Monthly Archives: April 2011

Coheed and Cambria @ House of Blues Boston

Phenomenal show last night by Coheed and Cambria. They’ve been a band for 10 years (a little longer if you count their direct predecessor Shabutie, but they’re not), and so they’ve hit the road on a little tour in which they’re playing their whole first album, plus a whole acoustic set and some additional full-band material. Oh, and also no opening act, just Coheed for 3 hours.

The acoustic set began the show, and it was where most of the more interesting setlist items were placed. It featured a song each from Travis Stever’s side project The Davenport Cabinet and from Claudio Sanchez’s side project The Prize Fighter Inferno, plus a new song called “Iron Fist”, a mellow song well-suited to the acoustic arrangement. It actually reminds me quite a bit of some of the Prize Fighter Inferno material. “Pearl of the Stars” sounds excellent whether electric or acoustic, and the different arrangement for the acoustic performance of “Here We Are Juggernaut” makes it into an almost completely different song.

Following a short break to move the giant “turbine blades” further back on the stage and give the boys a break, the band returned to perform The Second Stage Turbine Blade in its entirety. The energy level of the band was possibly at the peak of the four or five times I’ve seen them, with them feeding off the crowd’s energy (which was also at a high level) and creating a bit of a cycle back and forth.

Another brief break following the album closer “IRO-Bot” led to a closing set of five songs, which aside from “Welcome Home” were not necessarily obvious choices. Notably, this was the first time I’ve seen Coheed and Cambria where they didn’t play “In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth”. (In fact, now that I notice it, they didn’t play a single song from that album, which is kind of stunning.) However, “Far” is one of their best songs in my opinion, and its inclusion was welcome. The set closed with “The Black Rainbow”, which took a nice deviation from the recorded version at the end and closed the set surprisingly well.

Only one song was played during the encore, but that one song was well worth it: Claudio and Travis doing an acoustic arrangement of “Elf Tower, New Mexico,” a song unreleased until it appeared as a bonus track on a reissued version of The Second Stage Turbine Blade a few years back.

All in all, this was one of the best shows I’ve been to in a while, and definitely my favorite Coheed and Cambria show, not just because of the length of the show, but because the band was truly energetic and performed extremely well.

Without further ado, a few pictures and videos I captured, and the set list:

Before the show:
pre-show

Claudio playing “Always and Never” to start the show:
Claudio solo

Mother Superior:

Iron Fist:

Second Stage Turbine Blade / Time Consumer:

Time Consumer:

33:

Junesong Provision:

Neverender:

God Send Conspirator:

IRO-Bot:

Ten Speed (Of God’s Blood and Burial):

No World for Tomorrow:

Welcome Home:

The Black Rainbow:

Elf Tower, New Mexico:

acoustic set:
Always and Never
Mother Superior
Pearl of the Stars
Iron Fist
Milkfoot
Who Watches the Watchmen?
Here We Are Juggernaut

Second Stage Turbine Blade album set:
(Second Stage Turbine Blade)
Time Consumer
Devil in Jersey City
Everything Evil
Delirium Trigger
Hearshot Kid Disaster
33
Junesong Provision
Neverender
God Send Conspirator
IRO-Bot

additional rock set:
Far
Ten Speed (Of God’s Blood and Burial)
No World for Tomorrow
Welcome Home
The Black Rainbow

encore:
Elf Tower, New Mexico (acoustic)

scouring the bins

Record Store Day 2011

scouring the bins

I woke up bright and early this morning to partake in Record Store Day with my good friend Kevin up in Salem, NH, where two participating stores lie about 1/4 mile apart and had staggered opening times. Got a few good things, but none of the stores I went to had a couple of the releases I was looking for (most notably the Jimmy Eat World Bleed American reissue). They might just not have made it to this area, which would be sad.

One thing about this year is that there were many, many more people lined up for opening time than last year. One of the guys at Bull Moose said 10 times the number from last year. Neither store was particularly well prepared for it, and especially Bull Moose who had arranged their record bins in a very horrible manner, and the resulting mass of humanity attempting to get their mitts into very small areas was, well, depressing. It honestly felt at times like some crazy Lord of the Flies animal instinct scenario, battling for the scraps of a dead animal the pack leader had just finished with. I honestly felt sad to have been involved in it in any way (and I barely was, as I tried to stay back from that a bit even if it missed the chance to get some records I truly wanted).

A better system for this needs to get worked out for next year if crowds are going to increase again (or even stay the same). Maybe stores need to use a ticket system, only let so many people at a time, or place the merchandise in a way that will prevent near-fighting. I don’t know what the solution is, but better planning seems to be necessary on the part of stores.

Anyway, here’s my loot (a fair amount of which was not RSD-exclusive):

James Blake – S/T 2xLP
Jeff Buckley – Grace LP
Circa Survive – Appendage 12″ EP
Daft Punk – Translucence 10″ single
Death Cab For Cutie – In Living Stereo! 7″ sampler thingy
Foo Fighters – Wasting Light 2xLP
Foo Fighters – Wasting Light CD
Foo Fighters – Medium Rare LP (covers album)
Green Day/Husker Du – “Don’t Want to Know if You Are Lonely”
Manchester Orchestra – “Simple Math” b/w “The Plan” 7″
Pearl Jam – Vs. LP
Pearl Jam – Vitology 2xLP
Radiohead – The Bends LP
Radiohead – OK Computer 2xLP
Rush – “Caravan” b/w “BU2B” 7″
Sonic Youth – Whores Moaning 12″ EP
Wild Flag – “Glass Tambourine” b/w “Future Crimes” 7″

Madison, Wisconsin, March 12, 2011

[note: I originally wrote this a few weeks back for a website that my cousin has started up. It never ended up there and I forgot about it for a while. I wanted it to go somewhere, so I'm putting it here. I also realize now that it seems a bit unfinished, but I think it's better to leave it as it was in the moment.]

I was born in Wisconsin. It’s been a long time since I lived there, but I have deep roots as almost my entire family is still there or nearby, and I return as often as I can. In some ways, it is more “home” to me than my actual home in Boston. This is a difficult feeling to describe, but when I return to visit, there is a certain sense of peace that is often lacking otherwise.

As much as possible, I try to keep up with the events going on in Wisconsin. This is sometimes not as easy and it seems, and generally ends up being related mostly to sports. Nonetheless, even here in Boston, it was notable amongst quite a few of my friends on November 2, 2010 when Russ Feingold of all people lost his U.S. Senate seat to an upstart Tea Partier named Ron Johnson. We all were able to sense that something was happening in America, and that it was very wrong. Little did we know just how bad it was going to be, but know we would just a few months later.

The news of Scott Walker’s “Budget Repair” Bill spread quickly. It was clear, even immediately, that the bill was hardly that, but instead an obvious attempt to appropriate power and distribute it to the extreme wing of the Republican Party and to the corporate interests that fuel it. Collective bargaining was the initial target that brought Wisconsin’s workers to Capitol Square, but as we have learned since, that was only the beginning. The bill, and the eventual budget that Walker wishes to enact this spring, would bring about sweeping changes and cuts to a wide swath of state agencies and institutions that promise a scary conclusion if enacted. Wisconsin would be left with a massively decimated educational system, from elementary schools all the way up to one of the nation’s greatest research universities in UW-Madison. Services that assist the poor, elderly, or otherwise disadvantaged would be decimated, leaving hundreds of thousands with nowhere to turn. Environmental services would lose funding, leaving the door open for corporate interests who misguidedly believe that environmental regulation serves only as a speed bump to the filling of their coffers to pollute as they wish. State assets could be sold off without even a bidding process to whatever of Scott Walker or the Fitzgerald brothers’ friends benefit the most from such graft. Over time, these sweeping changes would end up driving workers out of the state, creating a woefully undereducated generation unable to fend for themselves in the modern world, and driving those smart enough to realize what is going on to leave the state for greener economic and intellectual pastures.

All of this is indeed very bad. It is, in fact, unprecedented in its awfulness. But the very worst is the manner in which the Republicans in Wisconsin’s seats of executive and legislative authority have taken on their task. Not content to simply use their majority in both legislative houses to pass bills, the Republicans under Scott Fitzgerald’s lead have gone a step further and spit in the face of the laws and Constitution of Wisconsin and the rules of their own assemblies. The actions of March 9 and 10, including the Committee vote with almost no public notice to supposedly separate the fiscal items from the bill, the Senate vote immediately following, and the rushed 10-second vote the next day in the Assembly, show not only a complete disregard for parliamentary procedure and the laws of Wisconsin, but also for their fellow legislators and most importantly, each and every Wisconsinite from Superior to Kenosha.

For weeks, as I watched from afar as untold thousands of Wisconsinites marched on the Capitol, standing up for the Wisconsin way of life, I longed to be alongside them all in Madison. I knew from the moment I read the initial reports in February that what was and is still happening portends the utmost importance, not only in Wisconsin, but for all of America. It is not insignificant that this battle is occurring in Wisconsin, a state long at the forefront of labor issues, rife with its own history of bloody battles and political struggles that set the tone for workers across the country. My own family has a deep connection with these struggles. My grandfather and great-grandfather were union men in Beaver Dam and were extremely active members. That same grandfather was the president of the Dodge County Central Labor Council, and my grandmother the president of the Auxiliary. Shortly after the Madison protests began, my uncle sent to my cousin and me a picture of my grandfather from the early 60s standing alongside Senator Nelson and Congressman Kastenmeier, reminding us of his passionate work, outside of his grueling factory job and raising of nine children, he did to help improve the lives and working conditions of others.

With each day that passed, I yearned more and more to join in the cause. I spent a great deal of time keeping track of each day’s events, but one learns only so much from reading text on computer screens and seeing the occasional photograph. March 9 was the final straw, the final outrage that would send me that weekend on a plane to Milwaukee and a short drive to the Capitol. As it turned out, that Saturday might have been the most powerful to date, with some reports suggesting that nearly 200,000 people showed up that day, and the 14 Democratic Party senators returning to address the crowds. I was blown away by the immenseness of it all, and found myself overwhelmed by emotion several times during the day. I met many people that day, from literally all walks of life, each one driven by the idea that we really are all alike and we all deserve the same respect.

The trip rejuvenated me, as I’m sure the past month has rekindled the drive of many people not just in Wisconsin, but in her neighbors embattled with similar issues, and throughout our Union. Each day, each week has brought with it new challenges, new battles that we must face in defense of our rights and our democracy, but it is a fight we all must take up, because democracy isn’t just a state of being, it doesn’t just exist every day, it is something that must be fought for each and every day, lest it die while we’re not looking.