Showing posts with label The Tragically Hip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Tragically Hip. Show all posts

Monday, August 2, 2010

"If you yell 'PLAY FREEBIRD!' one more time, I'm gonna punch you in the neck!" - Part III

Welcome, Kind Reader.

Y'know concerts are funny things.  Every one of them is a unique collision of disparate circumstance, the recipe of which will never be the same again no matter how hard you try to mix, measure and replicate.

And every one has a story.  I've probably seen no band more frequently then the pride of Kingston Ontario, The Tragically Hip.  They've provided a lot of great memories for me. 

It was in 1994 when The Hip (as they are affectionately known by fans) released their finest album, Day For Night.  I'd always been of two minds regarding the potential of a major American breakthrough for the band.  On one hand I always thought they were too good just to keep to ourselves but on the other hand I also didn't want to see them misappropriated and ruined somehow.

Regardless, they seemed on the cusp of a major breakthrough in 1995 when, thanks to considerable coercion by host Dan Ackroyd, the guys performed spine-jangling renditions of "Grace, Too" and "Nautical Disaster" on Saturday Night Live:






Everyone I knew at the time watched this event with the same interest as the Quebec Referendum (which through no co-incidence I'm sure was around the same time that year).  It looked like the cat was out of the bag.  Finally we'd have a musical export to truly be proud of.   


Indeed, for one brief shining moment, everything in the universe made sense to me.

But "The Hip" didn't make much sense to Americans.  Their performance didn't spark tinder.  For the next fifteen years the band continued to be our best kept secret.  I'm not sure the guys would agree with me, but I'm kinda glad it worked out the way it did.    

On the subsequent "Day For Night" tour we bought our tickets as quickly as limited funds would allow.  We ended up with fair to poor seats but really didn't care 'cuz we gonna be in the hizzy with one of our favorite bands. 

One thing about "The Hip" is that they've always been very socially conscious.  Mere hours before the show we heard on the radio that the band was raffling off front row tickets to anyone who brought along canned goods for the local food bank.  Almost as an afterthought we retrieved the only appropriate things we had in the cupboard : a tin of carbon-dateable wax beans that we'd inherited from the commune on Lucknow and a can of creamed corn which may have been left over from a 1950's bomb shelter.  So armed we went off to the show.

Just inside the door of the Metro Center we spied the bins for the food donations and they looked pretty sparse.  In went our wax beans and creamed corn, we were given numbered tickets in exchange and then we hired a couple of Sherpas to take us to our seats. 

Well, not five minutes after we'd found our spots the draw began for the front row seats.  When they called my number I felt like I'd won a tax-exempt  Super Powerball Lottery Sweepstakes!

And as if that wasn't enough, en route down to claim my winnings, my girlfriend's number was called!  We now had four front row tickets to see our beloved Hip and we scrambled to locate two friends of ours that we knew were in attendance!

The subsequent show was one of my favorite concerts of all time.  Openers The Odds were wonderfully proficient but delightfully tongue in cheek and I kinda miss their cockeyed brand of music.  But our beloved headliners were stellar.  Gord Downie was in fine form, at one point "taking to the street to shake his banana" whilst and at the same time indulging his penchant for butt wigglin', speaker climbing, spastic head shaking, steam of consciousness ramblings, song snippet mash-ups and microphone stand molestation.  Pure friggin' genius.

I remember starting to feel a bit crusty as early as 1997 because kids younger than me didn't seem to care as much for The Hip, preferring to throw their hats into the Our Lady Peace ring instead.  I've always found this rather inexplicable, but I guess this is what makes me such a cantankerous old f#@$.   Like Paul Simon astutely observed: "Every generation throws it's heroes up the pop charts."

I actually did buy OLP's first album.  I kinda dug the tune "Naveed" a bit but then became totally bored to death with their verse-chorus-verse songwriting and lead singer Raine Maida's off-key caterwauling.  Every time I have the misfortune of hearing him warble "Superman's Dead" I just wanna punch him in the face.

But that's what music's is all about, isn't it?  We all have our own unique passions.  I'm certainly willing to wager that there'll be some people out there who'll read this and say the same thing about Gord Downie.

And those people should seek professional help right away.  I'm not even kidding.  It isn't too late for you.   Honestly.  

Anyway all I can do is present the evidence, and let you, the Kind Reader judge for yourself as to who is the superior!  Hip rules!        



Even if I were to punch Raine Maida in the face, I would swiftly feel compelled to pick him up, dust him off, straighten his lapels and then lay a big wet one on him for bringing "Summersault" to Halifax on August 16'th of 2000.  This was a stellar outdoor festival of awesome bands organized and attended by OLP that blew through our burg and left me feeling as if I'd taken one giant leap in the direction of lifetime fulfillment. 

The show kicked off with the Canadian answer to musical cockroaches, Finger Eleven.  Not a lot of people know this but these guys actually began their careers as a preppy-looking Red Hot Chili Peppers rip-off act called (get ready for this) The Rainbow Butt Monkeys.  

Don't believe me?  Watch this...



That's right, folks, w-a-a-a-a-a-y back before the radio-friendly-unit-shifter called "Paralyzer" resuscitated their endless careers for the umpteenth time, these sellout chameleons where hopping around like idiots trying to do their best Flea impersonations.

Well, in 1997 they'd abandoned this dated sound and adopted the more marketable and gloomy proto-Grunge look.  Here's the same band just a few short years later:


Okay, so how exactly did they make that transition from bouncy college dweebs to looking like the road crew for Slipknot? 

It gets worse.  When proto-Grunge became passe they obviously went on a little sabbatical and came back in 2007 looking and sounding like Nickleback with the serial numbers filed off:


Look, I know you guys gotta pick up a check every once in awhile, but can you at least be a bit more subtle with the multiple attempts at sell-outery?

Anyway I can't crap on them too much since I did buy (and enjoy) two of their albums (1998's Tip and the "Methinks Thou Dost Protest Too Much" The Greyest of Blue Skies disc from 2000)I did this mainly because pickings were kinda slim in the mid to late Nineties and I had a tendency to glom onto anything that sounded vaguely bitter and angry at the time.

Their performance at "Summersault" that year also couldn't be slighted.  They certainly acquitted themselves nicely with an energetic effort and commanding sound.  I do give them s#!% but even I have to admit that they seem to work like dogs so I'm willing to give 'em bit of a pass.

Also in attendance was British alt-rock outfit Catherine Wheel.  Their jangly lackadaisical sound and posture of quiet introspection was wedged squarely between Finger Eleven's boisterous and electric set and the impending appearance of greater things to come.  As such, their performance went over like a lead balloon.  Amidst a chorus of boos and a hail of plastic bottles, the band crawled off stage while the lead singer hastily promised (in a posh Brit accent): "Goodbye, Halifax!  You will never see us again!"

Kinda sad actually.  They don't sound too bad.  Wrong place wrong time perhaps lads?



Next up was A Perfect Circle, side project for Tool's Maynard James Keenan.  I was completely obsessed with this band at the time and their showing at Summersault left me so impressed I bought one of their t-shirts at the merch tent.  So it begins...

Maynard was every inch the rock deity: shirtless, bedecked in a long blond fright wig and a pair of barely-north-of-the-equator gold lame pants.  He was like a hunched, shuddering wraith: the love child of Iggy Pop and Lady Gaga.  Here he is performing the sacrilicious anthem "Judith" live:


While Maynard's voice was pitch-perfect the band was equally game.  The Gollum-esque Billy Howerdel laid down a flawless audio tapestry of distinctive guitar stylings that veered across the spectrum of beauty and horror.  Speaking of beauty, Argentinian-born bassist Paz Lenchantin enchanted us with her beguiling appearance and hypnotic bass lines (It was like The Spoons all over again!).  The rhythm section was carried to dizzying heights by punishing drummer Tim Alexander and everything was held together nicely by veteran guitarist Troy Van Leeuwen.

My only negative memory of the performance was Maynard's promise that he'd come back to Halifax and bring his original band Tool with him.  Dude, I'm still waiting! 

Speaking of empty promises, we had the Foo Fighters up next.  The crowd had already been getting pretty rambunctious but by the time the Foos hit the stage the assembled were worked up into a real lather.  As the first vicious notes of "Monkey Wrench" came flying at us, everything went ballistic.

In quick succession I received a size-nine Doc Marten to the mush from a crowd surfer.  Irritated that the mook had distracted us momentarily from the stage, the next time he drifted by a companion and I each grabbed one of his shoulders and power bombed him to the ground in a way that would make "The Undertaker" proud.

For a few seconds all the moron could do was just lie there, look up at us and gurgle.  Still stunned, we pulled him up, dusted him off and pushed him back into the crowd saying "Dude, I thought we had you but we musta lost our grip.  Sorry 'bout that!"

F#@$%^& idiot.

Meanwhile the Foo Fighters were ripping though a lean and mean set featuring now-classic tracks from their first three albums like "This Is A Call", "Everlong", and "Learn To Fly".  By the time Dave Grohl took to the drum kit and Taylor Hawkins came to the forefront to perform a cover of Pink Floyd's "Have A Cigar", the crowd down below had merged into an amorphous stew of writhing humanity.

And let me tell ya, kids, I've been in some nutty situations in crowds before but this was by far the scariest.  When I'm packed in like a sardine like that I usually try and get my arms up around my chest so that I can make some space and keep my lungs operating but there were a few moments when my arms were slowly being driven into my ribcage.  At times I felt as if I was in the coils of the Midgard Serpent.

The Foos had decisively annihilated every one of their stage predecessors with a brash, self-assured set of pure molten rawk.  What can I possibly say that this clip won't illustrate ten times better?



As a parting gift, Dave Grohl promised he'd bring the band back to do a headline show real soon.


I'm still waiting, Dave.

Crushed, kicked, bruised, dehydrated and beaten I crawled out of the impromptu rugby match and retreated up the face of Citadel Hill to take in Our Lady Peace at a distance.  IMHO I kinda though they sounded like crap so I spent this time in traction, preparing for the next spectacle.

By the time the Smashing Pumpkins took the stage I was literally in a state of bliss.  Unable to resist the pull of the band I made the pilgrimage back into the scrum and watched in awe as a great band in the autumn of their career blasted out one the most memorable performances I've ever been privileged to witness.

Like Dinosaur Jr. in my last entry, the Pumpkins did little to hype the crowd.  They didn't have to.  Their stellar musicianship spoke volumes.  There wasn't a note out of place.  It was truly one of the most practiced, regimented, and flawless sonic assaults I've ever seen unleashed upon an audience.

Looking like a cross between Herman Munster, Nosferatu and the Gerber Baby, lead singer/veteran contrarian Billy Corgan belted out impassioned vocals and some brutal chordage.  Recently recruited ex-Hole bassist Melissa Auf De Maur made everyone forget D'arcy Wretzky even existed with her slinky and animated performance.  James Iha pelted the audience with wave after wave of juicy riffage.  And Jimmy Chamberlain, still one of the best drummers in the history of music, pounded out a relentless attack like a human metronome.

I hadn't purchased their swan song CD Machina: The Machines of God at that point in time but their performance of "The Everlasting Gaze" alone that night made me rush out the next day and buy it.  Along with "Zero" this tune is still one of my favorites of theirs.  The manic outro here is the stuff of legend and it gives me chills every time I hear it:



The Pumpkins provided a slew of unforgettable moments that night, but it as their bittersweet rendition of "1979" had a sea of lighters held aloft and nary a dry eye in the house.  In a few months the band would cease to exist as we knew it. 

I'm not kidding when I say this: that day changed me fundamentally.  It was literally like a religious experience.  It was transcendental.  The music, the bands, and the performances all conspired for a moment of complete nirvana.

Which I guess is why I got so pissed off by the crowd surfer.  Can you imagine having a moment of epiphany in your preferred house of worship and just at the moment of rapture someone comes along and boots you in the melon?  It's a miracle I didn't declare jihad on his scrawny ass.

I suspected it then but I know it now: this was one of the best days of my life.  Nothing can ever reproduce that historic day and my unique perspective in witnessing it.

I'm telling you right now: if you have any sort of passion for music don't just be content sitting at home spinning a disc or crunching bits on your iPod.  Get out there.  Capture your own gallery of unforgettable moments before it's too late!

EPIC:
Greyest of Blue SkiesYer FavouritesMer De NomsFoo Fighters - Live At Wembley Stadium [Blu-ray]Earphoria Live  Naveed

FAIL:

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

"If you yell 'PLAY FREEBIRD!' one more time, I'm gonna punch you in the neck!" - Part I

Top 'o the marnin' to ye, Relentless Reader.

So, the Sherlock Holmes-types amongst you may have already puzzled out that I'm kind of a music geek.

Ergo, I'm also a fan of live music.  Having just experienced the second-best concert-going experience of my entire life at the ripe old age of forty a mere few days ago, I thought it time to explore my history with bands in the flesh.

Wow, I  totally just made myself sound like Pam Des Barres there.  Oh well, it's a fair cop... 

It kinda sucks being a music nut growing up in a small town.  You may have found something that you're passionate about, you may even encounter a couple of similarly-minded people to hang out with but the chance of your rock idols playing anywhere close to you live is pretty friggin' remote.

Especially if you live on an isolated spike of rock in the middle of the Atlantic. Remote, indeed.

My penchant for metal saw me hanging out in High School with some guys that were in a band.  We were all identifiable as so-called "Bangers" by our distinctive uniform:

ONE STANDARD-ISSUE  BASEBALL METAL SHIRT 
(Preferably Maiden, Ozzy, Zeppelin or Crue)
ONE BLACK UNADORNED LEATHER JACKET
ONE PAIR OF TESTICLE-CRUSHING JEANS (PREFERABLY BLACK)
ONE PROTOTYPICAL AND FAIRLY RIGHTEOUS MULLET

My first experience with live music was actually courtesy of our school's unofficial metal/rawk mascot band.  I can't even remember what they called themselves; all I remember is being in awe at their bravery and inherent coolness while they played Journey's "Stone In Love" like clockwork at every High School variety show.  

The reality is, they were probably just trying their best not to look and sound too much like Degrassi Jr. High's "Zit Remedy":


When I got to university in the beautiful city of Halifax I completely snapped on live music.  Within the first week my concert-going cherry was broken at one of the Saint Mary's "Bashes" at the Tower,  courtesy of Canadian New-Wave outfit "The Spoons":



I have to confess that I spent most of the show making goo-goo eyes at the impossibly hot Sandy Horne.  Mutter, mutter...stupid restraining order...

I was in lurve.  Not just with a hot professional chick bassist but with the experience.  I began to see concerts, like sporting events or live theater, as a set of particularly unique circumstances that will never happen again.  The memories you generate from events like this become little amber-frozen moments that are precious and timeless.   

Before I grow too maudlin, let me prove my point.  As a fourteen year old squirt growing up in Stephenville, Newfoundland I would never in a million years thought I'd ever see Iron Maiden live in concert.  But on January 13'th, 1991, a young metal-head's dream came true.

Before the show we went to drink over at friend's house.  He'd moved off-campus to a place on Robie Street (affectionately dubbed "The Swamp") to swill a bit of moonshine before the show.  After one blast of this high-octaine space-shuttle fuel I remember thinking to myself:

"Hey, dumbass!  Stop drinking!  You're about to fulfill the dream of a lifetime by seeing Maiden live and what?!...you're gonna get so drunk you won't even remember it?  That's f#@$&^* stupid!"

No amount of coaxing, torment or peer pressure could needle me into another drink.  To this day I never drink before concerts.  Why pay a hundred bucks only to stand around swaying in place, mouth agape, not even noticing when someone hits you in the face with a frisbee?

Anthrax opened up for Iron Maiden and put on a phenomenal show.  I wasn't a fan of theirs at the time because I'd gotten out of metal when it became "thrashy" but Anthrax was flawlessly tight, high-energy and didn't take themselves seriously.  I'm still a fan of theirs because of that night.  I thought my buddy Mike was going to have a conniption during their performance of "Indians".

I myself went totally bat-s$#^ nuts when Maiden finally took the stage.  This was during the "No Prayer On The Road" tour and rumor had it that the show would be very stripped compared to, say, the "Powerslave" tour.  When the stage was revealed I realized they weren't kidding.  All we got was a curtain with the album art back-projected, a modest stage arrangement which still allowed frontman Bruce Dickenson to indulge his penchant for acrobatics and a cameo by mascot/inspiration to all career-minded zombies "Eddie" (The 'Ed).

I spent the entire show balanced precariously on the backs of two chairs so I could see everything on stage.  During the infrequent song breaks Bruce Dickenson apologized for a head cold that was wreaking havoc with his usually operatic pipes and for a more sparse stage set than normal.  At the time he claimed that a cargo ship which was carrying a ton of their gear as ballast had sunk a few days prior while en route to Halifax.

Over the years I'd come to think of this as total bulls#$! until I "Googled" this just minutes ago:

http://www.britannica.com/facts/10/40931784/January-11-1991-A-cargo-ship-sinks-off     

Regardless of the crazy circumstances (and the lack of Adrian Smith's presence) I have nothing but fond memories of the show.  By the end of it I'd screamed my voice into oblivion while belting out such trachea-rending faves as "Wrathchild", "Hallowed Be Thy Name", and "The Number of the Beast".   

Here's l'il sampling.  TURN IT UP!


I was now completely addicted to the live music experience, which was further intensified by seeing bands in smaller venues.  Diverse, exciting and eager-to-please domestic acts like The Barenaked Ladies (detailed here: http://emblogificationcapturedevice.blogspot.com/2010/07/clothes-make-man.html...yer humble host), The Doughboys, The Grapes of Wrath, The Pursuit of Happiness, Sloan and The Watchmen all impressed me to an extent.  

The amazing Leslie Spit Tree-O, for example, did a series of very wild and interactive shows.  I remember standing by the stage quite often with Mike and lead vocalist/free spirit/interpretive dancer Laura Hubert who often would humor our requests for songs.  

Well, here's a request I'll expect to have honored when I become Emperor of Canada: I decree that Leslie Spit Tree-O will promptly drop everything their doing right now, re-unite and perform the song "Falling Star" live on a constant loop until I demand otherwise!

*Hurm*, I couldn't find "Falling Star" but this will nicely exhibit their prodigious harmonic talents:


To drive home how important it is not to drink too much before a concert, I must tell the sorrowful tale of my friend Mike.  In the early Nineties, we were all collectively (and somewhat inexplicably) fans of "Bootsauce", Canada's answer to the "Red Hot Chili Peppers".  In fact, if memory serves, it was actually Mike who first introduced us to them.  Here's a sample from the "Much Music" video archives: 


Anyway, every member of my inner circle just loved these guys to death and it took forever for them to come to Halifax.  When the announcement came that they were to finally going to pay a visit to the late, lamented "Misty Moon" on Barrington Street, we were on the cusp of major upheaval.  

This came at the end of a school year and just before we all moved out of the house we shared together.  This was to be more than a mere concert.  It was a signpost, an exclamation point, a sure omen that a glorious era was coming to a close.  There was no better time nor occasion for one last big group hootenanny.

We counted down the days before the show.  Finally the big night came and most of us got psyched by playing the band's albums incessantly.  Mike, however, decided to prepare for this auspicious event by getting completely obliviated drunk.  

Even to this day we still struggle to convince Mike that he was even at the show.

"Dude, trust me!  You were there!  You had the time of your life!"

"Nope!  Didn't happen!  Never saw 'em!"

"But you and Colin sang 'Love Monkey #9' with the lead singer, for f#@$%'s sake!"

Word to the wise, kids: heed me on this one!

And now I'm gonna contradict myself a bit.  One time drink saved my life, but it wasn't because I drank before the show so much as during and immediately after.

We'd seen Toronto Ontario's King Apparatus before and had a blast with their quintessential brand of punk, ska, energy and witty lyrics.  When we learned of their return to our fair city at the late, lamented (I grow weary of writing that) "Double Deuce" our presence was not so much suggested it was required.  

There was just one little thing standing in the way: the weather reports were reporting b-a-a-a-a-a-d s#!%  that evening and threatened to derail our fun.  Well, it almost did for about five minutes, but we quickly decided "f#@% it" and went anyway.

Undaunted by the weather warnings and doomsayers we grabbed our long-sleeve shirts (jackets were a pain in the ass to check in, sometimes costing half the price of a drink, fugedabouddit!) and made our way to the "Deuce" during blizzard conditions.  Despite the terrible weather, a rabid little crowd had gathered to watch the band bounce through their modest catalog of grooves like "Hangin' On", "Five Good Reasons", "Made for T.V." and this appropriate ditty:


The show was a blast.  Me, Mike and our unlikely-but-stalwart ally Colin sang, drank, bounced, shouted and danced (read flailed, moshed and pogo-ed about spasmodically) until the end of the set, totally oblivious to the dangerous, whiteout conditions just outside the door.  After the show I bought a concert shirt (likely where my penchant for such things first started) and settled in for an evening of heavy libations.

Eventually we closed the place down and got kicked out into what has since become known as:

THE STORM OF THE CENTURY
 
That's right, folks, we staggered home during the gale that sunk George Clooney's boat.  Mercifully it did grow relatively mild somewhere along the trek, but it left two or three feet of packed slush to swim through, since we could all barely walk. 

I'm not exaggerating here, Incredulous Reader, we swam most of the way home.  Which is pretty incredible since I really can't swim.   With my blood steam awash with enough alcohol content to paralyze a gazelle, I was well insulated against the elements but I seem to recall that Colin prevented me from drowning a few times by hauling me to my feet using my belt.  At one point in time Mike picked up my t-shirt which I'd lost and was now adrift a few yards back.

I still remember us crawling up the steps of our rented townhouse on Lucknow like exhausted survivors on a desert island and a housemate slowly opening the door to appraise as if we were nuts.

Good judge of character, that one. 

Another seminal act that we took in without fail was Saskatoon, Saskatchewan's Northern Pikes. You may laugh now, but back in the Early Nineties, these guys could do no wrong.  Their song "Girl With A Problem" was like the de facto theme song for half the girl on our sister floor in residence:


I recall nearly dying of heat prostration when we illegally packed like lemmings into the "Misty Moon" to see these guys entertain about a hojillion crazed fans.  The crowd was sweating, the band was sweating, the glass work in the place was sweating.  I'm sure I lost four pounds on average during every one of their shows.

Sadly nothing stays the same, which proves the old adage: see your favorite bands now, folks!  Don't wait 'til it's too late.

We now know that internal strife within the band soon caused trouble in paradise for the "Pikes".  The last Saint Mary's "Bash" we saw them perform was pretty mournful.  It's as if all the life and joy had been sucked right out of them.  Things hit rock bottom years later, when in 2001, I saw them play a spirited but slightly pitiable show at "Key Largo's" in Lower Sackville for a small handful of fans, slack-jawed yokels and overweight families too distracted by their chicken wings to even pay attention.

Also during this time Metallica's self-titled "Black" album was swiftly becoming one of our soundtrack discs.  I had the privilege of witnessing them destroy our Metro Center on February 10, 1993 with the following unrelenting set:

    Enter Sandman
    Creeping Death
    Harvester of Sorrow
    Welcome Home (Sanitarium)
    Sad But True
    Of Wolf & Man
    The Unforgiven
    Justice Medley
    Through the Never
    For Whom the Bell Tolls
    Fade to Black
    Master of Puppets
    Seek & Destroy
    Whiplash
    Nothing Else Matters
    Wherever I May Roam
    Am I Evil?
    Last Caress
    One
    Battery

I still remember just how flawless their sound and presentation was.   They used their diamond-configured stage to entertain the audience of ten-thousand as deftly as if they were playing a small club.  They were like perfectly programmed metal monster machines who's only function was to blast your face off and leave you bludgeoned, pantless, deafened and whimpering for your mommy. The pyro alone was enough to ensure your head was completely devoid of eyebrows by the end of the show.

Here's some proof:


Ahhhh, I long for the days when Metallica didn't suck.  

I also had the privilege of seeing my life-time favorites "The Tragically Hip" go from cultish club darlings to consistent arena-packers.  Their tour in support of the "Fully Completely" album was riveting.  The band used beautiful and evocative back-screen projected art to keep the audience wired.  At one point during the song "Courage (For Hugh McClennan)" the band threw up the house lights and I distinctly remember entering some sort of weird concert nirvana.  I looked up and for one amazing moment it seemed as if  I could clearly see the faces of every one of  my fellow revelers around me, bullet-time style.  It was a fantastically communal and borderline tribal moment.

Alright, I know what you're thinking: (best read in voice of Phil Hartman as Frank Sinatra)  "You may not have a meetin' with the minds with Jack Daniels before a show, but you're smokin' somethin'!  Lay off the funny stuff, Ringo!"

You can think this all you want but I maintain: it's all natural baby!  That's concert magic in action!  Or it could have been a contact high...

The experience with "The Hip" was also aided considerably by Gord Downie's constant stream-of consciousness ramblings.  I still remember his first words to me as an audience member.  At one point in time between songs he just looked down at the roiling sea of humanity below and calmly observed:

"I like to think of all of you as the sperm and I'm the ovum."

One of my favorite concerts to this very day also occurred during this era.  It was Dread Zeppelin at the "Misty Moon".  For you poor uncultured bastards out there who don't know who Dread Zeppelin is, here is their Wikipedia entry:

"Dread Zeppelin is an American band best known for performing the songs of Led Zeppelin in a reggae style as sung by a 300 pound Vegas Elvis impersonator." 

And let me tell ya, baby, this is just as awesome as it sounds.  Here's a vid:  


We got ready for the show by renting dread lock wigs from "Boutilier's Costume Shop" in Dartmouth, which was kind of an unfortunate choice for me because the black wig with the red bows I got stuck with sorta made me a dead ringer for comic book scamp Little Lulu.

We also procured some "Rick's Fine Foods" pre-cooked hermetically sealed hamburgers using our meal cards as a gift for lead singer Tortelvis, who had a penchant for munching on such offerings mid-concert.

The place was packed and we managed to weasel our way next to the stage.  We were nearly crushed by the throng of Zep/reggae/Elvis crazed lunatics.  At one point one of our numbers got up on stage, flailed around a bit like Kermit the Frog on crystal meth and than promptly dived back into the audience, which promptly parted like the Red Sea.  He was nearly killed in the process.    

Good times.

Stay tuned folks, more concert tales are a-comin'...

EPIC:
Live After DeathUn-Led-EdLive Between UsLive Shit: Binge & Purge (CD & DVD)King ApparatusHits & Secrets

FAIL: http://annistonotr.blogspot.com/2007/09/worst-concerts-ever.html