One of the wonderful things about being your own editor is that
establishing your credibility as a writer is below “ability to wrestle
alligators” on your list of priorities, unless you plan on actually being
successful with your blog – or, unless you blog about wrestling alligators.
Fortunately, I’m interested in neither at this time, which is a good
thing because I went to see a Coheed and Cambria concert on Saturday, and
objectivity can go right to hell; they’re an unbelievable band.
Admittedly, I despised Coheed when “A Favor House Atlantic” hit the
MTV2 circuit about eight years ago (and yes, there was a time when not only did
MTV2 broadcast music videos, but new videos actually “hit the circuit”). “The
singer looks weird and sings like he’s a girl, I can’t understand the words,
why aren’t they singing about breakups or eternal angst, which one of those
guys is Coheed and which one is Cambria, and who are the other two guys then,
I’m not listening to this, I'm going to Azerbaijan."
Avenged Sevenfold happened to be one of my favorite bands at the time,
and about two years later, they began touring for their new CD with special
guests…Coheed and Cambria. Yeah. The band that made videos about mermaids and centaurs and wrote songs about total nonsense was touring with a quintet of
muscled metalheads.
I watched a promotional video for the tour that started by showing A7X
live, followed by “featuring COHEED AND CAMBRIA.” I was probably a split second
from X’ing out of the video..
HOLY HELL WHAT WAS THAT?
The superb opening riff of “Welcome Home” hooked me. They write, like,
rock songs? Hard rock songs? I dove into their back catalog and have purchased every
record since.
A few years later, I saw them live for the first time at the House of
Blues in Atlantic City. My friends and I like to play the “What’re they gonna
open with?” game before any show we attend, and we debated for a solid ten
minutes before that concert. Surely, they’d leave Welcome Home for the end and
open with another smaller hit, like Favor House, In Keeping Secrets or Time
Consumer.
Nope. They started the damn show with “Welcome Home,” whipped the
whole place into a frenzy, and proceeded with one of the best concert
experiences I’ve ever had.
I’m sure none of you are asking, “Why, Matt? Why does this bizarre
rock band deserve your virtually unconditional love and praise?” Well, nobody,
I’m glad you asked, because the answer is simple: they do just about
everything, and do it excellently.
Even experienced retroactively, listening to the band’s progression
from emo-punk to 80’s hair metal to gray, fuzzy hard rock to whatever the hell
their upcoming double album turns out to be is fascinating. Musically, the band
proved they’re as technically sound as the best bands in each of the
aforementioned genres, and lyrically, lead singer/guitarist/songwriter/head
honcho Claudio Sanchez has learned to package his poetry and storytelling into
pleasant phrasing and even (gasp) traditional rhyme schemes.
Oh yes, storytelling…I should mention that. So, while each individual
song deals with ordinary human elements and themes like love, death, betrayal,
war, family, coming of age, and the like (but with a special emphasis on that
“love and death” bit), most average humans don’t do daily dealings with people
or things known as Prises, Newo Ikken, or IRO-bots, unless you’re one of the one-percent.
The entirety of C&C’s musical catalog fits into an extended story
set in Heaven’s Fence, a galaxy of planets held together by beams of energy,
forming a shape known as the Keywork (it looks like this, or this). The actual
concept follows the family of Coheed and Cambria, who are actually robots
created to destroy the evil sorcerer Wilhelm Ryan (or Supreme Tri-Mage)
determined to defy his fellow mages and rule Heaven’s Fence. Ultimately, destiny
falls into the lap of Coheed and Cambria’s son (robo son!) Claudio (hm), who
must take his place in history and save Heaven’s Fence and the Keywork from
Ryan and his army.
Here’s the thing, though…until about a year or two ago, I had
virtually no understanding of the storyline. I knew there was a science fiction
saga behind the albums, but WHO CARES GUITAR SOLOS.
Hundreds of bands write concept records, including several in theunderground rock-punk scene that spawned Coheed and Cambria. Even considering the
scope of Sanchez’s alternate universe, however, it may never have been less
crucial to comprehend the storyline of a concept record in order to enjoy the
music. There’s enough variety in the 75+ songs they’ve written about the Amory
Wars (the official name of the storyline) to not give a shite about what a
Hound of Blood and Rank is, or why the story’s narrator is talking to a
bicycle. For those who do want to dive into the story, though, the band obliges, pumping out comics, novels and even a potential live-action feature with MAHKY MAHK.
Listeners will certainly hear familiar ingredients in the C&C
stew, but never familiar enough to seem derivative. Yes, Sanchez owes a lot to
Rush, both in the extended concept and his high-pitched “Geddy Lee with an accent” vocals. (Rebecca told me that her mom once heard a Coheed song and asked where they were from, expecting
an answer like Iceland or Antarctica or Saturn. They’re from New York/north
Jersey). Yes, a million crappier bands exhibit atmospheric elements of Coheed’s earlier
work (albiet with far less creativity - open strings and slight reverb alone do not an emo verse make, as I believe Nietzche once said). Yes, Eddie Van Halen heard “Feathers” and wants his guitar tone back. Yes,
some serious bands write pop songs as well, and some bands can seamlessly
convert their electric epics into stirring acoustic showcases.
Very few bands do all of the above, though, and even fewer pack the
feel of a theatrical, arena-ready performance into a bar or club the way Coheed
has each time I’ve seen them in the past four years. (Fewer still can play every single song they've ever written live, either) Friday, my friend and I
returned to the House of Blues where I’d seen Coheed play for the first time
years ago as they began touring for the aforementioned new record. Yes, nearly
1,000 words later, I’ve gotten back to the concert itself. Sorry, guys.
Our tickets read “8:00,” so, unsure if that meant “showtime” or
“doors,” we arrived at 7:45 to learn it meant “doors.” For the first time at a
non-festival show, though, I saw a schedule of times for the opening acts and
Coheed. This proved useful because, while I occasionally really enjoy the new
bands, my impression of Coheed’s opening acts in the past has been poor to
middling. To the Irish Pub we went. (If you ever need to find a bar to simply "chill" at in Atlantic City, the Irish Pub's your place. If you can't find it, look for the guy on the boardwalk wearing the enormous "IRISH PUB" sign around St. James Place).
At 10:45, we made it back to the House of Blues just in time for the
band’s entrance. Opening with “No World for Tomorrow” and “Gravemakers and
Gunslingers,” a killer one-two punch of 80s rock dramatics and bravado, each
member demonstrated a combination of nearly flawless musicianship and unbridled
energy you rarely find in smaller venues. The newest addition to the crew,
bassist Zach Cooper, fit in perfectly with Sanchez, guitarist Travis Stever and
prodigal drummer Josh Eppard, contributing to vocals in a similar fashion to
the band’s former bassist Mic Todd, who was kicked out for threatening to blowup a Walgreens unless the store pharmacist gave him drugs.
Since I spent this entire post kissing serious Coheed ass, I’ll give a
couple quick highlights from the concert rather than detailing the show front-to-back.
·
My friend, a 5’6” or so-tall girl, and I stood
on the back periphery of the mosh pit that opened up in the front third of the
venue. While I typically enjoy jumping into the pit for a few songs, my job
Saturday was to ensure no nut jobs or enormous dudes knocked us around or
blocked our view while we rocked out and sang.
This was generally pretty easy, since Coheed fans are generally more of an “energetic dancing/moving” crowd than a “speed metal moshing” one. But during the band’s power ballad “Mother Superior,” two guys continued to body-check people like they were listening to Slayer for the first time (or as if there weren’t a dozen better songs during the set to lose your mind to). As fans waved smuggled lighters and cell phones, a handful of security guards knifed through the crowd and threw the jackasses to the floor like a streaker at a football game. One of them fought tooth and nail, implying he was either hopped on something other than Jagermeister, or he is totally oblivious to his surroundings.
After the song, Sanchez addressed the crowd: “I don’t know what it is, there’ve already been like, what, five fights tonight? It seems like the older we get, the more violent our crowds get.” The whole crowd screamed in approval. AMERICA.
This was generally pretty easy, since Coheed fans are generally more of an “energetic dancing/moving” crowd than a “speed metal moshing” one. But during the band’s power ballad “Mother Superior,” two guys continued to body-check people like they were listening to Slayer for the first time (or as if there weren’t a dozen better songs during the set to lose your mind to). As fans waved smuggled lighters and cell phones, a handful of security guards knifed through the crowd and threw the jackasses to the floor like a streaker at a football game. One of them fought tooth and nail, implying he was either hopped on something other than Jagermeister, or he is totally oblivious to his surroundings.
After the song, Sanchez addressed the crowd: “I don’t know what it is, there’ve already been like, what, five fights tonight? It seems like the older we get, the more violent our crowds get.” The whole crowd screamed in approval. AMERICA.
·
Despite the above story, I want my children in
as many moshpits as possible when they’re growing up. Not crazy Wall of Death
shite necessarily, but a good ‘ol fashioned circle pit. Running full speed into
other people for hours is a great way to expend energy and burn up some pent-up
aggression. Plus, particularly if they don’t end up playing football or hockey,
the pits will toughen them up.
However, you’ll never find a more considerate bunch of people than
concert-goers in a pit who either a. See someone fall, or b. See someone lose
something. Hit the turf in a pit and 95 people will surround you to help you up
and keep others from trampling you before returning to their barbaric activity.
Drop a phone or lose a shoe, and they’ll converge to help you look for said
item. Mosh pits are the best.
·
As a gift to the man helping Sanchez sell his
home, who happened to be in the audience that night, the band played a strong
cover of the Dio-era Black Sabbath song “Heaven and Hell.”
·
The only song played from the group’s most
recent CD, “Year of the Black Rainbow,” was the lesser-known “Made Out of
Nothing.” Considering Eppard is less technical (read: good) than the
hyper-progressive Chris Pennie, the drummer for “Black Rainbow,” many songs on
that record might be phased out of live performances in the future. What Eppard
lacks in chops, though, he makes up for in pure enthusiasm and singing ability,
as he leant backup vocals to “Mother Superior” and “The Suffering.”
·
Few moments in life beat singing along to your
favorite band’s anthem with thousands of others. I’m not talking about going to
a Bon Jovi concert and screeching the chorus of “Livin’ On a Prayer” like you
have at every party or dance since 6th grade. The most rewarding
sing-along of your life will come when you hear a more obscure band’s ardent
fans shout the chorus or bridge of their best tune like a million
kindergarteners belting out their only line in a school play they’ve been
rehearsing for months for.
With Coheed, nearly every song is like that, but none more than the conclusion of “In Keeping Secrets.” After the song’s thundering first half dips into a softer, multi-part, two-minute bridge, the band builds back up to a grand finish with a electrifying melody of “whoas.” No words to remember, just shout along. After the band linked the bridge and the outtro with an improvised sound collage of a breakdown during the House of Blues show…well, it’s better if you just watch/listen (at 9:10).
With Coheed, nearly every song is like that, but none more than the conclusion of “In Keeping Secrets.” After the song’s thundering first half dips into a softer, multi-part, two-minute bridge, the band builds back up to a grand finish with a electrifying melody of “whoas.” No words to remember, just shout along. After the band linked the bridge and the outtro with an improvised sound collage of a breakdown during the House of Blues show…well, it’s better if you just watch/listen (at 9:10).
·
The modern concert “encore” is contrived to the
point of cliché. Coheed didn’t even bother pretending as if they wouldn’t be
back after their final song, sending out three or four sound guys to check
their instruments before they came out for four more songs, including new tune
“Domino the Destitute,” old favorites “Favor House” and “Welcome Home” (with
all the usual double-necked guitar shenanigans you'd expect) and concert
closer “The Final Cut.”
While “The Final Cut” usually evolves into a 15-minute improv session, this evening’s edition ended with…mannequins. All night long, two mannequins in bowler hats sat atop the amps onstage, one black and one white. For the final number, a member of the stage crew took the white mannequin off-stage, and another person dressed in an all-white spandex suit ran onstage in its place, chasing Sanchez around the drumset during Stever’s talk-box solo.
Eventually, the spandex man stole an amp, rolled it to the far left side of the stage, and sat atop it. A third stage crew member gave it a push, and the spandex man rolled right by Sanchez, waiting with his guitar. The spandex man grabbed it and exited stage right just as the rest of the band finished the song and bid the crowd adieu. Like the old saying goes, it ain't over 'til you feel like you've been doing shrooms.
While “The Final Cut” usually evolves into a 15-minute improv session, this evening’s edition ended with…mannequins. All night long, two mannequins in bowler hats sat atop the amps onstage, one black and one white. For the final number, a member of the stage crew took the white mannequin off-stage, and another person dressed in an all-white spandex suit ran onstage in its place, chasing Sanchez around the drumset during Stever’s talk-box solo.
Eventually, the spandex man stole an amp, rolled it to the far left side of the stage, and sat atop it. A third stage crew member gave it a push, and the spandex man rolled right by Sanchez, waiting with his guitar. The spandex man grabbed it and exited stage right just as the rest of the band finished the song and bid the crowd adieu. Like the old saying goes, it ain't over 'til you feel like you've been doing shrooms.
·
As we departed, my friend pointed out a small,
yellow-ish doll sitting on top of one of the stacks on stage with red light-up
eyes and dimples. Yes, folks, a light-up Pikachu doll presided over Saturday’s
festivities. Now, I can die in peace.
My hope is that, with this post, I've expunged all the Coheed-love from my system and I won't have to gush about them again for at least...*checks watch*...30 minutes. We'll see how that works for me.
Great post! I'm sad I didn't go.
ReplyDeleteNow, I'm going to learn Pearl of the Stars on guitar. I had played with the idea this morning, but, having read your post, it shall happen.
It seems that at least two Coheed superfans were having similar thought processes.
Great song, but I'm garbage at finger-picking, so it..well...sounds like garbage when I play it, heh.
DeleteAll 100% true - even though we're both constantly talking about Coheed, it was still a really great read as always
ReplyDelete