Category: Show Reviews

  • When the Circus Comes to Town: Jane’s Addiction, moe., Black Box Revelation and Floodwood, March 2-3, Albany, NY

    When the Circus Comes to Town: Jane’s Addiction, moe., Black Box Revelation and Floodwood, March 2-3, Albany, NY

    A weekend with two sell-out shows at the Palace Theater and interesting late nights that ensued made for a classic weekend of great music in Albany over the first weekend of March. Jane’s Addiction coupled with moe. to set up stellar weekend of music and revelry that ensued gave two bands that each started out more than 20 years ago but were far from nostalgia, instead rocking through marquee sets for hours each night.

    Jane's AddictionThe Black Box Revelation

    With a late start time of 8:30 for the opening act, I got a listen the day before of Black Box Revelation, a scortching garage band duo from Brussels, Belgium featuring a duo of Jan Paternoster on guitar and vocals and Dries Van Dijck on drums. I was impressed with a few songs on first listen and eagerly awaited the opening act. Guitarist Jan has some Jimmy Page chops when seeing him live, with a dose of the Black Keys but not necessarily the same band – the powerful rock and blues mix created negates the need for a bassist, almost. There were moments when Strange Times could have burst out a guitar jam. Drums were tight, harsh and crispy. Percent accent to guitarwork. Two songs of note, High on a Wire, a little-Silverchair-ish with gritty vocals, a clear break out song for this duo.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uBA2vBFgCgc&

    I think I Like You was notable in concert and felt a little more bluesy than the rest of the night, but the video for the song has a nice production value and was running through my head while the song played.

    The final song of the 45 minute set, Sealed with Thorns was sincerely jammed out, rocked out is more like it, for a solid 10 minutes, greeting the arriving crowd with a nice segue into the main act. By far, they were the best opening act I’ve seen in years. Jan spoke to the crowd towards the end, ‘This is one of the most beautiful venues we’ve ever seen.” Later, upon asking him what he felt about the venue, he shared, “It’s beautiful, we have never played many venues like this in Europe.” On their first tour in America and playing perhaps their 10th or so show here and to play the Palace – an honor many bands take years to build up to. As for the tour, the pair simply said that “Jane’s tour is amazing, they’re really cool guys,” an understatement likely.

    Having played at Bonnaroo and The Hangout in 2011, Black Box returned for a full opening tour, withEuropegiving us a taste of what is in store for post-hipster musical imports. What a relief. Their sound right now is so strong and raw that their evolution will lead to a notable future. For now, the duo are always welcome in America.

    Jane’s Addiction

    A “Theatre of Escapists Tour” was the theme that Jane’s Addiction frontman Perry Farrell and his group of freaks conjured up for the evening’s visual performance taking place on the precipice of the crowd and all throughout the show on stage. Starting with an extended pre-show music of tracks from Pink Floyd’s Shine on Your Crazy Diamond (notably performed here not two weeks ago by The Pink Floyd Experience)

    A cavalcade of freaks, including limber ladies in lingerie, pierced and adorned dancers and an Alex, ala Clockwork Orange leading the way before Perry broke out into Underground off the new release The Great Escape Artist. With an elaborate stage, drums on a riser and Perry, a soundtrack remnant in all black like a Brandon Lee from The Crow. Two ladies swung in the air in big white dresses with a random dude in a peacock outfit off to the side and the band strutting around the stage , full on stage show with sick music.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries?list=PL1EE7234904FC0D06

    Mountain Song sprung some grunge era guitar from Dave Navarro who I had just noticed was playing on stage. In my defense, I sat far right orchestra and Dave played to a legion far left pit, but the sound was easily identifiable for one of Jane’s Addiction’s best known songs. Paired up with Been Caught Stealin’ started in typical fashion, Perry being friendly with the crowd, shaking the hands of everyone up against the rail, as he did all night long, spreading the rock but this time, taking a hat and wearing it in tribute to the song.

    Ted, Just Admit it… the creepiest of Jane’s songs, and that is saying a lot, still brought the cheers and throngs to the stage, as the freak show going on behind the band was garnering the divided attention of everyone. While Perry sang ‘Nothings shocking…Sex is Violent’, the performance art with Siamese twins in white lingerie and now Alex hanging a baby doll then tearing it apart. Far above the band, where he then mocked suicide with a straight razor and fake blood; it was enjoyably fucked up. Perry then captured what was on stage and told the crowd a secret: “What you’re experiencing is the result of some broken people.” This is the understatement of the year. This wasn’t a GG Allin level of creepiness, but then a video of kids molesting dolls and abusing them, and the crowd was hushed. But is it art?

    The stage was set under the dark of the video to bring out a chair or two and a light by which Navarro played a painful acoustic guitar for a slightly calypso Jane Says but it still shone thanks to the vocals. Chip Away got a light acoustic treatment before a stage shift with video interlude that brought three drums to the front of the stage for Navarro, Steven Perkins and bassist Chris Chaney took stage left to bang on the drums while Perry for the rest of the show that follows. Three Days got full Navarro shredding while Perry played the maracas and the Siamese twins danced one at a time on the stage. The level of rock guitar shredding that ensued to end the show was a combination of Van Halen and White Zombie for a huge number in Three Days followed by the equally enamoring Stop!, always a crowd pleaser.

    The encore wrapped up the night, starting with Perry asking the crowd “Are you ready to come yet?” as the band moved into Words Right Out of My Mouth followed by Ocean Size, just a monstrous number, their best performed song of the night.

    A nice look at the future of rock and the recent past of a rock era we continue to live in started the weekend right. Next up was moe., who brought it back home on Saturday night.

    moe.

    Having started out in the Albany area, a homecoming is always well-attended and received by a throng of fans who sell out the Palace for moe repeatedly, bringing with them a full day of musical energy. A great show with no holds barred rock, the crowd welcomed their local band to the big stage for three hours of blistering rock with extended jams that got deeper as the night went on.

    Set 1: Runaway Overlude > Chromatic Nightmare > Seat Of My Pants, New York City > George > Four > Downward Facing Dog

    Set 2: Money* > Billy Goat  > Skrunk, Time Again, Big World> Ricky Marten > The Bones of Lazarus > Rebubula

    Encore: Spine Of A Dog > Dr. Graffenberg

    *with Marley Amico on sax

    Starting with 17 minutes of two spooky, Zappa-esque songs, the tension was broken with Seat of My Pants, always a crowd favorite. George and Four, two of my favorite moe tunes of all time clocked in at a combined 38 minutes. The lack of a definitive starting or ending point is the hallmark of a great band; with only two breaks on stage all night and continuous segues nearly throughout both sets. A good jamband like moe. keeps you guessing, changing songs up without more than a guitar riff to play off of.

    Money opened up set 2 and brought out Marley Amico, daughter of drummer Vinny, to tear up the sax solo for the epic Floyd song. Not a note was missed, just like New Years Eve when she performed the same number with moe in Portland, Maine. Truly, the talent is in the blood and was nothing short of a great performance. The second set moved through a half dozen numbers, rocking in an out of new tunes Billy Goat into established rotation numbers like Big World and Lazarus before ending with the epic love song, Rebubula, giving the same powerful build up it has hundreds of times before, each version still different than the last.

    [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cge3PsSUBiw&w=560&h=315]

    Some Al.nouncements preceded Spine of a Dog, the encore equivalent to Character Zero, able to be kept short or drawn out for a house shaking encore. The latter gave us a deep encore groove, extraordinary, spacing out into a fresh jam via a deep bass line groove via Rob. We were in the midst of Panty- melting 70s porn groove. An out of the blue smooth segue into Dr. Graffenberg was so exploratory that you had trouble remembering what song they were still tearing into. This was a great jam to lose yourself in, so the full 25 minutes of the encore.

    Floodwood

    With the show ending, the crowd dispersed, moving southward towards Pearl Street, local bars, watering holes, hotels and finally, Red Square, where Al and Vinny’s side-project Floodwood was performing latenight. A packed house sold out the show in advance (hint, get tickets early for these postshows) where moe. fans gathered to catch up with the extended moe.family that grows with each passing year. Rob Derhak stopped down to take in the show with friends, as did a nice chunk of the Palace crowd. Floodwood performed for two hours altogether, mixing Americana and bluegrass numbers, not unlike another side project of moe.’s, Al and the Transamericans. With Vinny behind the drums for both, this incarnation is more hill-country and less rocking than its predecessor, a nice cap to the evening. Featuring Zachary Fleitz, Nick Piccininni and Jason Barady from Woodenspoon on strings with Al on guitar and Vinny on drums, the group drove through originals, covers including an energetic Molly n Tenbrook. Called back for multiple encores over the final half hour, including Al’s Blue Eyed Son, the swarmed crowd dipped into each extension of the night eagerly. As the band finally wrapped the night up, the crowd slowly trickled into the streets, ready to greet 330am.

    These are the weekends that I look forward to months in advance, knowing how great the onslaught of music is over the course of two nights. Four great bands plus hundreds upon hundreds of live music fans makes for a great way to spend a weekend in Albany.

  • Timbre Coup ends February residency at Jillian’s of Albany

    Timbre Coup ends February residency at Jillian’s of Albany

    All good things must come to an end but all great things deserve an encore. Thursday night, Timbre Coup’s February residency at Jillians of Albany came to an end with their most powerful performance of the month, reeling in dozens of new fans to their rock/techno fusion. The crowd danced and writhed to the jams that developed from songs both new and old, leaving no doubt to the legacy the band is creating through their shows in the Capital District. Guitarist/bassist Dan Gerken said “The residency showed me that not only does acoustic Timbre Coup work, it was one of our strongest sets! You will be seeing more of this completely organic sound of ours very soon. We were happy to be able to experiment with the 4 show run we had.”

    timbre coup residencyFor their CD release party ‘Knuckles and Valleys’, the show featured a tracks including March, June, October and a stellar rendition of July to close the show. A sandwich of Arnold Schwarzenegger->Give it to me baby (Rick James)->Arnold Schwarzenegger was unexpected but they nailed it and an appreciative crowd asked for more. Jams out of Watching You and Radio were met with a packed dance floor for both young and old in attendance. This could wind up being a yearly or possibly bi-annual residency and would continue to foster the positive response the band had received in the past two years.

    Timbre Coup heads to Syracuse next to play the Westcott Theater on Saturday March 10th with Dirty Paris and Higher Organix, bringing the best of Albany to the Salt City. Dirty Paris and Timbre Coup return the next weekend to co-headline St. Patrick’s Day at Red Square in Albany making for a great Saturday night and continuing their notably worthy presence in their hometown of Albany.

    Check out pictures from Mike Wren here 

  • The Pink Floyd Experience, Palace Theater

    The Pink Floyd Experience, Palace Theater

    Good cover bands are hard to come by, as seen by the local acts that fill bars and clubs around the country each weekend, singing the songs of the past. The bigger names – Dark Star Orchestra and The Fab Faux are notable because they accurately recreate the music of the Grateful Dead and The Beatles, respectively, without donning costumes or trying to make the music their own. They have simply learned the music and play it as close to the original as possible and in doing so, fill a void left by the absence of the bands they cover. Some would call them tribute bands, but that distinction is reserved for the groups that take on the style and exact lineup of the original band (i.e. The Fab Faux has five members) and leaves little room for error or interpretation.

    pink floyd experienceFor a band as complicated as Pink Floyd, both in terms of music and history, the number of cover bands is akin to The Beatles; there’s The Machine, Australian Pink Floyd, Brit Floyd and the band I was fortunate to see, The Pink Floyd Experience from San Diego, California. Opening up on February 16, 2012 with the entire album ‘Wish You Were Here‘ and nailing all five epic songs (Shine on Your Crazy Diamond I-V, Welcome to the Machine, Have a Cigar, Wish You Were Here, Shine on You Crazy Diamond VI-IX) without skipping a beat. For my favorite album of them all by Floyd, I was impressed.

    Then a brief intermission where the lights revealed family night at The Palace Theater. Many fans are older now and brought their kids, mostly teenagers but a few tweens as well. Families were milling about, grabbing concessions and ignoring merchandise with mellow aplomb; surely this is the exact opposite of Floyd when they played Wish You Were Here at venues like this back in the 1970s. But a mixed crowd leads to a new generation or two with the ability to enjoy some of the greatest music ever written. Ranging from the psychedelia of the 60s to the rock anthems of the 70s to the rock opera of The Wall in the 80s and the scraps left over in the 90s when David Gilmour toured and Roger Waters didn’t, Pink Floyd spans 6 decades of music and returns to stadiums this summer (and The Times Union Center June 28th) with The Wall once again. The light show isn’t the same with The Pink Floyd Experience, but they make a great effort to recreate the entire experience, nailing the music and sound but lacking with the lighting.

    Set 2 started out with On the Run->Time from Dark Side of the Moon before mellowing out into the spooky vibrations of Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun. An extended sax solo front stage recreated the ‘Careless Whisper’ feeling from 1984, forgetting that the extended sax solo should remain in the 80s. Learning to Fly, the lone 1990s Floyd offering was anthemic and ensured that all eras were covered tonight. The group announced that they would play a song for Syd Barrett but sadly, no Bike but Interstellar Overdrive instead. Money and a short version of Echoes (minus the spaciness) followed, along with another sax solo before a random guy in a jacket adorned with light bulb took the stage for the stormy intro to Hey You. The surround sound effects were at their best here, getting fans to turn their heads as the sound traversed throughout the audience and segued into Comfortably Numb. A packed sandwich of Run Like Hell -> Another Brick in the Wall Part Two -> Run Like Hell got the audience singing along with the band while the giant pig took to the space between the audience and the stage, drifting up and down until fans had left the show shortly before 10pm.

    The members of The Pink Floyd Experience lauded Albany for providing a great turnout once again. This was a show that is very worth seeing, although I would have liked another 45-60 minutes of some more obscure songs. But I can’t complain, good cover bands are hard to come by.

    Dopapod with special guest Timbre Coup
    Jillians

    Following The Pink Floyd Experience, I headed over the Jillians, where Timbre Coup continued their residency for February, opening up for funk/electronica group Dopapod, another regular in the Capital District. Coup’s electric set for a packed house continues to be one of the highlights of music in the area, cornering the electro/prog-rock market and garnering new fans throughout the month of February. Dopapod followed with strong set of songs from their new album ‘Drawn Onward’ and random and funky dance numbers. Dopapod will be back in a couple short months, potentially opening up for a bigger name in the electronica genre. It’s a big week next week for Timbre Coup, with their CD release party of ‘Knuckles and Valleys’ on 2/23 at Jillians with Higher Organix opening. Don’t miss the final night of their Jillian’s residency!

  • Cry To The Blind CD Release Party with Hate Machine, Endyga, Endever, The Untold Lies, Starlight Cities, and A Thousand Shades of Cold

    Cry To The Blind CD Release Party with Hate Machine, Endyga, Endever, The Untold Lies, Starlight Cities, and A Thousand Shades of Cold

    Two songs into Cry To The Blind CD release party, front man Jon Lamanna summed up the thoughts of the massive congregation that had assembled for a fist pumping good time. Lamanna said, “Nobody believes that local music could be big in this town. But, we have sold out this room tonight with a show of local bands.” Granted, this is not a warm quote, but close enough. Over 1,000 people came and witnessed what may end up going down as the metal show of the year in Upstate New York.

    CTTB did a great job of stacking this bill with a great amount of diverse acts within the metal scene in this area. Even the first four acts, A Thousand Shades of Cold, Starlight Cities, The Untold Lies, and Endever, are bands with an extreme amount of talent and an audience to match. It is not often that a show with seven acts brings so much musical greatness together. None of these bands are nothing less than above average.

    The show went to a whole different notch of splendor when Endyga took the stage. I had never seen the band before, and turned to a colleague with a puzzled look on my face. I asked, “Who the fuck are these guys.” His response, “They are Endyga, and they are the real fucking deal.” An understatement of this magnitude would become reality as they zipped through a sick 30 minute set of absolute power. Like most of the bands on the bill, they had great melodic sensibility. However, these guys were devastatingly tight and heavy.

    After Endyga, Hate Machine came on to smash faces. The recently reunited legends of the late 90’s and early 00’s, are just as vicious today as they were back then. Jed and the boys came out and delivered a set of solid older material while throwing in a new tune here and there for good measure. It is a very daunting task to follow a band like Hate Machine on any bill. They bring the pain, and shove it in your face. However, Cry To The Blind is one of the only bands I would ever consider putting on a bill after them. After all, the night did belong to the guys in Cry To The Blind.

    Cry To The Blind came out with guns blazing. Obviously, with this being the band’s CD release party “From Now On,” was the focus of most of their set. Highlights from the new album, were the title track, Better Than Me, The Hunger, and Letting Go. The band also delved into older material like Heartless, among other great tracks of the past. There was a real special aura around this event. For starters, it was Jon Lamanna’s birthday. The band commemorated the occasion by having a cake delivered to the stage. It was also important because of the special announcement that was made half way through the band’s set. CTTB announced that they are starting their own label. They have the backers, and the distribution capabilities to truly take this to a whole new level of the game. For people like myself who have known these guys for years, this was the greatest part of the whole evening. It put an exclamation point on what was one of the better shows I have seen in quite some time. Expect HUGE things from Cry To The Blind in the next year. And know this, it has been a long time coming. -Erik Jensen