Thursday, February 4, 2016

Concert Review: Sleep

Sleep lays down the groove.
Sleep
Thalia Hall, Chicago
Jan. 27, 2016
Sleep--the seminal stoner/doom metal band--hasn’t recorded a new album since the late-1990s. As legend has it, the band’s most visionary effort was twice rejected by the record label because they turned in one epic, 63-minute song (“Dopesmoker”) as the album. The Bay Area group soon disbanded, and, even though the song was released in all its glory in 2003, the group hasn’t released any significant music since.
They have rejoined for sporadic touring since 2012, and perhaps haven’t fully formed as a band due to guitarist Matt Pike’s success fronting the three-piece metal outfit High On Fire, releasing a series of albums that have made a heavy impact on the genre and cemented Pike’s status as one of the most riveting figures in metal.
Still, Sleep’s legend was enough to sell out two nights in a row (Jan. 26 and 27, 2016) at Thalia Hall, which might be one of the best places in Chicago to see live music (more about that below). It was a transcendent night of music and undeniable proof of the band’s genius, influence and ahead-of-its-time quality.
The band played “Aquarian,” “Dragonaut” and the title track all from 1992’s “Holy Mountain,” Sleep’s best full album of material.
But the highlight of the set, of course, was “Dopesmoker,” at least the first 25 minutes of it that the band played. Singer-bassist Al Cisneros doesn’t begin his monk-like chanting vocals until eight minutes in, allowing the three-piece to firmly establish its mid-tempo groove. Pike wrings the most out of each power chord, letting each ring out like a distorted, mystical gong. Drummer Jason Roeder (also of Neurosis) keeps a steady beat, heavy on the cymbals, for seemingly days. Pike, as usual, stood stoically bare-chested in front of his stack of Orange amps, focused solely on wielding his axe.
The band wasn’t overly heavy, nowhere near aggressive, just pleasantly rhythmic and even hypnotic. There were zero showy guitar solos and absolutely no rock posturing. The overall effect, however, was a collective weight, a slow crushing that descended on the audience like an aural sedative.
The historic building that houses Thalia Hall also houses
Dusek's Board & Beer and The Punch House.
The Venue
Newly renovated rock concert venue Thalia Hall, at 1807 S. Allport St. in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago, is magnificent. It first opened in 1892 as an opera house, and is now a three-dimensional complex of bars and restaurants, all under one roof. The architectural landmark has an inviting and comfortable personality.
At one end, Dusek’s Board & Beer restaurant is a fine spot for food and a wide range of craft beers, including new neighborhood brewer Moody Tongue. Downstairs is the Punch House--decorated as if it’s a suburban home basement bar, circa 1975, with wood paneling and taxidermied fish. An impressive saltwater fish tank serves as the bar’s centerpiece. This hipster hideaway specializes in cocktails both classic and innovative, and still more bites to eat. Punch is sold by the glass, carafe or actual punch bowl, and a faux-wall bookcase serves as a speakeasy-like door (if you move the correct period-piece tchotchke) into a wine cellar and large room, ostensibly for party rental.
The sleekly renovated concert hall is located upstairs. A main floor features standing room akin to the space of Metro. Paying a few more bucks allows a customer access to the balcony seating area with good views all around. A high ceiling makes for an airy space. The sound there is clear and well mixed, and modern temperature controls help make it a comfortable space, something sorely missing in grungier places that usually host such bands (like the Riviera, Metro, Congress...you name it). The hall allows in-and-out privileges, perfect for those who want to sneak down to the Punch House or Dusek’s bar before the headliner takes the stage. It feels like home.

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Concert Review: Lamb of God / Anthrax / Deafheaven

Lamb of God during encore.
Concert Review: Lamb of God / Anthrax / Deafheaven
Aragon Ballroom, Chicago
Jan. 30, 2016
Lamb of God’s latest album *VII: Sturm Und Drang* contains a few songs about singer Randy Blythe’s imprisonment in a Czech prison for the accidental death of a fan at a show, an incident for which he was eventually brought to trial in Prague and ultimately exonerated.
But it would be unfair to accuse Blythe of profiting creatively and monetarily from this young man’s death through the writing and publishing of tracks “512” (nominated for a Grammy for Best Metal Performance) and “Still Echoes,” which speaks to the horror Blythe endured while imprisoned. As he writes in his memoir of the ordeal--entitled “Dark Days”--he is a man of honor and would have served his proposed 10-year sentence willingly and eagerly if found guilty. He could not live with himself if he were guilty and unpunished, his “hands painted red” and his “future painted black,” as he sings in “512.”
This sense of honor combined with Lamb of God’s unflinching dedication to their brutal form of thrash metal are two reasons why they have built a rabid following, on full display at a near-capacity Aragon Ballroom. During the entire 90-minute set, the crowd moved as one, head-banging and swaying to the crushing rhythms--it was total crowd buy-in that is rarely seen at any show, regardless of genre.
The band opened with “Desolation” then quickly transitioned to classic track “Walk With Me In Hell,” with images of Armageddon playing on twin screens. Rather than using unsteady monitors for his perch, Blythe frequently jumped up on a platform at the front of the stage to growl out his orders: “Pray for blood / Pray for the cleansing / Pray for the flood / Pray for the end to this wide awake nightmare.”
“512” and “Still Echoes” were played, but it was tracks like “Ruin” that really got the double mosh pits frothing and even combining like two twisters meeting. Footage from cult debacles including Jonestown and Waco, Texas, played on the screens as Blythe and the crowd sung together the ending words to “Ruin,” a mantra of a warning about the evils of cult deception: “Fear, pain, hatred, power.”
“Now You Have Something To Die For,” a staple at any L.O.G. show, whipped the crowd into another frenzy as slideshow images of U.S. military servicemen and women scrolled on the screen, all in a tribute to their service.
The first encore included “Blacken The Cursed Sun,” during which the entire crowd was ready for every call-and-response moment, answering “Hell, no!” to every question Blythe barked at them, including: “Is there still hope for us?” and “Is any of this even real?”
Oh, it was real, and the crowd won’t soon forget this show.
“Redneck” closed the second encore, but not before Blythe declared during “Vigil”: “Smite the shepherd and the sheep will be scattered.”
As long as Blythe and L.O.G. are shepherding, this crowd would have followed them to hell and back.
Set list for Lamb of God:
“Desolation”
“512”
“Walk With Me In Hell”
“Still echoes”
“Ruin”
“Overlord”
“Walk The Faded Line”
“Now You Have Something To Die For”
“Set To Fail”
Encore #1
“Blacken The Cursed Sun”
“Erase This”
Encore #2
“Vigil”
“Laid To Rest”
“Redneck”
Anthrax breaks out the classics.
Original “Big Four” member Anthrax still holds a relevant place in metal, opening for L.O.G. in advance of forthcoming album “For All Kings,” to be released Feb. 26, a date the crowd was reminded of no less than six times during the set.
They opened with “Fight ‘Em ‘Til You Can’t” from 2011’s *Worship Music* and also played “In The End” from that album as a tribute to deceased metal legends Ronnie James Dio and Dime Bag Darrell.
The band’s 50-minute set was full of polished arena rock posturing, which was a nice juxtaposition to Deafheaven’s at times awkward stage presence (more about that later). Classics “Caught In A Mosh,” “Antisocial” and “Got The Time” showed the aging thrashers are still fun-loving yet defiant,  and new tracks “Evil Twin” and “Breathing Lightning” were also introduced with warm reception from the crowd.
The best moment came during the last song--1987’s “Indians”--during which the song came to an abrupt end mid-thrash. Drummer Charlie Benante (who is originally from Chicago while the rest of the band hails from NYC) wanted to make sure his hometown crowd was having fun, and lead singer Joey Belladonna (who couldn’t quite hit the high-pitched Native American-inspired wails in the song) encouraged the twin most pits to merge once they restarted the song where they left off. The crowd did its best to oblige.
Set list for Anthrax:
“Fight ‘Em ‘Til You Can’t”
“Caught In A Mosh”
“Got The Time”
“Antisocial”
“Evil Twin”
“In The End”
“Breathing Lightning”
“Indians”
Deafheaven played a four-song, 35 minute set.
Pitchfork-endorsed hipsters Deafheaven tried to engage the early-arriving crowd, but its brand of death metal may be a tough sell to those who haven’t heard the studio albums, which are chock full of subtle and beautiful movements amid the crushing tempos and blood-curdling shrieks from lead singer George Clarke.
Clarke, although wearing all black, doesn’t quite embody the mannerisms of a death metal singer. Starting with opening song “Brought To The Water” from latest album *New Bermuda,* he head-banged his short-haired head in short bursts, waved his arms like a conductor over the crowd and moved about the stage like some awkward interpretive dancer.
The other four band members (three on guitar and bass, and a drummer) were also all in black, and largely stationary in the shadows as only green or blue spotlights barely illuminated any stage activity during the 35-minute set.
The California band hit a comfortable groove during the second (and less brutal) half of “Luna.” The crunchy power chord riffs of “Come Back” were another high point for the band trying to find its niche with the diverse metal audience in attendance.
“Dream House” closed the set with Clarke theatrically banging on his chest with two fists and wailing into the din--the vocals were mixed much louder live than on studio recordings where they are more of an eerie, ghost-like presence.
Set list for Deafheaven:
“Brought To The Water”
“Luna”
“Come Back”
“Dream House”
Power Trip, from Texas, opened the evening with a short set of songs that showed influences from punk, hardrock and thrash in the vein of classic Metallica.