The Metal Files

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Posts Tagged ‘austin

Meeting Harlan Glenn of Juggernaut 08/04/12

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I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, I LOVE TEXAS METAL…but let’s clarify (again)…classic Texas Metal.  Since moving to Austin in 2006 I’ve been fortunate enough to meet a lot of guys from a lot of those classic bands thanks in large part to Jason McMaster (Broken Teeth, Watchtower, Dangerous Toys etc).  Jason’s still one of the hardest working guys in the business and it’s not difficult to catch one of his several bands playing around town.  Last night was one of those nights as I popped into the Red Eyed Fly to see Jason’s Metallica tribute called Killa Maul which only plays the first Metallica album in its entirety.  As a bonus, San Antonio’s Martyrhead was opening up.  They’re a Motorhead tribute which features Bob Catlin (SA Slayer, Juggernaut) and Art Villareal (SA Slayer, Karion).  Definitely some Texas metal legends.  As I was talking to Jason during Martyrhead, he pointed out that the guy in front of us was Harlan Glenn of Juggernaut.  Of course I asked Jason to introduce me and he kindly obliged.

After talking with him for a few minutes, I asked him if he was going to be around for the night as I wanted to run over to my apartment to get my book and Juggernaut CD for a signature.  He said he was there for the night and would sign anything.  I run home and return quickly and we started talking again and he signed the book and the CD.  It was cool hearing stories from the old days in San Antonio with Juggernaut and his life now in Los Angeles.  Quite interesting.  I always liked the album he did with them (Baptism Under Fire) and their song on Metal Massacre VII, In The Blood of Virgins.

It was a nice random meeting and I love it when I am able to get the book signed by someone from the old “underground.”

All photos by David Prewitt/DaveTV (another Austin legend in his own right).

Harlan and a happy dude

Harlan signing the book and CD

 

 

Written by The Metal Files

August 5, 2012 at 1:40 pm

Cheap Trick Concert Review, Austin, TX 7/29/12

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Let’s face facts.  I was never really a big Cheap Trick fan although at some point or another I owned their debut album and Dream Police.  It’s not that I didn’t like them, to be honest, I think I’ve liked every song I have ever heard by them.  But for whatever reason I just never got in to them.  I believe part of that was due to my brother Robert’s lack of interest in them in 70s and I pretty much drew my musical tastes in those days from what he fed to me.  However I do remember myaunts Diane and Debbie liking them but we only saw them once a year when we’d visit Pennsylvania.

I saw Cheap Trick one time before in 1999 at the Hampton Bay Days Festival but I was pretty far back in the crowd and couldn’t really grasp the energy.  I also don’t remember the crowd being that excited either.  When tickets went on sale for last night’s show at The Moody Theater / ACL Live, I had to get tickets for it.  That venue is awesome and has been bringing in some great shows so far.

In the early 2000s, I was playing in a band called The Renegades of Sluts (this is not a typo) and we did She’s Tight and Hello/Goodnight in our set sometimes.  Good fun.  I’ve always loved She’s Tight and was hoping we’d get to hear it.  Perusing recent setlists for Cheap Trick’s Global Warming Tour.  Last night was an off night for them while on tour with Aerosmith and they played Dallas the night before.

When I can, I try to buy extra tickets to shows.  Sometimes to resell for profit and sometimes just to go ahead and get them on presale when maybe a friend isn’t able to do it at the time.  I bought 2 for this show and ended up asking my dear friend Molly to come with me a few weeks ago.  Perfect!

We get to the show and the opener is on.  I had no interest in seeing them after listening to a few tracks on Youtube earlier in the day.  Not my bag at all.  We hung around the lounge until they were finished.  Signs were posted around the venue stating that Cheap Trick would be on at 9.  We went and found our seats and were getting excited for the show.  Molly wanted to hear Southern Girls but they ended up not playing it.  I did get to hear She’s Tight, though.

The lights go down right at 9 am the band hits the stage opening with Clock Strikes Ten.  Zander was wearing a band leader type uniform and hat for most of the show.  Nielsen is dressed like he always dresses.  I don’t know what Peterssen was dressed like, but it was out there.  He had an Elton John thing going for sure.  Unfortunately Bun E. Carlos no longer tours with the band, but Rick’s son, Daxx, has been handling the live duties for the last 2 years and did a fine job.

They played a good set and the highlights for me were certainly She’s Tight, Oh Candy, The Flame (always loved this song), I Know What I Want and Borderline.  I was a bit surprised as to how many songs I recognized.  The great thing about their music is that every song is right around 3 minutes long, old rock and roll style.  The Beatles influence on them is overt and it’s a wonder I even like them due my my disdain for the Beatles.

Robin’s voice started a wee bit rough but got stronger and stronger as the night went on.  In The Flame, he nailed the high note at the end.  I was truly shocked.  He still has a lot of power in his singing.  While I’ve never looked at Rick as a stellar player, he’s certainly solid and entertaining.  He jumps around a lot for a man who is 65.  Tom Peterssen apparently invented the 12-string bass and he used a few different ones all night.  Of course Rick used about a dozen different guitars and an 8-string bass for one song.  The whole band was really good in general.

I did notice from our balcony set that there was a piece of paper taped to the floor in front of Zander’s mic that said “AUSTIN TEXAS”.  Rick wasn’t sure where he had played last night as he stated, “Where did we play last night?  Atlanta?”  Funny.  But I guess when you’re touring that much, things get blurry.  What a wonderful problem to have, eh?

During Surrender, Rick grabbed the hand of a little kid with a mohawk and yanked him on stage.  They handed him a ton of guitar picks and he was tossing them out to the crowd.  He also helped to sing the song with Robin and knew all of the words.  It was pretty neat thing to see.

After Surrender, they left the stage.  After about 2 minutes they came back on and played 3 more songs:  Dream Police, Gonna Raise Hell and Goodnight.

It was a great show and hopefully I’ll have another chance to see them again.  I also wish I would have taken the opportunities to have seen them more in the 80s and 90s.  Such is life.

One thing I thought was weird was that during the main part of the set, security made the people in the floor seats stay at their seats, no one was allowed at the stage at all.  They were hardcore about it.  If you don’t want people rushing the stage at a rock show, put up a barricade.  Easy.  I’ve seen them used at this venue before (Megadeth anyone?).  After the encore started, everyone rushed the stage and security didn’t try to gain control again.  I also noticed that the venue was barely 3/4 full, which I found a bit surprising seeing that the place only holds a few thousand folks.  I guess they’re just not that popular here.

Go see them if you get a chance, you won’t be disappointed.

“AUSTIN TEXAS” on the paper in front of the mic

I will be the the flaaaaaame

beauty and the beast

Megadeth/Volbeat/Lacuna Coil Concert Review, Austin, TX 3-03-12

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Motorhead cancelled their last remaining dates from Mustaine’s Gigantour because of some lung and throat issues that Lemmy was having.  What a pisser.  I love seeing Motorhead live and coupling them with Megadeth is a super extra bonus!  But no luck.  Get well, Lem.  Next time!

We missed Lacuna Coil completely and I wasn’t bothered by that at all.  Not a fan in the least.

Volbeat comes on and they weren’t what I thought I remembered listening to online.  It was just “happy fun rock”.  First few songs kind of reeled me in then every song after that started sounding the same.  I was over it

and couldn’t wait for them to stop playing.  Annoyingly they kept doing little 5 second spats of “Ace of Spades” and it was utterly annoying.  Then at the need of their set they broke into a Slayer snippet.  I thought it was silly.  But hey, when you need a crowd to get excited, what do you play?  SLAYER.  They’re singer was good, however, and reminded me a lot of Dave Maneketti of Y&T.  The only reason I even mildly wanted to check them out was because Hank Shermann of

Hank Shermann

Mercyful Fate fame was paying guitar for this tour.  Every once in a whole you’d hear a classic Shermann fill or something, but overall he didn’t do much.  Maybe just trying to pay the bills with them?  Who knows.  At least he’s doing something, eh?  Again, I was ready for them to stop.

Time for Megadeth.  I love them for the most part.  Sure, I stayed away from the Friedman era, but the albums they have done since 2000 have all been really good.  Dave Mustaine, as I have stated before, is one of the best metal guitarists on the planet.  No, you won’t get the neo-classical widdly-diddly stuff, but the man has chops and again tonight he was on.  The band sounded great, except for the drummer.  I’ll get to him in a bit.

Dave’s voice sounded good, his playing was fucking great and he just brought a really positive energy to the whole show.  Dave Ellefson did as well.  They both looked like they were having fun.  Throw a shredder like Chris Broderick in the mix and you’ve got a potent combination of musicians.  Mustaine and Broderick are from 2 totally different schools of guitar playing.  Chris is a technical shredder where Dave is just a true player and a riff machine.  You can feel the passion in his riffs and solos.  They were just great and I am so glad I got to see them again.

Now, on to Shawn Drover and his drumming.  I’ll go ahead and say it, Dave should find a better drummer.  Drover is such a stale and boring player.  I’ve said that since the first time I saw him in Megadeth.  Not to mention the dude doesn’t play a lot of the old stuff correctly.  Personally I think he ruins Peace Sells.  He’s like

Dave's Heavenly light?

the Matt Sorum of metal.  What a fucking bore!  Jimmy Degrasso was more interesting and even Nick Menza, who I also thought was stale, was a step up from Drover.  BORING!

The Megadeth setlist was pretty good, but as always I was hoping for some more older material.  I think

because of Dave’s religious convictions, we’ll never see Looking Down The Cross or the Conjuring live ever again.  Too bad.  I was also really hoping for My Last Words, but no luck.  They did play Set The World Afire, Peace Sells, Wake Up Dead and In My Darkest Hour.  Some of the other shows also got Hook In Mouth, but oh well.  They did mix the setlist up from all of the other shows which was cool.

Again, the band brought such a positive energy that you couldn’t help but get into it.  And you know what?

DAVE MUSTAINE > METALLICA

There, I said it.  For as much as Dave has never let go of being thrown out of the biggest “metal” band on the planet, I’d argue that he’s written better albums continuously than they have.  Popularity is one thing and Metallica surely has that game won.  But quality of music and musicianship is, in my opinion of course, Mustaine’s game.

It was such an awesome show and I can’t wait to see them again…and again…and again.

Setlist:

  1. Set the World Afire
  2. Wake Up Dead
  3. Hangar 18
  4. Trust
  5. Angry Again (dedicated to Alex Jones)
  6. In My Darkest Hour
  7. She-Wolf
  8. Public Enemy No. 1
  9. Whose Life Is It Anyways?
  10. A Tout Le Monde w/Christina Scabbia
  11. Ashes In Your Mouth
  12. Sweating Bullets
  13. Head Crusher
  14. Symphony of Destruction
  15. Peace Sells
  16. No Class
  17. Holy Wars…The Punishment Due

Peace Sells...

A Tout Le Monde w/Christina Scabbia

Jr.

Chris Broderick

MegaDave

Uncle Vick showed up!

"Said I was out with the boys..."

Thank you and goodnight!

Symphony X/Iced Earth/Warbringer Concert Review 2/28/12 Austin, TX

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Austin’s metal scene was a bit lacking when I moved here 5 years ago.  San Antonio has always been the metal capital of Texas but I think Austin has been picking it up a bit in the last few years.  While we’re still not getting Maiden, Priest, Scorpions and other big headliners like that, we’re still getting a steady stream of smaller acts.  Megadeth has come regularly and Motorhead always comes.  Luckily I get to see them together this coming weekend for Gigantour 2012.

Emo’s has been pretty consistent for bringing good metal since I’ve been here.  Now that they’ve moved to a bigger venue on the east side, they’ve been doing their due diligence and booking decent shows.

Last night was Symphony X/Iced Earth/Warbringer.

Warbringer opened up and I am indifferent about them.  Solid retro-thrash, but not bringing anything new to the table.  Like I said last night, “they’re just ripping off Testament.”

I once was a huge Iced Earth fan, then they released Something Wicked This Way Comes and I was out.  I’ve tried listening to all of their albums and they’ve never got me back.   I saw them in 1999 and filmed it.  You can see the entire show on Youtube. They picked up another singer recently, Stu Block, who used to be in Into Eternity.  The band was solid, as expected.  Jon Schaffer makes sure he’s got good players in his band.  They played 3 or 4 older songs and sounded good and the new stuff they played sounded fine.  Stu has a really good and clean high range, but his “normal” voice is a bit too much like Matt Barlow, minus the Hetfield-ah! tendencies that Matt had.  Whoever their lead player is these days is pretty good.  One annoying note, I really hate the crowd participation songs and they did it in over hald their set.  “hey hey hey hey!”  Ugh.

I saw Symphony X in 2000 at L’Amours in New York when they opened for Halford.  I thought they were good, but just not my cup of tea.  I like a handful of tracks from their first 3 records, but prefer to hear them on CD than live.  All very talented guys.  I left after their first song.

Iced Earth

 

Written by The Metal Files

February 29, 2012 at 9:07 pm

Lemonheads Concert Review Austin, TX 021112

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Between 1993 and 1995 I played in a band called I AM I.  We played a lot if cover tunes mixed with our originals and one of the bands we covered a lot was The Lemonheads, especially from their album It’s a Shame About Ray.

When I saw that they were coming to Austin and playing that album in its entirety, I had to go.  I’ve always loved that album and that era if my life always brings good memories. 

After the opening bands played, Evan Dando hit the stage opening his set with some acoustic songs.  After 3 or 4 songs, his new backup band hit the stage and they went right into the album.  They sounded great.  It was an outdoor show and it was cold, right around the freezing mark.  They blew right through the set and did some more songs from other albums. 

Evan’s voice sounded great and his playing was solid especially for being that cold.  One thing about that album, there are a lot of licks on there that remind me of Alex Lifeson.  A few of the guys I was hanging with all felt the same way.

It was a good night of non-metal.

image

Written by The Metal Files

February 12, 2012 at 10:26 am

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