wild atmosphere of “If You C Jordan”, things slowed down to a sentimental crawl as McMahon performed the ten minute ballad “Konstantine” to start the band’s encore. First released ten years ago as a live-only hidden track on the band’s debut, the song has been a signature part of Something Corporate’s setlist their entire career. “Forget December” was undoubtedly the biggest surprise of an evening loaded with surprises, and the Christmas-themed cut sounded great. “Punk Rock Princess” went last, possibly closing the book on the last New York City performance by Something Corporate.

I Woke Up in a Car
Space
She Paints Me Blue
Straw Dog
21 and Invincible
Me and the Moon
Fall
Watch the Sky
Globes and Maps
Cavanaugh Park
I Want to Save You
Only Ashes
Ruthless
Drunk Girl
The Astronaut
Hurricane
If You C Jordan
Konstantine
Forget December
Down
Punk Rock Princess

Something Corporate

Something Corporate

Something Corporate has never sounded tighter or performed a stronger setlist; for nearly two hours, the band executed twenty-one well-picked songs with the kind of precision and passion rarely found on reunion tours; McMahon’s new project, Jack’s Mannequin, has unquestionably kept the frontman sharp. While McMahon does perform Something Corporate songs at Jack’s Mannequin shows from time to time, it’s hard to compare those brief moments to a full evening look into McMahon’s youngest years, from the beautiful  “Konstantine” to the angsty “21 and Invincible”.

Photos by Kristen Pempek


Story of the Year / American Fangs @ NYC 8/9/2010

August 9, 2010

With support from American Fangs, Lansdowne, and Black Suit Youth, Story of the Year performed in downtown Manhattan on a hot summer evening. After stealing the show from headliners Anberlin just a few months earlier, it would be interesting to see if Story of the Year could match that night’s intensity as the main act in the 600-person Blender Theater.

American Fangs

American Fangs

Just after 9PM, American Fangs kicked of their performance with fiery vocals from lead singer Gus Cavazos. The band tore through an exciting set, pulling songs from their 2009 self-titled debut EP.  At one point, Cavazos jumped into the crowd and sang from inside a circle pit, prompting roars from those nearby and immediately forcing the crowd to reciprocate his energy. The Houston natives sounded tight through the half hour set, likely gaining some new fans from a crowd that had never heard of the quartet before their set began.

Story of the Year

Story of the Year

Missouri’s Story of the Year started with two album openers back-to-back, beginning with “The Children Sing” from their latest full-length.  “And the Hero Will Drown” went next, setting the tone for the five-piece’s seventy-five minute set: loud, brash, and much more intense than their over-polished and finely tuned studio output. Things continued with “Falling Down”, another high-powered 2003 romp from Page Avenue, lead by frontman Dan Marsala’s explosive vocals.

Story of the Year

Story of the Year

“The Antidote”, augmented with guitarist Phil Sneed’s top-notch backing vocals, sounded great. “Anthem of Our Dying Day” was noticeably more urgent live, rendering the meager studio version obsolete in the process. On the new “The Dream is Over”, guitarist Ryan Phillips tore through the song’s blazing solo with impressive accuracy, further supporting the fact that Story of the Year are an excellent live act. Still, the quintet stumbles through some song transitions; a lot of the set is unnecessary banter between Marsala and bassist Adam Russel. The band seems to build their live show around that, though: songs like “In the Shadows” (written by primary lyricist Russel) capture the spirit of that banter and the constant push-and-pull between Marsala and Russel’s friendship. Still, when the band takes on some of their better songs — like the unrelenting, anti-homophobic “Is This My Fate? He Asked Them”, which closed the set — Story of the Year truly shines.

The Children Sing
And the Hero Will Drown
Falling Down
The Antidote
Our Time is Now
The Ghost of You and I
Anthem of Our Dying Day
Take Me Back
Wake Up
The Dream is Over
In the Shadows
Is This My Fate? He Asked Them
Say It Ain’t So (Weezer cover)
Sidewalks
Until the Day I Die

Story of the Year

Story of the Year

Story of the Year’s encore consisted of Marsala alone with an acoustic guitar taking requests from the crowd. The frontman tried to perform Weezer’s “Say it Aint’ So” but cut the song short after his guitar’s electronics stopped working midway through the chorus. Marsala replaced the guitar in time to perform “Sidewalks”, but the replacement wasn’t tuned flat so he struggled to hit the song’s higher notes, a refreshing moment of integrity that recalls a band still up-and-coming and just trying to fit their songs into the allotted set time. The band joined Marsala during the end of “Sidewalks” and adjusted appropriately to the key change, playing along with Marsala one half-step higher than expected.

Story of the Year

Story of the Year

“Until the Day I Die”, the band’s biggest single to date, closed the show at 11:20. The song started with an extended introduction that resulted in a climax of the track’s familiar guitar lick. The song remains the only link to a band that once tasted mainstream success; Story of the Year is now a fairly obscure act, only selling out the small Blender Theater with last minute at-the-door ticket sales. The band has only gotten stronger since their one-time burst of popularity, though, and Story of the Year continues to issue solid full-length albums, supporting those releases with hard-hitting, small club rock shows.


The Gaslight Anthem @ Asbury Park 8/5/2010

August 5, 2010

The Gaslight Anthem played outdoors at the Stone Pony Summer Stage on a beautiful evening at the Jersey Shore. While more than five million viewers opted instead to sit at home and catch MTV’s Jersey Shore, three thousand lucky attendees instead chose life and witnessed integrity in the form of a hardworking rock band from New Jersey rewarding their longtime fans with a near two-hour performance that incorporated songs from all four of the band’s releases.

The Gaslight Anthem

The Gaslight Anthem

Walking out to Jay-Z’s  “Empire State of Mind” (and wearing a blue Derek Jeter shirt), frontman Brian Fallon quickly remarked to the crowd that they should all scream “Jersey” over “York” during the song’s Alicia Keys-sung chorus. Indeed, this show was about New Jersey: it marked the band’s first performance in their home state since releasing American Slang, one of the best albums of 2010 thus far. The Gaslight Anthem kicked things off with a few cuts from that album, including the remarkably catchy title track and “Boxer”, both songs making their way through the airwaves on any rock-format radio stations that haven’t yet closed their doors.

“Blue Jeans & White T-Shirts” was a special cut this evening, with Fallon commenting that even as the band gets to tour all over the world, they still take a piece of their Jersey home with them in the form of this song. Fans hung onto Fallon’s every word, and before jumping into the song he remarked that “at 33 RPM, life ain’t so bad.”  Acknowledging the nearby Cookman Avenue, only recently renovated into a desirable living area, Fallon changed up the song’s final lyrics: “Someday I’ll buy you that house on Cookman — if they don’t keep raising the rents so high”.

The Gaslight Anthem

The Gaslight Anthem

Sink or Swim‘s “Angry Johnny and the Radio” received unique treatment, as well, with an extended introduction and Fallon injecting bits and pieces of Brand New’s “Jesus” into the song’s bridge. The band only just released American Slang,  so the biggest treats of the evening were the nine cuts (only “We Did it When We Were Young” was absent) from that album. “The Spirit of Jazz” and “Old Haunts” sounded right at home next to old favorites like “The ’59 Sound” and “We Came to Dance”, a funny point to consider when The Gaslight Anthem are barely five years old. Some cuts prior to American Slang were introduced as “old songs”, but the tracks were only released as far back as summer 2007. The songs aren’t old at all — they’re just tired from the band’s relentless touring in the tricounty area.

Some of those songs included “Red in the Morning”, a song Fallon describes as vocally influenced by the California punk quintet The Bronx. The Gaslight Anthem successfully perform so much new and “old” material in one evening by playing extended sets: few acts perform twenty-six song setlists. Even fewer bands barely five years old perform more than twenty in a night. The Gaslight Anthem’s dedication to their live show helps lift them well above their peers; this was no clearer than on the stellar performance of “Great Expectations” that closed the first part of their set.

The Gaslight Anthem

The Gaslight Anthem

Against Asbury Park’s noise ordinances, the band returned for a five-song encore. Originally planning to cut some of the songs to obey curfew, Fallon announced that the band had been given special permission by the venue to continue on as planned. “Here’s Lookin’ at You, Kid” was a fine way to to wind down the evening, leading right into “The Backseat” wrapping things up in the same manner as it does on The ’59 Sound.

American Slang
Boxer
The Diamond Church Street Choir
Old White Lincoln
Even Cowgirls Get the Blues
Señor and the Queen
Bring it On
Miles Davis and the Cool
The ’59 Sound
The Spirit of Jazz
Angry Johnny and the Radio
Film Noir
Old Haunts
Blue Jeans & White T-Shirts
We Came to Dance
Red in the Morning
Wherefore Art Thou, Elvis?
The Queen of Lower Chelsea
Stay Lucky
Boomboxes and Dictionaries
Great Expectations
Orphans
We’re Getting A Divorce, You Keep the Diner
Wooderson
Here’s Lookin’ at You, Kid
The Backseat

The Gaslight Anthem

The Gaslight Anthem

It’s hard to ask for more in a setlist — the band has written just under forty songs to date and performed twenty-six of them in one night. Crisp guitars and rock-solid rhythms provided the backdrop for Fallon’s luscious storytelling, told through a bold, gritty alto; the quartet connects with the crowd in and out of each song. The band’s connection with the crowd isn’t superficial. The Gaslight Anthem don’t write stories about adolescent life in New Jersey, they recount them with a brazen wisdom that demands a closer listen.


Paramore / Tegan and Sara / New Found Glory @ Philadelphia 8/4/2010

August 4, 2010

The Honda Civic Tour arrived in Philadelphia on a hot August afternoon at Penn’s Landing Festival Pier, a considerably smaller venue than the arenas that made up most of the tour. One of the few dates with standing room — and perhaps the only date to be exclusively general admission — the night offered Paramore and their supporting acts a chance to be the very best show on the entire tour.

New Found Glory

New Found Glory

Following a performance by opening act Kadawatha, New Found Glory started at 7:15 with “Truck Stop Blues” from their latest album, Not Without a Fight. “All Downhill From Here” followed, and a large portion of the crowd responded to the band’s most well-known song. Still, cuts from quintet’s most popular album — 2002′s Sticks and Stones — were the most exciting, and vocalist Jordan Pundik embraced the energy emitting from longtime fans that pushed their way to the front of an otherwise motionless crowd.

New Found Glory

New Found Glory

For “Don’t Let Her Pull You Down”, the Florida quintet taught the audience the song’s namesake chorus using enormous, vibrant signs painted “DON’T”, “LET”, and “HER” (when flipped, the posterboard revealed “BUY OUR SHIRT”). “Hit or Miss” sounded great, and the band’s final cut, “My Friends Over You”, was equally impressive. Veterans of touring, and certainly familiar with larger venues, New Found Glory was sonically sound and exciting to watch during their ten-song setlist. The band pulled no punches, even using their guitar tech to play the keyboard parts live when necessary.

Truck Stop Blues
All Downhill From Here
It’s Not Your Fault
Understatement
Something I Call Personality
Kiss Me (Sixpence None the Richer cover)
Don’t Let Her Pull You Down
Hit or Miss
Failure’s Not Flattering
My Friends Over You

Tegan and Sara

Tegan and Sara

Tegan and Sara Quin, identical twins from Canada, provided direct-support. Slower and more subtle than New Found Glory before them, the evening certainly shifted gears during the twins’ set. Supported by a backing band, the duo  surprisingly constructed half of their setlist from 2004′s So Jealous, strange because the band has released two much more popular albums since. Tegan and Sara undoubtedly drew a number of fans who appreciated the older cuts, though, even if it meant most of the set going over the heads of the Paramore-ready crowd familiar with just their newer, more mainstream material.

Tegan and Sara

Tegan and Sara

Despite playing together for more than ten years, Tegan and Sara still sound rough around the edges. The band’s newest material relies heavily on air-tight production — consequently hitting harder in the studio — and the act’s constant pleas to the crowd to “calm down” because it was “too hot” were a bit off-putting when the crowd was barely moving at all. The penultimate “Northshore” featured the song’s various “don’t [verb]” lyrics on a giant screen behind the band while the twins traded fast-paced lyrics like “don’t bend, don’t bleed, don’t beg, don’t scream, don’t whine, don’t fight, don’t tell me”.

Tegan and Sara

Tegan and Sara

Just hours before Tegan and Sara performed, a United States district court judge overturned California’s Proposition 8 — a ban on homosexual marriage. In celebration of the ruling that apparently touches a personal chord with the sisters, the duo performed “Underwater” from their 2002 full-length, If It Was You, to close their set. Tegan and Sara were enjoyable, but nothing remarkable; to truly enjoy the act’s quirky indie-pop, their studio albums are a much better choice.

You Wouldn’t Like Me
I Bet It Stung
The Con
Walking With a Ghost
So Jealous
Hell
Alligator
Back In Your Head
On Directing
Nineteen
Where Does the Good Go
Speak Slow
Northshore
Underwater

Paramore

Paramore

By 9:35 Paramore began their set with a lengthy introductory jam, performed behind a stage-concealing curtain. As the band kicked into the opening licks of “Ignorance”, however, the curtain dropped and the Tennessee natives were revealed to the eager crowd. “Feeling Sorry”, another cut from the band’s latest album, Brand New Eyes, went next; in fact, the band played all of their most recent full-length except for “Brick By Boring Brick”, “Turn it Off”, and “All I Wanted”. Riot! single “That’s What You Get” followed, and frontwoman Hayley Williams sounded as strong as ever singing the song’s soaring chorus: “That’s what you get when you let your heart win!”

Paramore

Paramore

Complementing an already solid lineup, Paramore added a third guitarist, Johnathan Howard, to the tour. The band rarely needs a third guitar, but songs like “Emergency” sounded somewhat beefed up by the addition. Also beefing up their live show were fun videos of the band played in the background during parts of the set, showing brief scenes like the band skateboarding through town or hanging around the house. Make no mistake, however, Paramore’s live show starts and ends with the band’s songs and not gimmicky videos.  “Decode” drew a deafening roar from the crowd — likely due to its use in Twilight — but the song is one of the band’s weaker cuts and indeed the only nick in an otherwise flawless set.

Paramore

Paramore

Midway through the evening, Paramore’s setlist took an interesting turn with Williams singing a cover of Loretta Lynn’s “You Ain’t Woman Enough”, backed only by lead guitarist (and ex-boyfriend) Josh Farro on acoustic guitar. The brief tune found the two alone on the corner of the stage while the rest of the stage was being rebuilt to resemble a living room, complete with lamps and furniture. The band joined together on couches in the middle of stage to perform mellow, acoustic-based takes of “When it Rains”, “Where the Lines Overlap”, and “Misguided Ghosts”. The change of pace added a welcomed dynamic to Paramore’s otherwise fairly straight-forward arena-rock-ready set.

Paramore

Paramore

“Let the Flames Begin” returned the band to their electric roots; the band extended the song with a special live-only bridge that has been a part of Paramore’s set for some time. The band returned to their 2005 debut with “Pressure”, with Williams introducing the rest of the band during the song’s drawn-out instrumental breaks. “The Only Exception” appeared to conclude evening, but Paramore returned moments later around 11PM with their breakout single “Misery Business”.

Ignorance
Feeling Sorry
That’s What You Get
For A Pessimist, I’m Pretty Optimistic
Emergency
Playing God
Careful
Decode
You Ain’t Woman Enough (Loretta Lynn cover)
When It Rains
Where the Lines Overlap
Misguided Ghosts
Let the Flames Begin
crushcrushcrush
Pressure
Looking Up
Misery Business

Paramore

Paramore

It’s unclear why the band inexplicably removed “Brick By Boring Brick” from their encore — the song has been a part of the Honda Civic Tour all summer until Philadelphia — but even with that unfortunate omission Paramore still performed one of the best shows of the summer. Drawing from three excellent albums, the band crafts an exciting setlist that touches on a variety of styles within the punk-pop and pop-rock spectrum. Williams is a fantastic frontwoman anchored by rock-solid musicians, and the band’s live performances are undeniable evidence that the five-piece is more than studio magic.

Photographs credit to the excellent Becca Sawka.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.