Showing posts with label show review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label show review. Show all posts

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Show Review: Skate and Surf Festival 2014




When the landmark pop-punk and hardcore festival Skate and Surf announced that it would take place for the first time in almost ten years last year, the announcement was met with overwhelming support. That support turned to jeers, however, as the even was marred by a location change that proved to be both a logistical and organizational nightmare, a weekend forecast that simply didn’t co-operate with an outdoor festival, and a rumors of heavy merch cut percentages causing several bands to refuse to sell merchandise at the festival. I was fairly critical of last year’s Skate and Surf, saying that the one saving grace was that I also was able to go to Six Flags each morning before the festival grounds opened (and Fall Out Boy playing an awesome set in the pouring rain didn’t hurt).

So when the festival was announced as returning in 2014, I made a promise to myself. Despite having gone to every New Jersey area Bamboozle/Skate and Surf since 2008, I would only go to Skate and Surf 2014 if Midtown reunited. Well, it turns out festival organizer John D’Esposito got Gabe and the gang back together for not one but two sets on the weekend. As a result, I decided to make the trek to Asbury Park for the second day of the two-day festival. The festival suffered yet another location change this year, moving from Middletown to Asbury Park, but yet again the location change ended up benefiting the festival in the long run. Moving the festival back to Asbury Park allowed Skate and Surf to go back to its roots and allowed the fans to appreciate the festival’s legacy. 

Monday, August 27, 2012

You'll get what you paid for: My Weekend with Circa Survive

Circa Survive is my favorite band. They have been my favorite band since I was sixteen years old. These are facts. We all have that one band who puts into music exactly what you're feeling, details exactly what you're going through, and says the exact things you need to hear to feel welcomed, inspired, and accepted. That's what the band means to me, and to so many others. So when the band set up their Safe Camp at Union Transfer on August 24 and 25 to celebrate the release of their fourth full-length album Violent Waves, there was no way I was going to miss either show. There's a certain level of expectation when it comes to seeing Circa Survive, as they are, without doubt, the best live band in the world, but what's incredible about the band's live show is that no matter how good they were the last time you saw them, they manage to find ways to get even better.



The first night of shows were opened by  Birdy NumNum and the Spirit Squad and Bear Hands, who both had a trancy, indie feel to them, and while both bands sounded on-point, they paled in comparison to the openers for night two. Circa Survive took the stage with the activation of five light screens that projected various colors throughout the set, and Friday's set was boldly opened with "Birth of the Economic Hit Man," the 7-minute opening track on Violent Waves. After "Hit Man" came "Sharp Practice," the first single from the album. Friday's set was focused more on the deeper cuts from Circa's back catalog, featuring songs like the title track from On Letting Go and the underrated Juturna track "We're All Thieves". The band played six tracks from Violent Waves, the highlight of which being "The Lottery," as fans were greeted by the smiling face of Geoff Rickly, former frontman of Thursday, who appears on the album version of the song. Thanks to Thursday's indefinite hiatus, it's difficult to see a situation in which Rickly is able to play the song with Circa Survive often, so to see him onstage one more time was a welcomed surprise.


While Friday's show was memorable in its own right, most of the members of the audience who were lucky enough to attend both record release shows would tell you that Saturday was the better day, thanks to the show's openers. Electronic duo Grimace Federation took to the stage first, and as they played to a crowd of people who probably had no idea who they were. Still, the Union Transfer crowd was entranced by an energetic, mystifying set from a band that looks to make even more waves of fans in the future.


Fellow Doylestown, PA natives Balance & Composure were up next, and their set had a little bit of a twist on it: the band's regular bassist was replaced by Title Fight bassist/vocalist Ned Russin. This resulted in the band playing a little bit more of their older material (from Only Boundaries and the band's split with Tiger's Jaw), rather than supporting last year's breakthrough full-length Separation. The hometown crowd was more energetic for B&C than any of the other openers, and the band's energy onstage was a reflection of the audience's warm reception of a band who gets better and better every time they play live.


By the time Circa Survive took the stage Saturday night, the crowd was filled to the brim with anticipation. The band's set was completely different from the first night (save for the night's closing track, "Get Out"), with only seven songs (out of 30) were played on both nights. Saturday's set saw the re-entry of fan favorites "Imaginary Enemy" and "The Difference Between Medicine and Poison is in the Dose," and featured a song from Violent Waves that wasn't played the day before ("Bird Sounds"). The band decided to end their main set they way they began it the day before, closing with "Birth of the Economic Hit Man" before coming back for a well-deserved encore. 



As I said before, anyone who was able to catch both nights of the Circa Survive Violent Waves Release "Party," as the band called it, should consider themselves very lucky. The band's energy and passion are matched only by their presence and precision, and no other band on earth combines all of these things in a live setting better than they do. It's easy to say this, but the experience of the Violent Waves release shows truly were unlike any other concert I've ever been to, and if it's any indication for what Circa Survive have in store for their fall tour (with Touche Amore, Balance & Composure, and O'Brother), the Violent Waves have only just begun to reach the shore.

BUT, since we're all about giving our readers something special, here's our gift to you: a picture of the setlist from each show! In the picture below, the setlist from Friday is on the right (the one that has "Hitman" on the top), and Saturday's setlist (the one that says "Lottery" on the top) is on the left. It should be noted that while "Frozen Creek" was listed on Saturday's setlist, but the band did not play it due to time constraints.

Keep your eyes out for our review of Violent Waves this week!

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Show Review: Journey's Backyard BBQ featuring Circa Survive


Ah, Summer. The season where worries fall by the wayside, the sun stays out past its bedtime, and life just gets a little bit better overall. And one of those reasons it gets better is all of the concerts you're able to go to for a relatively low price. While Warped Tour has a stranglehold as the premier tour for emo bands to solidify their place in the scene, there's room for plenty of other great shows, and with a company like Journeys putting together a free mini-festival in the parking lots of malls all around America, the only thing you really have to figure out is how to get there. And when the tour came to the King of Prussia Mall in Pennsylvania, with hometown heroes Circa Survive headlining, there was no excuse not to be there. 

The band took the stage at around 6:10pm, after all of the BMX/motocross/skateboarding expos where held and the free giveaways were handed out. With the sun shining down on the music stage, Circa Survive was greeted by hundreds of eager fans of all shapes and sizes, and each of them were equally invited to enjoy a 9-song set (and unexpected one-song encore) from the best live band in the world. 


Beginning their set with the one-two punch of "Through the Desert Alone" and "Glass Arrows" from their most recent full-length Blue Sky Noise, the band mixed new songs and old fairly well, with Circa staples like "Living Together" and "The Great Golden Baby" mixing together perfectly with hidden gems like "Holding Someone's Hair Back" and "In Fear and Faith" from the band's debut full-length Juturna, along with monster singles "The Difference Between Medicine and Poison is in the Dose" and "Get Out" (which ended the main set). Despite the heat and little cloud coverage of the sun's rays, the band's energy never wavered, and Anthony Green was up to his old tricks, commanding the stage with an amount of passion no one else on this planet can match. 


Perhaps the most intriguing part of these kinds of shows is that they are often played by bands who are native to the area who are taking the summer off of touring to finish a new album, and that's the exact reason you won't be seeing Circa in a venue near you until the fall. The band have completed their new album, and during the middle of the set, they played a new song off of that album, titled "The Birth of the Economic Hitmen." The song fit in perfectly, sounded great, and gave the fans a new level of excitement for what's to come from their hometown superstars. What's even better, Anthony Green teased the crowd with information, telling the crowd that details of the album will be announced "soon," and the band's fall tour will be announced "very, very soon." Despite only having enough time to play ten songs, the future doesn't look brighter for Circa Survive, and as one of my favorite bands, I can't wait to see what's next. Until then, I'll have to settle with yet another stellar set from my favorite band. So, there's that.

Setlist:
1. Through the Desert Alone
2. Glass Arrows
3. In Fear and Faith
4. The Difference Between Medicine and Poison is in the Dose
5. The Birth of the Economic Hitmen
6. The Great Golden Baby
7. Living Together
8. Holding Someone's Hair Back 
9. Get Out
10. Act Appalled (Encore)