Showing posts with label UEA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UEA. Show all posts

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Gig Review: Mastodon/The Dillinger Escape Plan/Red Fang. UEA Norwich, 9/2/12



Whilst I haven't followed them that closely their whole career, and really only started listening to them in the last year or so, it seems obvious to me that Mastodon are one of those bands who do whatever they want, in terms of music. Whilst remaining 'heavy', no two albums of theirs really stay the same. And no more so than their latest album, The Hunter.

Whilst it's predecessor, Crack The Skye adopted a more progressive feel to it, with epic long songs such as The Czar and The Last Baron, The Hunter goes for shorter songs, a move that angered many people, who seem unable to enjoy watching a band as talented as Mastodon evolve.

To say The Hunter went down well critically is a bit of an understatement. Recieving glowing reviews across the board from places you'd expect it to, like Kerrang, Classic Rock and Metal Hammer to places you wouldn't, such as Q, The Guardian. Hell, The Times named it their album of the year for 2011!

The album even bothered the top 20 album charts in the UK, and they featured on an episode of Later With Jools Holland on the BBC. As you may gather, Mastodon are not just another metal band.

What I like so much about them is that they don't try and sound like a tribute to older bands. When you have seemingly every metal band out there emulating Metallica, Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden etc., Mastodon, again, do what they want and have a style that's almost their own.

Opening for Mastodon at the UEA was Red Fang, a band about as close as you can get to Mastodon musically. And I mean that in a good way. From Portland, Oregon and on their first tour ever in the UK, the band really impressed. A stoner-style mix of big riffs and dazzling solos, won everyone at the sold out UEA over almost instantly. A great start to the night.

What didn't fit that well on the bill however, was the inclusion of The Dillinger Escape Plan. Whilst they were hugely popular with the crowd (many of whom were clearly only there to see them) and did at first hold my interest with their energetic and crazy performance, I just couldn't maintain the excitement levels others had for them. I've never been a huge fan of screaming vocals, but DEP play extremely well, but after a little while, the vocals, and the lack of memorable songs (they really did bleed into each other after a while) really started to turn me off. There are plenty of Mastodon's contemporaries that could have fit the bill, it's a shame that didn't happen.

All such issues with the support bill were soon forgotten when Mastodon hit the stage. What followed was over 90 minutes of pummeling metal, with no breaking for any between-song talking, a lot of which was from The Hunter (9 songs out of the 23 played in fact), and those seemed to be the songs that got the biggest response from the crowd, from where I was standing anyway. Songs like Dry Bone Valley, Black Tongue, Curl of the Burl, and Blasteroid got huge cheers, up there with the reaction when they played the older hits such as I Am Ahab, and Blood and Thunder.

As is becoming tradition at gigs, the people around me didn't seem to share everyone's enthusiasm. While Mastodon were on stage, some kids to the left in me (wearing DEP shirts) seemed more interested in throwing a shirt about the crowd, and a lot of the time weren't even facing the stage.

But the worst thing by far was the young guy in front of me who I saw UPDATE HIS FACEBOOK STATUS whilst Mastodon were on stage, moaning about how dull they were, and how he wanted them to play the older stuff. Even though the name of the tour was The Hunter. Just astoundingly ignorant, and possibly the worst thing I've ever seen at a gig.

Apart from the idiots who refuse to accept a band must release new material to continue to have a career, the crowd reaction to Mastodon was one of the loudest I've ever heard at the UEA (which was either sold out, or extremely close to) throughout the set. The performance reminded me in a way of when I saw Dream Theater at High Voltage last year, just amazing musical skills, but utterly grueling, in the best possible sense.

Where Mastodon go from here is anybody's guess. They seem to be able to do no wrong for the last few years (they even emerged unscathed from doing the score for the terrible Jonah Hex movie), so the only way is up. At this rate they could be the band that finally changes the public's perception of metal. It'd be about time.

Mastodon played...

  1. Dry Bone Valley
  2. Black Tongue
  3. Crystal Skull
  4. I Am Ahab
  5. Capillarian Crest
  6. Colony Of Birchmen
  7. Megalodon
  8. Thickening
  9. Blasteroid
  10. Sleeping Giant
  11. Ghost of Karelia
  12. All the Heavy Lifting
  13. Spectrelight
  14. Curl of the Burl
  15. Bedazzled Fingernails
  16. Circle of Cysquatch
  17. Aqua Dementia
  18. Crack The Skye
  19. Where Strides the Behemoth 
  20. Iron Tusk
  21. March of the Fire Ants
  22. Blood and Thunder
  23. Creature Lives

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Gig Review: Bowling For Soup. UEA Norwich. 17/10/11



Of all the times I've seen Bowling For Soup play live, I've never seen them do a headline show. I have seen them at festivals, and even saw (and met!) the guys at an acoustic set/CD signing in London several years ago, but every time they come around to play a entire set, I have always managed to miss it. Until now that is...

Touring the U.K. in support of their new album 'Fishin' For Woo's', BFS touched down again at the UEA (they seem to like Norwich, it always seems to have a tour date here when they are touring the country) and brought fellow punk popper's Orange and Suburban Legends.

I'm going to be brutally honest about the support, I wasn't there to see them and I used that time to talk to some people I hadn't seen in a while, so can't fairly review them, but I do have a few notes about both that it would be remiss not to share.

I am still convinced I've seen Orange before, and I did kind of recognize them, but nothing they did drew me out of the conversations I was having. My brother probably put it best when he said they "looked as generic as they sounded".

Suburban Legends did catch a bit of my attention by the end of their set. The use of trumpet and trombone made for some pretty catchy songs, and the cover of 'I Just Can't Wait To Be King' from The Lion King raised some smiles.

We were more than ready for Bowling For Soup, though. Moving from near the bar to a better spot on the 'dancefloor' (regular UEA patrons will know what I mean by that), we didn't have to wait long till the band emerged, kicking off with 'I'm Gay' from the 'Great Burrito Extortion Case' album, followed by 'High School Never Ends' from the same album.

The crowd were wildly enthusiastic at this point, but that did die down a bit as the set went on. Not at the front, that totally maintained, but from where I was standing, I saw a lot of folded arms and not much excitement being shown.

The band were on fine form, from both a music and comedy standpoint. Anyone who knows of the band must know they are funny guys, and those who don't just need to check out one of their videos. And they were as hilarious as ever at the UEA.

That being said though, I did find the band stopping for a drink (at the bar they had on stage, no less) during 'Punk Rock 101', while the strains of AC/DC's 'Have A Drink On Me' were being piped in over the PA, a bit much to be honest.

That was made up for with a different song introduction at the end, when 'Girl All The Bad Guys Want' was halted for a completely improvised song called 'Do You Want To Suck On My Balls, Gary?'. You can check that out in the last blog I posted, as I was happening to be filming at the time!

It was also worth noting that the band seemed to play (with the exceptions of one or two early ones), every single they have ever released! They also surprised the crowd with covers of 'Stacy's Mom' by Fountains Of Wayne (they covered that song, apparently because a lot of people seem to think it's one of their own songs!), and 'Summer Of '69' by Bryan Adams, which was amazing!

Whilst writing this review I found out that BFS' song '1985' was a cover version too, first recorded by a band called SR-71, and used with their blessing. I guess you learn something new everyday! Or two things, as I had no idea the band do the theme tune to 'Phineas And Ferb' till they played it!

Bowling For Soup played...

  1. I'm Gay
  2. High School Never Ends
  3. S-S-Saturday
  4. Ohio (Come Back To Texas)
  5. When We Die
  6. Emily
  7. The Bitch Song
  8. Stacy's Mom
  9. Today Is Gonna Be A Great Day (Phineas And Ferb Theme)
  10. Almost
  11. My Wena
  12. The Last Rock Show
  13. Punk Rock 101
  14. No Hablo Ingles
  15. Turbulence
  16. Friends O' Mine
  17. Summer Of 69'
  18. 1985
  19. Belgium
  20. Girl All The Bad Guys Want/Do You Want To Suck On My Balls, Gary?
****
Aside from getting a bit too wacky with the onstage bar, Bowling For Soup put on a fantastic show. Catch them on tour when they are in your town!