Brand New / Thrice / meWithoutYou @ Atlantic City 12/1

December 2, 2007

The House of Blues in Atlantic City is always an interesting venue: the crowd is usually full of drunk males in their mid-twenties, and the crowd usually doesn’t know too much about pits, instead just pushing into each other over and over. While this was certainly true this cold December evening, it didn’t do much to distract from three bands who played extremely solid sets.

meWithoutYou opened the evening to a crowd that didn’t know much of their material. They played much from Brother, Sister, including songs such as “C-Minor”. It is my opinion that their spoken-type vocals are usually very strong lyrically, but the delivery gets boring on the albums after awhile. Luckily, the band is completely tight live, and singer Aaron Weiss performs with his entire heart, seemingly holding conversations on stage with people who aren’t there. Drummer Richard Mazzotta didn’t stop through the entire set, as the band seamlessly transitioned from each song to the next. The band played for about a half-hour before exiting from the stage, thanking the crowd numerous times for listening to them as they did.

Thrice took the stage next, surprisingly opening with The Artist In The Ambulance’s “Stare at the Sun”. Although most of the crowd was certainly in attendance for Brand New, Thrice and Brand New fans tend to overlap, so the crowd was very into Thrice as well. “Firebreather”, one of Thrice’s heaviest songs to date, followed before the band kicked into 2002’s “Kill Me Quickly”, an extremely energetic tune that certainly kept the crowd moving. The band didn’t slow up, continuing with “Silhouette”.

Some technical difficulties would follow through the set, beginning with setup issues before the band played “Digital Sea” live. It was extremely peculiar to see singer Dustin Kensrue on stage without a guitar–he instead used some sort of digital effects box and microphone. The song is certainly much stronger live than on the album, and Dustin’s energy and passion for it seem to be the clear reason. The full setlist:

Stare at the Sun
Firebreather
Kill Me Quickly
Silhouette
Digital Sea
Burn the Fleet
The Artist in the Ambulance
Flags of Dawn
The Whaler
Don’t Tell and We Won’t Ask
The Messenger
Deadbolt
The Earth Will Shake

I had never heard Vheissu b-side “Flags of Dawn” live; the band played the song incredibly, however–certainly better than the song is recorded. In fact, aside from “Firebreather”, all of the evening’s Alchemy Index songs were new to me live, and I was very impressed. Guitarist Teppei Teranishi took over keyboard duties when needed–and did so perfectly.

Surprisingly, the band played four cuts from their 2003 major-label debut , including “Don’t Tell and We Won’t Ask”, a song Dustin introduced the song as a song “[the band] all love[s]“. Thrice played staple “Deadbolt” before ending with “The Earth Will Shake”, which may be my favorite Thrice song. The song has always received great treatment live, but something about the song this evening made it even heavier than normal. Perhaps the bass and drums were simply clicking perfectly, or Dustin’s vocal delivery was better than normal, but the song sounded the best it ever has.

Thrice did play thirteen songs as direct support to Brand New, but the band certainly needs to get out on a headlining tour to support their latest disc so that they can play for a longer time. An incredible setlist, and arguably the best performance of the evening, Thrice could not have performed any better at their first show ever in Atlantic City.

It took much longer than normal, but Long Island’s Brand New finally took the stage late into the evening. Opening with “Welcome To Bangkok” the band put out a great vibe and played extremely tight. “Sowing Season” and “Millstone” followed before “Sic Transit Gloria..Glory Fades”, each song sounding very tight. The band utilized two drummers and some extra percussion instruments for the end of “Millstone”–a trend the band hasn’t bucked since starting it about this time last year.

The band actually played eleven of the twelve tracks from The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me:

Welcome To Bangkok
Sowing Season
Millstone
Sic Transit Gloria..Glory Fades
The Shower Scene
Me Vs. Maradona Vs. elvis
Luca
Archers
Why Don’t You Find Out For Yourself (Morrissey Cover)
Not The Sun
Deguasser
Jaws Theme Swimmng
You Won’t Know
Limousine
Jesus
Untitled

It was great to hear “The Shower Scene”, the best song from 2001’s Your Favorite Weapon. “Me Vs. Mardona Vs. Elvis” was exceptionally powerful this evening for some reason, and “Limousine” was as strong as ever. Guitarist Vin Accardi and a guitar tech wrestled during “Archers”–I guess his guitar part isn’t quite that essential.

Jesse performed “Why Don’t You Find Out For Yourself” from Morrissey’s amazing Vauxhall and I album before the full-band played “Not The Sun”, the only song from their 2006 effort I had yet to hear live. Along with a few other songs from that album, I could do without hearing it again live.

Unfortunately, the band only managed to throw in a few Deja Entendu songs, leaving out some excellent songs in the process. The encore was essentially a waste–a weak version of “Untitled” was the last song of the evening, leaving a bitter taste in the mouth of fans who had hoped for a few more songs from something other than The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me.

Following Thrice’s performance this evening wasn’t easy by any means, but Brand New did their best. A few more older cuts would have helped a lot, and even effectively performing an encore would have made their performance seem a lot stronger. I’ll be attending the bands’ Philadelphia show December 7, it will be interesting to compare setlists and performances.


Brand New / Anathallo / Colour Revolt @ Atlantic City 5/28

May 29, 2007

I had never been to the Borgata Event Center (though I do enjoy the Borgata Casino as my favorite casino in AC), so I was pretty excited to see what their area for concerts (definitely not “shows”) was like.  It was interesting–carpet, stadium seating, a gigantic stage, and a huge standing area.  The biggest acts in music today routinely sell this venue out.. looking at the upcoming acts you’ll see legends: Bob Dylan, The Beach Boys, Chicago, Earth Wind And Fire, Morrissey, and plenty other big name acts.  I estimate the venue held about 5,000 last night for the sold out show.. much larger than the venues that held only hundreds in times past when I’ve seen this band.

Colour Revolt opened, and they played well enough.  Anathallo followed, and they put on a unique show, filled with many instruments you wouldn’t normally find at a “rock concert”.  Their vocals could definitely have used a volume boost, it was often hard to hear them.  They were a nice change of pace to the typical “scene bands” you usually find as openers, though.

The crowd the entire night was absolutely terrible, a trend that I’m finding is all too common now that bands like Brand New are breaking into the mainstream–or that “emo” is becoming incredibly popular.  Primarily little kids who only wanted to hear “Seventy Times 7″ or “Jude Law and a Semester Abroad”, meat-heads only there to hold their girlfriends, and other walks of life not found at these shows only a few years ago, the crowd was rude, talkative during the quiet songs, and plain ignorant to most of the bands’ material–even Brand New.

Brand New’s setlist:

Coca-Cola
Luca
Archers
The Shower Scene
Millstone
Limousine
Okay I Believe You, But My Tommy Gun Don’t
Sic Transit Gloria..Glory Fades
Jaws Theme Swimming
Untitled Demo 05
Play Crack The Sky
Untitled Demo 01
Welcome To Bangkok
Sowing Season (Yeah)
Jesus Christ
Handcuffs
Degausser
You Won’t Know

Eighteen songs, with thirteen of them consisting of “new material”.  The crowd didn’t know anything aside from the one track from Your Favorite Weapon and the four from Deja Entendu, continually yelling for the band’s older material during quiet new songs such as “Limousine” or “Handcuffs”.

The demos/b-sides from The Devil And God Are Raging Inside Me were a nice surprise, since I’ve heard nearly every other Brand New song at least a five times live.  “Untitled Demo 05″ is begging to be recorded and released, and “Untitled Demo 01″ would be a perfect opening to some sort of b-sides EP.  “Coca-Cola” was a great way to open the show, despite the crowd not knowing the song at all.

Jesse was much more into this show than he was at Bamboozle (see my review of that for details); the band sounded much tighter as well.  It’s a mixed bag about their song-selection: it would be nice to hear more of my favorite Brand New songs from Deja Entendu, but it is nice hearing so much new material.

Aside from the unexpected demos, highlights of the set included the extended jam in the middle of “Okay I Believe You, But My Tommy Gun Don’t”, the “loves you so much” buildup in “Limousine”, Erica from Anathallo singing on “Play Crack The Sky”,  and the entire encore that pretty much began with the end of “Welcome To Bangkok”.  “Degausser” remains one of my favorite Brand New songs (still, I only need to hear it ONCE per show), and the band played it flawlessly.  Vin was wearing 3-D glasses during the performance, and someone was using a voice box set to “robot” to do the backup vocals (such as “When I arrive will God be waiting and pacing around his throne; will he feel a little Old Testament?”).  It was a great touch.

It was very nice to see Brand New playing a solid show, after their horrendous Bamboozle outing.  The crowd was terrible, but it didn’t stop Long Island’s finest from putting on a great show.  I anticipate the band’s upcoming tour with Thrice and meWithoutYou.