The Bowery Ballroom hosted the Brooklyn-born band, HOKO, on the evening of Wednesday, August 23rd. On tour in support of almost monday and the WEATHERS, HOKO branded their name into the minds of their modest but curious New York City audience. This fifteen stop USA tour is HOKO’s first tour debut, and they are making sure to impress along the way. Through the vehicle of their experimental style, they are refreshing the palettes of listeners with a sound unlike anything they’ve ever heard.
Photograph by Sophie Gurwitz
Bodies trickled into the ballroom as time climbed towards HOKO’s set. Conversation vibrated across the floor, people expressing their excitement about the headliners and a few eager to watch HOKO’s set, while others volleyed HOKO’s name around with intrigue.
When the lights dimmed, everyone’s attention was pulled towards the darkness resting on stage. Blue light hues swirled across faces of the crowd while the band presented themselves on stage. Bass came through the floor, tugging at peoples’ bones, demanding their presence. After a minute long introduction of pure sensation, the first guitar riff electrified the atmosphere to kick-off a night of music.
Photograph by Sophie Gurwitz
HOKO opened with their song “Pretender.” Dense guitar riffs and confident vocality drew the audience into captivation. Their sound projected something heavier than the typical pop-rock song. The tones and intensity of the instrumentals almost felt dark – not in a dangerous way but in an enticing manner.
It was impossible to name a comparable sound to them, they felt fresh. Listeners bounced around artist names, “COIN,” “Bleachers,” “B-52’s,” “Zeppelin.” That vast of a name pool proved testament to their individuality.
Photograph by Sophie Gurwitz
It’s difficult to be truly unique in the music industry, to not fall into the coddle of a niche, to not be a genre artist. HOKO has taken the liberty of demolishing musical barriers, and redefining flexibility in relation to their production. Their sound cannot be labeled, for they are rock, they are electric, they are pop, they are psychedelic. They are ever-evolving. As the night progressed, it became evident that something of impressive massivity is to come from HOKO.
Photograph by Sophie Gurwtiz
Lead singer, Nathaniel Hoho, absorbed the ballroom’s energy and gave a rockstar level performance. He got in the crowd to mosh with the audience. He climbed atop speakers, and entertained the cameras. He engaged with fans in between songs. Half way into their set, it became hard to believe HOKO had never toured prior to this, for their presence suggested years of being fluid and daring on the stage. Their performance felt too big for a stage the size of Bowery’s.
Photograph by Sophie Gurwitz
One of HOKO’s most popular songs, “Candy Eyes,” gripped the evening when it made its way through the setlist. Guitarist and esteemed string player, Jesse Kotansky, brought out his violin for the song. To hear the harmony of the violin with Hoho’s powerful voice was a beautiful display of musical juxtaposition. Versatility receives respect from concert goers. Though a handful of the audience didn’t know of HOKO before the show, they were sure to remember them after the night the band gave them.
Photograph by Sophie Gurwitz
Their production value implied experimentation and play as a priority. The boldness, the confidence, the yearn to perform created a high that everyone suspended in. People finally began to move their bodies and sing along with the band, as if they developed a sort of trust with HOKO’s sound. A sureness between the classicality of rock and the future of pop.
Photograph by Sophie Gurwitz
Unfortunately, HOKO’s set was merely a half hour long. The show could have carried into the next set and closed out the night, alas Weathers and almost monday had shows of their own to put on. Hoho brought the evening to a clean close when he jumped down into the crowd, parted the mass of bodies in half, and disappeared through the back of the crowd.
Seize Atlantis, an energetic rock band formed in Glens Falls, released their remaining show dates for their tour, Ruins Rebuilt.
They started as a mere jamming project way back in 2018, with different band members and a different name. But just after a few shows crawled the demanding COVID-19, forcing the band into a 7-month hibernation, where they took this time to rebrand themselves as Seize Atlantis. Since their COVID hiatus, they’ve been on a steady incline of music production.
Seize Atlantis is made up of four music lovers: Mike Dardas (bass and backing vocals), Cody Platt (drums), James Mullen (lead vocals and guitar), and Luc Bourgault (lead guitarist).
With only 10 shows left, you won’t want to miss them. Seize Atlantis will be visiting Glens Falls, Albany, and Lake George.
RUINS REBUILT TOUR DATES
9/2 Glens Falls Charles R Wood Theater
9/9 Glens Falls Mean Max Brew Works
9/16 Albany Fuze Box
9/23 Lake George The Lagoon
10/6 Glens Falls The Grateful Den
10/14 Lake George The Lagoon
10/27 Albany Empire Underground
11/18 Glens Falls Mean Max Brew Works
11/25 Albany Empire Underground
12/31 Glens Falls The Grateful Den
For more information on Seize Atlantis, including announcements, tickets, and upcoming tour dates, be sure to check out their Instagram, FaceBook, and LinkTree.
Bryant Park Picnic Performances season of free, live performances, continues on Saturday, September 9 with the US debut of Turkish musician Gaye Su Akyol, as well as opening act The Secret Trio, presented by Drom.
This concert celebrates the music of Anatolia and marks the centenary of the founding of the Turkish Republic.
Gaye Su Akyol is an Istanbul-based musician and artist, born in 1985. In her work, she redefines the concepts of power, desire, change and rebellion. She creates a universe of imagination, in which she constructs her own “counter-reality” — a world without oppression or injustice. Without alienating from the land she was born into, she questions its representations, defines new symbols, and chases after the practice of transforming a conservative world through collective dreaming.
Gaye Su Akyol has created her own unique language, taking the contrasts of traditional Anatolian music, Classical Turkish music, psychedelia, surf rock and post-punk, and combining them with her futuristic approach. Akyol, who, in 2014, released her first album Develerle Yaşıyorum (“I Live With Camels”) in 2014, written and composed entirely by herself, defines her music as “universal in concept, local in spirit.” She expanded her audience through numerous concerts and festivals in Turkey, Europe, Middle East and the Far East, with the release of her first international album, Hologram İmparatorluğu (“Hologram Empire”) in 2016.
The Secret Trio, the opening band for Gaye Su Akyol, is made up of three astounding musicians who came together to create a new type of chamber music with new and interesting approaches to their instruments. Immerse yourself in the captivating melodies and stunning virtuosity of Ara Dinkjian, Ismail Lumanovski, and Tamer Pinarbasi.
Founded by two immigrant business entrepreneurs, Drom’s mission is to celebrate cultural diversity in the performing arts field. They have provided a physical space for artists from around the world to present their music, art and creative experiments. Drom live by the motto, #DromIsHome. From downtown Manhattan, they bring together a local and global community of like-minded individuals to share art and culture that transcend genre, class, race, and geography. Drom’s programs span diverse artistic forms including music, dance, theater, comedy and its stage is open to the next generation, as well as established performers.
REMAINING SCHEDULE AT BRYANT PARK
August 25 – Accordions Around the World: Diana Burco, Suistamon Sähkö, Ragini Ensemble
August 26 – Roulette Intermedium: Immanuel Wilkins, 75 Dollar Bill, Ka Baird
August 31 – The Town Hall: Martha Redbone Roots Project
September 01 – The Classical Theatre of Harlem: Young, Gifted and Black
September 07 – American Symphony Orchestra: American Expressions
September 08 – New York City Opera: Romeo and Juliet
September 14 – Harlem Stage: 40th Anniversary Celebration
Attendees to Bryant Park Picnic Performances may bring their own food or purchase from on-site food and beverage vendors. At all performances, attendees can discover new dishes and celebrate classics from the five boroughs with a rotating line-up of local artisanal vendors curated by Hester Street Fair.
For the most current information about Bryant Park, please visit bryantpark.org/picnics.
Grateful Dead drummer Billy Kreutzman, along with a cast of “kids” played a quick two show tour including one night at the scenic Pier 17 rooftop.
Along for the ride were “new kids” like Daniel Donato and Sierra Hull but also some “kids” who’ve been around the block with Billy like Tom Hamilton and Aron Magner.
The first set opened up with “China Cat Sunflower” and included crowd favorites like “Truckin” & “Cumberland Blues” closing with “Built to Last.”
In Grateful Dead fashion the second set was opened up with “Drums”. The band joined the two drummers to play an unexpected Bob Marley cover of “Could You be Loved”. The second set included a Talking Heads cover “Take Me to the River” as well as deadhead favorites like “Bird Song”, “Wharf Rat”, & “Unlce John’s Band,” closing the second set with “Franklins Tower”.
The crowd roared and cheered for this incredible band. They come back up to play an encore of “Wake up Little Susie” and “We Bid You Goodnight”.
54 years ago, Max Yasger leased out a farm field he owned for what would turn out to be one of, if not, the most noted music festivals in history. The Catbird Music Festival took to these hollowed grounds over August 19-20, in search of the spirit that is Woodstock.
The Lumineers
The name of the festival was inspired by the Catbird used in the original 1969 festival artwork. This being 2023 tie die, long hair, and bare footing could be seen co-joined with cell phones, microchipped wrist bands, and VIP and Platinum packages. No matter your status, the vibe from those attending made it impossible to distinguish 2023 from 1969.
Glamping
Camping was allowed at Bethel Woods, the first time since Mountain Jam 2019. You had your options of car camping, RV camping, or glamping in canvas tents offering either a twin or a queen bed. Throughout the grounds young and old, couples, groups and families intermingled as one.
Gala Music stage crowd
Over the course of two the days (August 19 – 20, 2023) at the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 23 musical acts performed on two stages. The scheduling of sets enabled people to stroll from stage to stage and not have to choose which performers to listen to.
Women took a prominent role in the festival with Adia Vicoria and Allison Russell closing out the Gala Music stage on Saturday and Sunday respectively.
Eggy played a funky and fun set to start off this full day of music. The Soul Rebels brought their authentic New Orleans, horns rich sound to Bethel. Dispatch played a reggae filled, groovy set which included a nod to the good ol Grateful Dead with a “Friend of the Devil” cover.
Trey Anastasio Band played a set filled with TAB and Phish classics including Moma Dance, About to Run, Wolfman’s Brother, and a guitar raising, feedback chasing First Tube to close out their set.
Previous attempts to emulate the original Woodstock Music and Arts Festival have not measured up. The Catbird Music Festival seems to have found the sweet spot. Let’s hope this bird will migrate back to the Hudson Valley in 2024 and build another nest of peace, love and music.
Day 1
Photos by Mickey DeneherJohn R. MillerJames BayBriscoeMargo Price49 WinchesterTrampled by Turtles Adia VictoriaBamd of HorsesThe War on DrugsThe Lumineers
John Cale, one of the true OGs of the international art rock underground, gave a masterclass in performance and reinvention before a packed house at BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival in Prospect Park on August 19.
At 81, Cale is still a striking and potent musical force, a true creator who is forever seeking new artistic horizons. He’s a man whose catalog has spanned everything from the proto-punk of the Velvet Underground to classical minimalism, gorgeous orch-pop balladry, the fiercest (and drunkenly deranged) hard rock rants to, on his first new studio album in a decade Mercy, shades of beat-driven hallucinatory electronica and experimental pop. This new collection finds the adventurous Welshman in the company of youthful collaborators like Weyes Blood, Laurel Halo, Sylvan Esso and Actress.
Belying his age, Cale was a most commanding force on stage – in fine voice, a sharp black Italian suit and dramatically spikey white hair, playing both keys and guitar for a 14-song, career-spanning set.
In a nod to his new album, many of the songs were kicked off with a rhythm machine like “Moonstruck (Nico’s Song),” his tribute to the Velvet Underground chanteuse whose best solo albums, like 1968’s The Marble Index, Cale produced. Another standout from the new album is “Night Crawling,” the first single which recalls his adventures with pal David Bowie in the New York City downtown of the 1970s.
Two of the most interesting and atmospheric numbers were “Rose Garden of Future Sores” and “Half Past France.” Both featured orchestral backgrounds, disorienting chords and spacey electronic effects. The latter was a 180-degree spins on one of the serene ballads from Cale’s acclaimed 1973 orch-pop masterpiece, Paris 1919. Its calm was transformed into a sinister ambient Krautrock noise nightmare. Its queasy string drone foundation was punctuated with bowed electric bass and an eerily harmonizer-effected vocal on the outro line: “We’re so far away, floating into space.” The same sonics were present for his funereal take on Elvis’ “Heartbreak Hotel,” a highlight from his 1975 album, Slow Dazzle.
Sonic dread never sounded so good.
Cale picked up the guitar and rocked strong and hard on old favorites like “Guts,” “Helen of Troy” and “Cable Hogue.” He returned to the keys to revisit a Velvet Underground staple to the delight of the crowd, Lou Reed’s junkie opus, “I’m Waiting for the Man.” Here, he perhaps deferred to the P.C. police by injecting the line “Hey buddy” for Lou’s “Hey White Boy.”
Another fantastic rearrangement was in store with another Paris 1919 ballad, “Hanky Panky Nohow.” Cale and his wonderfully tasty three-piece backing band made this already gorgeous song even more beautiful and relaxed – with a rhythm machine underpinning, a glacial pacing and an added sample of an operatic soprano female soloing on the song’s long coda. This and all tracks performed were complemented with video projections that made their atmospheric sounds even more so.
Cale’s set concluded with a raucous version of “Barracuda,” another punchy rocker from his album Fear featuring some very fine psychobilly guitar soloing.
The surprise of the evening was the set by the show opener Tomberlin, the nom de sound of contemporary folk artist/singer-songwriter Sarah Beth Tomberlin.
Now living and working out of Brooklyn, this Kentucky-born performer played a well-paced set of gentle tunes from her two Saddle Creek Records’ albums, the most recent of which, 2022’s I Don’t Know Who Needs to Hear This…, was recorded a few blocks away from Prospect Park at Figure 8 Studios.
Tomberlin is a confident performer with the kind of droll between song banter that easily won over the crowd, one that was surely there, in very large part, to catch a glimpse of Cale.
The most striking element is her voice. It has both a breathy quality that reminds me of another buzzworthy young performer, Snail Mail, and all power and range needed to bring across one of her dramatic lyrical twists. Her three-piece backing band provided sensitive accompaniment to all her songs, many that we’re mere whisps. Airy Frisell-like guitaring, lots of shimmering brush work on the drums and lush yet minimalist keys perfectly adorned her intimate story songs and their poetic lyrical turns.
Standout tracks in her set were the evocative “Sunstruck,” “Stoned,” “Memory” and the set closer, the sprawling psychedelic “Happy Accident.”
Rock outfit Dogstar have announced that they will be stopping in Brooklyn as part of the tour for their upcoming album Somewhere Between the Power Lines and Palm Trees, the group’s first project in over 20 years. Dogstar is made up of Bret Domrose (guitar/vocals), Robert Mailhouse (drums), and notably, Keanu Reeves (bass). The band is set to perform at the Music Hall of Williamsburg on December 11.
Founded in Los Angeles during the 90s, the group started to formulate their alt-rock sound with garage jam sessions. In 1994 Dogstar would depart on an extensive tour and a year later the collective opened for David Bowie. The band released just two albums together, Our Little Visionary in 1996 and Happy Ending in 2000. Due to the members’ other professional and artistic commitments, the group grew apart, last performing in 2002. However, Dogstar returned this year with the single “Everything Turns Around” off their upcoming album.
We are so excited to re-introduce Dogstar with our new single ‘Everything Turns Around.’ It feels like a fun summer song to us.
In addition to “Everything Turns Around” the group recently released “Breach” off of Somewhere Between the Power Lines and Palm Trees. Made for the summer, both of the albums’ singles channel the Southern California energy that the band has become synonymous with. Somewhere Between the Power Lines and Palm Trees is slated to drop on October 6.
Dogstar’s upcoming tour includes over 25 dates and stretches from each coast of the United States. The tour started on August 10 and runs until December 21. In addition to their American performances, the group also has three shows scheduled in Japan. Click here for tickets and more information.
Dogstar Tour Dates
8-22 Napa, CA – Uptown Theatre
8-23 Menlo Park, CA – The Guild Theatre
8-24 San Luis Obispo, CA – Fremont Theater
8-26 Ventura, CA – Ventura Music Hall
8-27 Solana Beach, CA – Belly Up
8-28 Santa Ana, CA – The Observatory
9-05 Osaka, Japan – Zepp Namba
9-06 Yokohama, Japan – KT Zepp
9-07 Yokohama, Japan – KT Zepp
11-30 Los Angeles, CA – Troubadour
12-03 San Francisco, CA – The Great American Music Hall
Residents of Binghamton’s West Side neighborhood are mowing their lawns and moistening their reeds in anticipation of Binghamton Porchfest 2023, back for an eighth year next Sunday, August 27, from noon to 7 p.m.
Porchfest invites thousands of community members each summer for a free afternoon of live music performed from the residential porches, stoops, and yards of the Abel Bennett Historic Tract. The 2023 festival features 162 local and regional bands performing at 63 host locations, showcasing folk music alongside hip-hop, worship music next door to heavy metal, high schoolers covering Lou Reed, retirees singing Beyonce, classical, jazz, opera, country, and punk.
Food vendors and restroom locations dot the neighborhood and a free shuttle traverses the perimeter of the roughly quarter square mile festival footprint, defined by the rough borders of Riverside Drive, Chestnut Street, Recreation Park, and Beethoven Street. Most roads will be closed to traffic, with free golf cart shuttles offering rides where traffic is prohibited. Lourdes Hospital is offering free parking in their back lot at the end of Lourdes Road. Cans collected during the festival will benefit fundraising efforts for the Danielle House.
Like the many other Porchfests operating independently throughout the country, Binghamton Porchfest is modeled after a DIY community festival hosted by the residents of Ithaca since 2007.
Binghamton Porchfest 2023 comes to life with the support of the City of Binghamton and Mayor Jared Kraham, Cavanaugh’s Grocery, Visions FederalCredit Union, and the generosity of many community sponsors and donors. This event is made possible with public funds from the Statewide Community Regrants Program, a regrant program of the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and administered by The Earlville Opera House. Additional support for the Broome SCR Program graciously provided by the Stewart W. and Willma C. Hoyt Foundation, Inc.
It was a big night for rock fans in Syracuse on Wednesday, August 16th, as The Goo Goo Dolls brought their Big Night Out Tour to Lakeview Amphitheater. O.A.R. opened the show.
It’s been a long road for The Goo Goo Dolls. The Buffalo natives formed in 1986 and have maintained their core two members, John Rzeznik (vocals, guitar) and Robby Takac (vocals, bass guitar) since day one. They are now joined by Craig Macintyre, who took over drumming duty in 2014. Along the way, the band have released 14 studio albums and have an impressive 19 top-ten singles. The band saw their popularity explode in 1997 with the release of “Iris,” which was included on the City of Angels soundtrack. The song spent an impressive 18 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 airplay charts.
The evening kicked off with a set by Maryland rockers, O.A.R. The amphitheater was already well on its way towards full when O.A.R. took the stage at 7:15pm. The band launched in to “Love and Memories,” off their 2005 release Stories of a Stranger, which brought those in attendance quickly to their feet. It was clear early on that many in attendance were passionate followers of the band, as many made their way to the front of the amphitheater to sing and dance along. The band wasted no time playing their familiar hit “Shattered” early on in the set. The band would close out their set with the ever popular “Crazy Game of Poker” which saw the front pit section jump up and down and throw playing cards in the air.
After a lengthy stage change over, the Goo Goo Dolls took to the stage at 9:10. The band took no time breaking out the hits, opening with the high energy “Broadway” off 1998’s Dizzy Up the Girl. It was the perfect upbeat opener, and quickly it was clear the band was excited to be there. Rzeznik and Takac bounced from one end of the stage to the other, with smiles fixated across their faces.
Early in the set, Rzeznik paused to thank the fans of his band who have been there since day one, as well as to pay homage to legendary Syracuse rock club, The Lost Horizon. “I remember coming here in 1986 and playing at the Lost Horizon, and just being amazed that anyone actually came to see us.”
The remainder of the 25 song set saw the Goo Goo Dolls perform their various classics and fan favorites, like “Slide,” “Here is Gone,” “Black Balloon” (which saw fans toss black balloons in the air) along side newer hits like 2023’s “Run All Night” and “Yeah, I Like You.” Along the way Rzeznik took multiple opportunities to thank the crowd and convey his appreciation, proclaiming “I can’t believe I still get to do this, and I want to thank you guys…” before performing one of the band’s earliest hits, “Name.” As the evening neared a close Rzeznik introduced the second to last track as “One you all will know” before playing a cover of Tom Petty’s “I Won’t Back Down,” a track the Goo Goo Dolls and O.A.R. recently teamed up to record in the studio. The band would then close the evening with their 1997 smash hit, “Iris”, much to the crowd’s appreciation. It truly was a big night out for rock fans.
On Friday, August 18, Swedish stratocaster maestro Yngwie Malmsteen and legendary ex-Deep Purple ‘voice of rock’ Glenn Hughes rolled into the Strand Theater in Hudson Falls, New York.
Yngwie Malmsteen – Photo by Derek Java
A note on the Strand Theater – this was my first time at this venue, a great, small theater with a large balcony and smaller floor, all seated, where a few hundred people can fit. It was fairly full on this Friday night; if not sold out, it was close. The near capacity crowd was all-in for a night of vintage heavy with a great co-headline double-bill. This was the first night of the Malmsteen-Hughes pairing, which is touring across America through the end of September.
The Strand Theater – Photo by Derek Java
The doors opened a bit later than advertised, as first-night soundchecking took some time. Luckily there’s an Irish pub next door. The gig started fairly quickly after they let the crowd in – there was a band on before the co-headliners – Southbound Beretta, from Indianapolis, IN. Young guys, not a southern rock or country band as the name suggests, but full-on, blasting, loud, raw heavy rock. Motorhead springs to mind. Two guitars, bass, solid drummer. One of the guitar player sings, and his voice invokes maybe a cross between Lemmy and Blackfoot’s Rickey Medlocke. An odd band to see in a seated venue, these guys should be playing loud in a sweaty bar with cheap beer and whiskey. They had only time for four or five songs, I only caught one song title, “Two For One” (“about a threesome”, said the singer), but it was headshaking stuff. Tons of energy, lots of headbanging and onstage activity that reminded me of early Metallica or Raven.
Southbound Baretta – Photo by Derek Java
Glenn Hughes played next. Ageless is a common cliche floated for any 70s-80s rockers who are still treading stages, often well past their expiration dates, but Hughes, 74 this year, truly is. Still rock-star skinny, full head of hair, and most importantly that legendary voice – unlike many of his peers of the 70s heavy rock vintage, Glenn’s voice is still there, amazing as ever. This is fairly astounding in light of his storied history of excess. He, of course, began with the Birmingham, UK trio Trapeze in the early 70s before joining Deep Purple in 1973 as bassist/vocalist with future Whitesnake man David Coverdale as replacements for the departed Ian Gillan and Roger Glover. As impossible as replacing Gillan would seem, Hughes/Coverdale did it, and in spades, producing 3 classic records (Burn, Stormbringer and Come Taste the Band), before dissolving in 1976.
By this time, Hughes (by his own admission) was deeply awash in cocaine and other habits, and for the rest of the 70s and all of the 80s, while he produced some sporadic, quality work (some reunion tours with Trapeze, the cult classic Hughes/Thrall record in 1982, some vocals on Gary Moore’s Run for Cover record in 1985, and Black Sabbath’s solid but ill-fated Seventh Star in 1986), these projects were torpedoed by his addictions. Amazingly, he’s been clean since ‘91, and in recent decades his solo records and other projects (with Sabbath’s Tony Iommi, Black Country Communion, the Dead Daisies and more) have been some of his best ever.
Glenn Hughes – Photo by Derek Java
This tour is to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Deep Purple’s Burn album (which actually came out in early ‘74), but instead of a front-to-back set of that album alone, Hughes played a mix of classics mostly from his era of Deep Purple, kicking off with a pummeling “Stormbringer” into Burn’s “Might Just Take Your Life”. It was great hearing him sing both the Coverdale and his own parts from these DP classics. His band is astoundingly good: Søren Andersen (guitar), Ash Sheehan (drums) and Bob Fridzema (keyboards). Anderson handled the Ritchie Blackmore and Tommy Bolin guitar parts admirably, and while Fridzema’s keyboards maybe could have been mixed louder, Sheehan’s drums were brilliantly hammering, and brought an added vigor to these great tunes.
And what a set of songs: you can’t go wrong with the funky, stomping “Sail Away”, or the extended “Mistreated”, on which Anderson earned his wage admirably, with Glenn ad-libbing and adding to Coverdale’s straight-blues take on the original. What a set of pipes on this guy. And kudos to Hughes for finishing the regular set with a couple of tunes from the underrated, Tommy Bolin-era Come Taste the Band, an enlarged, astoundingly roaring “Gettin’ Tighter” followed by “You Keep on Moving”, truly great renditions. The lights came on and it appeared to be over, but happily the band strolled back out and encored with the Ian Gillan-era classic “Highway Star” (Hughes handing his bass to a crew member for that one, and hitting every Gillan note as a microphone-toting frontman), before Glenn grabbed his bass again and the band wrapped it up with, of course, “Burn”, a blazing, triumphant version. Yngwie’s work was cut out for him.
Glenn Hughes and guitarist Soren Andersen – Photo by Derek Java
This writer has not seen Yngwie play live in a long, long time. His first NYS Capital Region show was in June 1984, he was probably 20, as part of the band Alactrazz, fronted by ex-Rainbow singer Graham Bonnet, at the Palace Theater in Albany opening for Ted Nugent. Malmsteen dazzled that night, and I snapped up the ‘84 debut Yngwie record ‘Rising Force’ immediately upon release, and that killer mostly-instrumental debut LP was a favorite at the time. To be honest, after a few years I stopped keeping up with his records – his solo band played some good shows opening for AC/DC and Iron Maiden locally, but by the time he reached headliner status for several area shows, I’d checked out.
This tour is promoted as featuring Yngwie’s ‘greatest hits’, but frankly as he had few actually ‘hits’ (other than “If You Don’t Remember, I’ll Never Forget”, a minor mid-80s radio song, played this night as the set-closer), it was more accurately a career-spanning best-of. While some may mock the “unleash the fury”, irony-free presentation, you can’t deny how outstanding the Swede is at what he does. The speed, dexterity and burning intensity of his playing has not abated. The guy is truly an amazing player.
Yngwie Malmsteen – Photo by Derek Java
If you wanted Yngwie fucking Malmsteen, full-on and roaring, this night did not disappoint. In recent years he was doing solo shows, him alone, singing and playing live to backing tracks, but (happily) not this tour. He had a keyboards/bass/drum backing band, all in the corner of stage left. There was a towering “wall of amps” at the back of the stage, maybe 35-40% of which were actually on. Yngwie’s band in the old days always featured a singer out front, but now he does the singing, with the keyboardist and bassist backing him up, and he sounded just fine. The sound itself was crushingly loud, which sometimes made Yngwie’s solos swamped and distorted, and it was clear there were some sound and pedalboard issues throughout the night.
But he played amazingly, looked great for a guy who must be approaching or past 60, clad as you’d expect in black leather pants, black cowboy boots, a black shirt open to the waist and long, jet-black hair and big sideburns. I mean, you wouldn’t want Yngwie wearing an age-appropriate sweater and corduroys with a neat haircut, would you? Hell, no. Note should be made of the hardest-working man on the night, Yngwie’s roadie, who would dutifully switch guitars for the man, often while scooping up the previous guitar, dropped by the boss and feedbacking on the ground, while taping row after row of guitar picks to Yngwie’s mic stand between seemingly every song – every punter in the front rows must have gotten a half-dozen guitar picks, which Malmsteen hurled, flicked and kicked into the crowd all night.
Yngwie Malmsteen – Photo by Derek Java
The setlist covered the whole span of his discography, the only notable omission being the ‘85 Marching Out record, which wasn’t featured at all in the set. Yngwie spoke to the crowd a few times, but the echo on his microphone made it hard to make out what he was saying. But chat wasn’t the point – the long set moved fast, from song to song, with as many arpeggios and fugues and neo-classical superheroisms as the day is long. As a first-album enthusiast, it was great to hear “Now Your Ships are Burned” (Malmsteen handling the vocal admirably), “Far Beyond the Sun” and an absolutely ripping “Evil Eye” in there. There were also a few covers, the most odd being “Smoke on the Water” – Yngwie has always been a Blackmore devotee, and it was a great version, but a strange choice when you’re co-headlining with an actual member of Deep Purple. Or maybe it was a perfect choice. The show was long, loud and unrelenting. As you’d want, really.
A great show – in a footrace, Yngwie may have won in terms of volume, bombast and merciless intensity, but Glenn had the songs, the vibe, and overall the better set of the night. All three bands were top-notch though – kudos to the Strand Theater for booking such a great night of heaviness.
Southbound Beretta setlist: Drive, Two for One, Petal to the Metal, Name on a Bullet.
Glenn Hughes setlist: Stormbringer, Might Just Take Your Life, Sail Away, You Fool No One, Mistreated, Gettin’ Tighter, You Keep On Moving, Highway Star, Burn.
Yngwie Malmsteen setlist (approximate): Rising Force, Baroque and Roll, Like an Angel, Relentless Fury, Now Your Ships Are Burned, Wolves at the Door, (Si Vis Pacem) Parabellum, Badinerie, Far Beyond the Sun, The Star-Spangled Banner, Seventh Sign, Tacotta, Evil Eye, Smoke on the Water, Trilogy (Vengeance), Brothers, Fugue, You Don’t Remember, I’ll Never Forget, Black Star.
Yngwie Malmsteen – Photo by Derek JavaYngwie Malmsteen – Photo by Derek JavaYngwie Malmsteen – Photo by Derek JavaYngwie Malmsteen – Photo by Derek JavaYngwie Malmsteen – Photo by Derek JavaGlenn Hughes – Photo by Derek JavaGlenn Hughes – Photo by Derek JavaGlenn Hughes keyboardist Bob Fridzema – Photo by Derek JavaGlenn Hughes and guitarist Soren Andersen – Photo by Derek JavaGlenn Hughes and Seth Anderson – Photo by Derek JavaGlenn Hughes drummer Ash Sheehan – Photo by Derek JavaCrowd cheering for Glenn Hughes at The Strand Theater – Photo by Derek JavaGlenn Hughes – Photo by Derek JavaSouthbound Baretta – Photo by Derek JavaSouthbound Baretta – Photo by Derek JavaSouthbound Baretta – Photo by Derek JavaThe Strand Theater – Photo by Derek Java