The Metal Files

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Posts Tagged ‘korova

Striker & Spellcaster Concert Review, San Antonio, TX, May 20, 2015

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Striker, Spellcaster and Weresquatch rolled through San Antonio Friday night.  I had just seen Spellcaster in Chicago at Ragnarokkr and couldn’t really get into the 2 songs I saw after getting blown away by Old Wolf.

We arrived with about 2 songs left from Weresquatch but I didn’t hear anything from them that made me care.

Spellcaster’s main man, Cory, found me before the show.  Great dude.  Spellcaster went on shortly after and were just great.  Super solid, good stage presence and good players.  Unfortunately the sound in the Korova basement leaves a lot to be desired as does the lighting.  Overall it didn’t matter.  Spellcaster rocked the crowd of 40 or so and I look forward to seeing them again at Frost and Fire II in October.  The 3 songs from their new album, Night Hides the World, sounded great, especially the title track.

Striker headlined and I had only listened to some of their stuff a few days prior to the show.  Good solid stuff that translated well live.  My favorite part of seeing them was their great 3-part vocal harmonies.  Much of the crowd had left during their set and admittedly I spent a lot of time talking with my drummer outside.  I’d definitely like to catch them again.

Catch the tour if you can.

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Written by The Metal Files

May 22, 2016 at 8:20 pm

Night Demon & Visigoth Concert Review,San Antonio, TX, April 11, 2016

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This is a busy week for shows and I’m a little further behind in my reviews, so trying to catch them all up today.

Night Demon and Visigoth have teamed up for a North American tour and booked some Texas dates.  Per usual when Night Demon is in town, I put them up at my place and Visigoth got shared space as well.  I didn’t originally plan on hitting the San Antonio show but last minute decided to drive down to Korova for the show.  On the way there I was notified that it would be an early show since the venue neglected to find an opening band.  Typically in San Antonio, these shows would have a handful of openers.

Rodney, Leanne and I enjoyed a great dinner at The Palm before heading over to Korova.  When we walked in, the place was practically dead.  The show was in the basement and I don’t think more than 25 total people were there. Didn’t help that it was a Monday night, but still, that’s pretty week.  At least if there were some local openers, it would have likely provided some additional promotion.

The singer and bassist for Visigoth have been pretty sick with some sort of flu-ish type bug but once hitting the stage, Jake put on a powerful vocal performance to the tiny crowd.  This was only the second date with the touring lineup as the main drummer and lead players for Visigoth were unable to make the tour.  While not perfect, they put on a great show all things considered and the few of us that were there were into it.  The sound in the basement was pretty awful, too, but they made do.  Of their short set, Iron Brotherhood is my favorite.

Night Demon came on and played like there was a packed crowd.  They’re already touring veterans and didn’t let up just because no one was there.  They opened with Ritual and their version of Riot’s Road Racin’.  Want to make friends in San Antonio?  Play a Riot song.  The band was tight and played all of their 2015 release Curse of the Damned and 4 tracks from their debut EP.  Solid set.

After the show I needed to get back home and try to get some sleep as I was going to do this all over again at the Austin show.

 

Written by The Metal Files

April 15, 2016 at 2:07 pm

Uli Roth, Jennifer Batten & Andy Timmons Concert Review, San Antonio, TX, March 5, 2016

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Uli!  Still one of the best alive.  I had bought the meet and greet pass a few weeks ago mainly to get Jennifer Batten in The Book.  I’ve met Uli in the past and had him sign it in 2004.  Great guy.  I got lucky that Batten was out on the patio for a few minutes prior to the show and graciously signed the book.  “What’s this?”  I explained it a bit and showed her the band that she was in.  “Whoa.  That was a short-lived time in that band.”  After that I was able to put the book back in my car and not have to lug it around for the night.  Sweet!  I gave my pass to a buddy.

Prior to Andy Timmons’ set, David Klosinki from Uli’s band got up and played one song, likely from his solo album.  It was a shredder.  That guy is a pure bad ass.

Andy got on stage and played over backing tracks.  It was my first time seeing him and he’s pretty good although not anyone I’d really like to see again.

Jennifer came on playing to backing tracks as well with choreographed  video.  In case you didn’t know, she toured with Michael Jackson for years and did a few years with Jeff Beck.  Her set was enjoyable.  She’s obviously a good player.  She did one song called Cat Fight and prior to playing it pretty much stated that she was a crazy cat lady.  haha.

Uli hits the stage with a bigger band than last time as he’s added a third guitarist.  Unnecessary in my opinion, but whatever.  They opened up with Scorpions’ All Night Long and Sails of Charon.  The set consisted mostly of classic Scorpions and 2 from his solo work.  We left as the encore was starting.  It was all Hendrix stuff and apparently they did an instrumental version of Gary Moore’s Still Got the Blues.  For a set that only consisted of 12 songs, it ran almost 2 hours.

His band was fantastic and John West’s vocals were outstanding.  The third guitarist provided some great backing vocals and sang lead on Fly to the Rainbow.

The sound sucked for Uli, though.  Korova doesn’t have great sound to start with but Uli’s personal sound guy didn’t help things.  Everything was far too loud for that room.  The only time it sounded good was when I went close to the front.

The only other issue was with ticketing.  Why offer digital tickets if they’re not accepted at the door?  Even when the door guy has the list of everyone who bought a ticket.  I was directed to go across the street to the hotel and print it out.  It caused a lot of problems.  I’ll know better for that venue.

Anyway, I bought an Uli Earthquake shirt and the Scorpions Revisited CD and they gave me an Uli Roth record bag.  Anyone want it?  The actual Uli tour shirt looked horrible although it had tour dates on it.

 

 

Written by The Metal Files

March 6, 2016 at 4:58 pm

Loudness Concert Review, San Antonio, TX, November 6, 2015

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posteruseLoudness returned to San Antonio last night touring for the 30th anniversary of Thunder In The East.  I’m really surprised by that based on what happened last time and knowing it was the same promoter.  Seeing that they had slated 8 openers (again) and I’m pretty sure all were ‘pay to play’, I was worried about the show running late into Loudness’ set again.  Lots of people were.  While the last opener was playing, they were getting no respect from the crowd.  People were yelling “pull the plug!”

Loudness was supposed to be in by 1130PM but it was closer to midnight.  Barring anything stupid, they had enough time to play their full set.

They opened with Crazy Nights, Like Hell and Heavy Chains, all three from their most popular album, Thunder In The East.  The band sounded and looked great.  The crowd was very into it as well.  They followed up with the title track of the new album, The Sun Will Rise Again.  It sounded great and I bought the CD prior to their set along with a bandanna and tour shirt.

Their set was mixed up pretty well with 2 songs from the new album and everything else from the classic era, including Street Woman from the first album.  They also played 2 from my favorite album, Lightning Strikes.

It was a great set and the venue looked about half full, which I find odd from the once metal capital of the USA.  For their encore, they re-played Crazy Nights with Riot’s Don Van Stavern on bass and backing vocals.  That was fun but it would have been cool to have had them do a different song with him.  But oh well.  Great night!  There were no lowlights to their show.

I did buy the meet and greet to make sure I could get The Book signed.  I forgot to bring it with me in 2006 like and idiot.  They were all super nice and I wasn’t even too bothered that the new drummer signed the book and my Disillusion CD.  I mentioned to Yoshi and Akira about seeing that NC show and Yoshi said he remembered that one and the poor attendance.  After snapping a quick foto, I was walking away and said, “Arigato Loudness!”  All four of them stopped signing stuff and looked right at me and individually nodded and said, “Arigato!” right back at me.  That was pretty cool.

Written by The Metal Files

November 7, 2015 at 6:04 pm

Satan Concert Reviews, San Antonio and Austin, TX, October 21-23

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Days 2-4 of Mitchfest with Kelz consisted of 3 straight shows with Satan in San Antonio and Austin and it’s just easier to satanALLIMG_6402combine the reviews all in one post.

We mess around Austin for a little bit before heading back to the house to rest up for Tuesday night’s show with Satan in San Antonio at The Korova.  We got there a little before Satan showed up and helped them load their personals from the van to Korova’s green room.  They looked pretty good after playing Houston the night before.  They recognized us from the Richmond show earlier in the year.  Satan was being backlined on this tour by the venue and/or the opening acts.  Seemed that there were a few compatibility issues with guitar heads to the effects that Ramsey/Tippins used but those quickly got fixed with the arrival of a couple of Marshall amps.

Austin based Firestarter ’82 opened the show and I stuck around for their set as their bassist is a good pal of mine.  She did a fine job as always.  Local thrashers, Aggravator, played next but we missed them as we were having a couple of drinks next door.

We get back right before Satan hits the stage and as expected, they delivered an awesome set to about 40-45 people.  The crowd size was quite unfortunate, especially for a city that often touts itself as the metal capital of the USA.  Things change I guess.  And it was a Tuesday night…but still.  How often are you going to get the chance to see Satan?  Satan played flawlessly as expected.  They were great when we saw them in Richmond this year and I expected no less this time.  They did not disappoint.  It really can’t be stated enough how great of a guitar duo Russ Tippins and Steve Ramsey are.  Ross’ vocals are stellar, especially for a 61 yr old man who can still belt out the falsetto with no problem.  Sean and Graeme held the bottom down as Satan rolled through a mostly similar set to earlier this year with only a few changes.  They were awesome and have become one of my favorite live bands.  Brian’s not a big talker between songs beyond introducing the next song and I’m fine with that.

It was also great seeing some old pals that I hadn’t seen in a while, namely Rob Doom, Jaime, Mando and of course Rodney who was the show promoter.  A new friend, Henri, came in from Holland just to see these shows with Satan and Militia.  Pretty cool!

Kelz and I left promptly after the show for the 75 minute drive back to Austin.  Of course it was full of conversation about the show and old times.

Satan Setlist The Korova, San Antonio, TX, USA 2014

Day 3 of this Mitchfest didn’t consist of much other than foraging around town for food and resting.  This night’s show consisted of Satan, local speed/thrash metal legends Militia and my band, Eternal Champion, opening up.  What a perfect bill of classic styled metal!  We had to be at the venue by 730 to load in and we were backlining all bands that night.  We did a quick rehearsal and then headed over to Beerland to load in.  We got everything set up and then grabbed a quick slice of pizza and a beer across the street to wash it down.  There was a good crowd rolling in after the doors opened at 9.  Lots of friends who work for one of my company’s clients came.  It was awesome seeing a bunch of non-metalhead friends show some support like that.
We hit the stage a little after 10PM and breezed steadily through our set.  Minus my bass being out of tune for the first verse of the first song (wtf?), the set seemed tight and was extremely fun.  The crowd was right up front with us and it was a blast.
Up next came one of my favorite bands, Militia, who have been here since the mid-80s and reemerged about 5 years ago.  Original drummer Phil Achee came to town from Alabama to play this show and it was great seeing/hearing him on the skins again.  It just felt right.  Mike Soliz’ vocals were on point and I’m still amazed every time I see and hear him on stage.  He’s a beast of a singer and one awesome guy.  I think they gained a lot of new fans that night.
And then Satan.  The crowd had thinned out a little but not that much and Satan rolled through the same set as the night before.  I enjoyed seeing and hearing Graeme playing through my bass rig.  He made it sound a lot better.  haha.  After finishing their main set and destroying everyone who was left for their set, the house lights came on and the music from the soundboard started playing.  The band was a little disappointed that they didn’t get to play their encore.  So was I.  But it was a great show.  I’ve not had that much fun playing a show in ages and getting to do that with 2 of my favorite bands made it even more special.

Satan Setlist Beerland, Austin, TX, USA 2014

Day 4.  We’re tired.  Lack of sleep, not eating properly etc was catching up to my old ass.  haha.  We went out and got some tacos and bounced around to a few places before getting the nod from Satan’s tour manager that they were ready to eat.  I had offered to take them to my favorite BBQ joint in town and we chowed down.  Two of them are vegetarians so their options were limited but they seemed satisfied.  The others loved the ribs, sausage and pork tenderloin.  I think they were happy to just get something that wasn’t pizza or from a fast food restaurant.  I have to admit that it was a bit surreal having a meal with those guys.  Yeah, they’re just people, I know that.  But they’re also people that I’ve been listening to since the early 80s.  It was fun.
This night’s show featured a totally different lineup consisting of Sweat Lodge, Ditch Witch and Natur, all bands that I’m not into in the least.  Not at all.  0%.  Although I think Natur could be a little more workable to me if their riffs went somewhere.  These bands also draw the “we dress like we’re 1975 hippies”.  I’m pretty sure most of them were born in the mid to late 80s.  Not my thing but whatever.
I stayed outside for the two openers and watched about half of Natur’s set.  I was strictly there for Satan.  As they were setting up, Kelz and I staked our spots right up front.  I wondered how many people there would be familiar with them but it seemed like a decent amount of people were.  A pit lasted throughout most of the set and Kelz and I were flung to the stage a few times each, but I didn’t mind.  It wasn’t a violent pit at all and reminded me of the 80s a bit.  Satan played through their set and were great again.  Two nights in a row they didn’t get to do their encore.  They also didn’t do their instrument as there was no where for Brian to stand during that song.  He had trouble getting to to the stage during the opening song as the crowd was packed up there.  Again, Satan destroyed another show.  After finally getting kicked out after closing, we were exhausted.  Completely.  Totally worth it.
This show marked the last night of MitchFest.  It was great seeing Kelz come to my city and hang out.  We had a blast and always look forward to the next gathering of Mitches.