Coheed and Cambria >> Play a Show on Earth in San Francisco [The Masonic]

As the show beings, Claudio stands alone in a single spotlight with an acoustic guitar, fingerpicking the lonely isolated notes of ‘Ghost’ off the new album. The crowd is still calm, with sparse whistles and distant COHEEED!’s punctuating the sonata like-melody. We all know what we are in store for, we all know how heavy this shit is going to get and I believe everyone in the crowd – like me – is using this time and this song to build our energy, to conserve.

Coheed and Cambria

Our conservation efforts did not bode well as the band rolled right into ‘In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth:3’and did not let up after that. That song sounds heavy as fuck live. Their set list was a blend of classics and new songs; but because Coheed is not a band that douche-ifies as they get older [aka the Coldplay effect, previously known as the U2 effect], the crowd never had a chance to rest as all the new shit is just as beastly. The mosh pit swirled, growing in size like a snowball of arms, elbows and men with bangs rolling down a mountain gaining momentum until critical mass was reached when the band ended their encore with ‘Welcome Home’. At this point, the entire General Admission floor was smashing around at full speed into each other. If you were trying to escape melee, your only safe harbor was the balcony seats. At a single point in the song I counted 8 simultaneous crowd surfers getting tossed around like beach balls, it looked like fucking Chinese acrobats or something. I watched the lead singer of I The Mighty get straight tombstone on his head and immediately stand up, gave double devil horns and get hoisted onto the crowed again. The lights were fully on as well so you could see every grimy detail of the mayhem that was occurring. It was the most fun I have had in a long time and I rarely have fun at rock concerts anymore.

 Coheed & Cambria

If I am going to pay 10 bucks for a Bud Light, deal with everyone's BO and have sore fucking calves tomorrow, then your music better make me lose my mind at some point. Unlike an EDM show, you can’t really dance at a rock concert, and the crowd rarely feels like we are on the same wavelength together like when there is an explosive drop at Drum n Bass show. Add that to the fact that most modern rock bands can’t play their instruments. So you end up spending an hour listening to songs sound exactly as they do on the album except with horrible sound quality and watch some dude strum the same fucking power chords as every other rock song ever written and some drummer play the same boring 4/4 beat. This is you must see Coheed live, to remember what rock was and could be. If you are a fan of their music, then I shouldn’t have to explain how good these guys are at playing their instruments. Claudio’s high tenor, almost feminine voice, hitting impossible notes with such precision and passion all the while furiously playing a blazing speed riff as the drummer duck-faces his way through a monstrous beat is a rare sight in rock today. Rarely does a band have two guitarists and both of them are shredding different, complicated lines that harmonize with each other. Trust me, at your next shitboy rock concert pay attention to the guys with guitars, both dudes are probably strumming the same thing as each other with so much distortion you can’t tell how bad they are until one of them plays a sleepy ass 8 note per bar guitar solo and the other one grabs the mic with both hands during the slowdown. God I hate that shit.

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Last fall, Coheed and Cambria released their first album in 15 years that did not take place in another galaxy. Instead of the usual setting of Heaven’s Fence [78 planets connected but a mysterious energy]; The Color Before the Sun takes place in a cramped brownstone in Brooklyn, New York.

If you have no idea what I am talking about, all of Coheed and Cambria’s previous records were all concept albums related to The Amory Wars, a comic book series written by Claudio Sanchez. The 7 albums tell the story of the Kilgannon family’s struggle to save the universe from a galactic Archmage by protecting the Keywork. Yes you read all of that correctly and yes it is as awesome as it sounds. So when you hear Claudio’s screech command ‘MAN YOUR BATTLE STAAAATIONS’, Claudio is actually singing about battle stations...like in space….like with lasers and shit. Of course, as with all good science fiction, we are allowed to extrapolate and personalize any metaphors that feel meaningful to us. It takes the mundane but very real human themes and pressure tests those ideas using impossible scenarios. Claudio uses the context of an intergalactic war to examine very earthly ideas like family, sacrifice, and responsibility. ‘What does duty mean when the universe is at stake and you're the only one who can save it?’ is very similar at its root to ‘what does duty mean when it's Monday morning and I am about to call off from work because I stayed up until 3am watching Daredevil on Netflix? Or what does duty mean when you know it's finally time to be a Father?

Coheed, like so few others, is a band that has an entire catalog of very good consistent albums. If you are a fan of any of their work chances are you must be a fan of all of it. I do not dislike a single one of their songs, I love most of them and others are true classics, with a sound that evolves yet is most certainly still Coheed and Cambria. This 8th album is no different,it still sounds very much like a Coheed and Cambria with its heavy riffs, progressive song structure and complex vocals. You can still hear the Megadeth-ian, 70’s prog rock influences, but it feels entirely different because the lyrics and themes are Claudio’s first person telling of his own life rather than a 3rd person space saga. He writes about the claustrophobia of moving from the wide open spaces of upstate New York countryside to a cramped Brooklyn apartment [Islands]. He writes a song for the newborn son he had yet to meet [‘Atlas’]. He writes a song about identity and the struggle of accepting all the different shades of which we are [‘Colors’]. He writes about the lingering doubt that we could have done things differently, maybe better [‘Eraser’]. He writes a love song to his wife [‘From Here to Mars’].

Walking home on this breezy, quiet San Francisco night, I am forced to draw a lot of parallels here to life in my 30’s. This band has gotten older and wiser. They have stopped fantasizing about grandiose themes as they begin to realize these earthly issues of growing up because you have to and questioning if there was a better way to get this point seem heavy enough and can feel as important as saving the universe. Life has thrust change and growth upon on us. Change can be unrelenting, inevitable, exciting and terrifying, yet, on this evening, as the crowd erupted, as Coheed and Cambria and I thrashed, raised our fists in the air, and banged our fucking heads just like we’ve always done. I realize that not everything has to change….and even though I am older, I will always be me.

Carmichael

Carmichael

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Atreyu >> Metaled Up in Atlanta [Masquerade]

Atreyu >> Three bands came through Atlanta and entered into the Masquerade on a beautifully cool night with metal on the agenda.

Atreyu Atreyu AtreyuAtreyu

The first was a local band, Souls of Redemption, who are going places fast. Their loud metal sound made an impressive impact, well received by the crowd who were still piling through the doors to the Heaven stage upstairs. It's always great to see new and local bands in any area. Souls of Redemption will be ones to watch. Next to grace the stage was Cane Hill. For those attending Rock on the Range in May, these guys will rock your pants off with hard hitting metal and an attitude.

The time had come for Atreyu to take the stage. This band can certainly entertain a crowd. They are the party! Everything with this band works, sound of riveting guitars, bass and drums, this is metal. Atreyu is back and this night made me realize that they only got better with time away. Rock On!!

 
Tiffini

Tiffini

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McDowell Mountain Music Festival returns in March!

MMMF16 >> This year the McDowell Mountain Music Festival will be in its 13th year and every year it seems like the lineup one-ups the prior bill w/ bigger and better artists. In just the last few years MMMF has brought in Phantogram, Passion Pit, G Love, Ben Harper, etc. and in 2016 they aren't fucking around again.

MMMF

This year the McDowell Mountain Music Festival lineup boasts Beck, Kid Cudi, Animal Collective, Porter Robinson, St. Lucia, MS MR and what I'm perhaps the most excited about, Bloc Party. The variety of artists that are uniting under the desert sun this spring is a testament to how much the festival wants everyone from all walks of life there.

MMMF16

In addition to the killer lineup and what all desert dwellers know to be the best time of the year here, the festival promises to deliver the best experience with multiple stages, VIP areas, delectable food and beverage in several areas of the grounds and mitigating the impact to Mother Earth by complying with the latest in sustainability standards.

So this weekend you should take a break from the ballparks and get out to Hance Park for the annual McDowell Music Festival for an entire weekend of great music, live and in full effect under the spring desert sunshine.

marc

marc

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Big Black Coat >> the new Junior Boys album is re-fresh

Junior Boys >>  are back in full effect this year with their 5th studio album Big Black Coat, a followup to their 2011 release It's All True. The title cut 'Big Black Coat' is the first single of the album and although its the last track, it is a perfect summation of of the album's essence.

Junior Boys - Big Black Coat

The duo of Canucks have done it again. Big Black Coat is superb. It's crisp. It's electric. It's indie electro dream synth at its finest and it aligns with the sophisticated sound Jeremy Greenspan and Matt Didemus have been evolving to. This is what their 5 years of fine tuning under a new label have resulted in.

Jeremy explains, 'One of the nice things about doing the solo stuff and in particular the album with Jessy, because it did so well, was that I could stop thinking about Junior Boys as being the thing I do and start thinking about it as a thing I do. That meant I could work on Junior Boys music with the same spirit as I did when it was new. It was hugely liberating and invigorated me, because I was doing things I felt really good and confident about. I was really happy with the last two Junior Boys albums, but if I look back on it, they were challenging records to make, in a way that this one absolutely wasn’t.'

The refresh is apparent in the new album and the crispness of it exudes through every track. It's mathematical yet sometimes that sustain of the heavy walls are at odd signatures to make it beautifully unpredictable.

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Perhaps predictably, my favorite track is 'Big Black Coat' but I do also really like the cover of 'What You Won't Do For Love'. Although the original song by Bobby Caldwell is unrecognizable aside from the lyrics, the soul of it is still inherent and the track explodes with so many variations of sound.

These gents from Ontario are kicking off their album tour stateside MAR-11 so it would behoove you to check them out in your city if you want some indie synth disco up in your souls and experience what Jeremy and Matt have produced 5 years in the making.

'The fact that we haven’t put out an album in a long time has been liberating in that we haven’t been so phenomenally successful that everyone knows who we are. With this album, a lot of people will be hearing us for the first time. There’s a freedom that comes from that.'

Tracklist:  1 >> You Say That 2 >> Over It 3 >> C'Mon Baby 4 >> Baby Give Up On It 5 >> M & P 6 >> No One's Business 7 >> What You Won't Do For Love 8 >> And It's Forever 9 >> Baby Don't Hurt Me 10 >> Love Is A Fire 11 >> Big Black Coat

marc

marc

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Eric Prydz will set off Palladium in LA on back to back nights in FEB

Eric Prydz >> is coming to LA this month and will be performing back to back Friday and Saturday sets at Palladium FEB 19th and 20th. The venue is perfect for what is sure to be a double dose of hot beats for those in LA who like to get down.

Eric Prydz

Prydz has been busy this past year and his momentum doesn't seem to be letting up, working with Haitian producer and DJ Michael Brun. He's on the bill for he's Coachella, TomorrowWorld and Ultra. Plus he's constantly bringing hotness remixing Alicia Keys, Tiesto, Calvin Harris, etc.

Talent aside, there's a big heart pumping too. He produced a new track in Haiti featuring Haitian artist J Perry, which is being released to raise money for Artists for Peace and Justice, a charity that gets support from other big impact people from James Franco to Olivia Wilde and Ben Stiller. The cuts just dropped last Friday and all proceeds are going to charity via Spotify's charity platform.

If you're in Southern California you need to make it out to one of these nights with Eric Prydz on the decks. You won't be disappointed.

marc

marc

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Epica >> was epic in Atlanta [Masquerade]

Epica >> took to the stage in Atlanta inside the Masquerade last night and it was -- epic. Fans of Epica poured into the music venue to the Heaven stage for the show on a cool, rainy night but the energy was high and the audience response was one many will not soon forget.

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Tiffini

Tiffini

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Stick Figure >> Putting Smiles on Faces in Santa Cruz [The Catalyst]

Taking this Thursday opportunity to throw it back, way back, all the way to last Friday night. Ok, it's not that far back but it will be worth it trust me. At least it was for me because last Friday I got to go see Fortunate Youth and locally grown Stick Figure in Santa Cruz. The bands played at The Catalyst club, a local landmark and a staple for live music and all that is Santa Cruz. Having grown up in the bay area and spent many a summer day and night on the beaches of Santa Cruz, I'm almost ashamed to admit this was my first visit. It may have taken thirty plus years but it was worth the wait.

Catalyst

Fortunate Youth was the opener, and to be honest I wasn't expecting much. They seem to be a band that follows me to every reggae festival and concert I go to. Like myself they are multiple year veterans' of California Roots Festival in Monterey as well as The Emerald Cup in Santa Rosa. Somehow our paths never really crossed, likely because I had my mind made up I didn't like them. Didn't hate their music but listening to what was available online I could file it in the same sleepy cabinet as Iration and a handful of similar bands. However, sure enough midway through their set I would recognize some songs and found myself bobbing along with the crowd; ‘Sweet Love’ and ‘Trippin’ being the most memorable. It was actually the perfect mellow warm-up to get the crowd in an irie mood for the headliners to come.

Fortunate Youth

Stick Figure is the musical brainchild of lead singer and guitarist Scott Woodruff. It's actually even more than that. The first Stick Figure albums were all him. He wrote, produced and recorded everything himself, meticulously laying down tracks one by one, manicuring every sound and instrument until it was just right. The time was now for the often shy and reclusive singer now, to leave the confines of his studio in the Santa Cruz mountains to take on a full band and tour in support of the newest album Set in Stone.

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The set started strong as the crowd's anxiousness seemed to match Scott's nervous adrenaline bringing great energy coursing through the Catalyst with old favorites, ‘Vibes Alive’ and ‘Weight of Sound’. Although the sounds were crisp and lyrics light and clear, the middle of the show took a lull. It seemed to be a combination of less familiar new material  and Scott seeming to get lost and retreat into the music himself. To his credit he pulled it back and fittingly with the song ‘Breathe’ he seemed to relax, come back out of his shell and command the stage once again. He closed out the show with strong new singles ‘Smokin Love’ which features Collie Buddz on the album, and ‘Choice is Yours’ which is a collaboration with Slightly Stoopid, also from Set in Stone.  The encore was my personal favorite, and closing song from the new CD Smiles on Faces. The penultimate track of the album was the perfect closing number. It showcases intricate melodic arrangements, strong vocals including a collaborative hip hop verse or two from keyboardist K-Bong, and most importantly encapsulates the positive vibe the band put out all evening. It really did leave everyone leaving with smiles on their faces.

Stick Figure

Looking forward to see what Scott and Stick Figure do in the coming years. As he gets more comfortable with larger stages and live performances, I have no doubt this Dave Grohl of reggae will continue to grow the already positive and supportive fan base that followed them to the Catalyst last Friday night. Give tanks and praise, and Jah bless.

 
Charles

Charles

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