23/01/2010

(From the archives) Alkaline Trio: Live

Date: August 26th 2008
Venue: The Ambassador
City: Dublin, Ireland
Excerpt taken from personal blog




"…To see the show as a non-committed enthusiast was a great experience. There were emphatic highs, like set-opener Private Eye running straight into Calling All Skeletons, which had the masses singing their hearts out. There was an especially poignant moment when Goodbye Forever was dedicated to the late great Jerry Finn, and was delivered with the kind of conviction that made me glad I parted with my cash and made the trip. There seemed to be a perfect blend of anthemic nostalgia to underpin the bulk of the set. Tracks from albums 'From Here To Infirmary', 'Good Mourning' and even earlier were tossed in confidently. It's admirable for a band to be unafraid of dipping into a discography and seeking fan-favourites over music television hits (notably missing were Stupid Kid and We've Had Enough), and the gesture was met with riotous applause after every song's final chord."

(From the archives) My Chemical Romance: Live

Date: 27th March 2007
Venue: Scottish Exhibition & Conference Centre
City: Glasgow, Scotland
Unpublished




In order to fully appreciate a live production like this, one must cast aside any preconceptions that are tied to this band.

My Chemical Romance are undeniably the unchallenged gods of the 21st Century ‘Emo’ movement. When ‘Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge’ hit the shelves angst ridden teens all over the world went berserk for the rebellious Goth-Punk hybrid sound, and in a matter of days red eye shadow was literally uniform for the masses. Fast forward three years and The Black Parade hits the shelves. The same craze ensues. Few believed that the band could top their earlier achievements but naysayers were silenced beyond doubt as soon as the title track hit the airwaves.

Leading the young army that follows this band to the hilt is an inspirationally tight song writing unit in the form of lead singer Gerard Way. Frank Iero and Ray Toro add some of the catchiest guitar hooks and melodies on the planet right now, and Gerard’s brother Mikey and drummer Bob Bryar are a solid backbone upon which this musical chaos is placed. Give ‘The Black Parade’ one listen and I defy anyone to call it poor, cheap, ‘commercial-over-quality’ or childish. The elements combined in their latest release state to the world in black and white why MCR reign supreme on the rock music food chain. So to experience it live, one would assume, would be breathtaking. One would bloody well assume right.

The SECC is buzzing tonight, and the hysteria that sweeps the arena when the lights go out is at fever pitch. A lone spotlight pierces the stage to reveal Gerard Way on a hospital gurney as the opening strains of ‘The End’ emerge from behind the huge black stage curtain, barely audible when set against the now overflowing emotion of the crowd. 7,000 people feel the hairs on their arms stand on end and know that something very, very special is about to happen.

Way, like a truly great front man, commands a sold out arena as if he was in London’s notoriously tiny Barfly. The band mercilessly tears through tracks from The Black Parade, clad head to toe in their signature army uniforms. The stage production is second to none. However, a spectacular light show, tonnes of ticker tape and some huge pyrotechnic explosions only just live up to the sheer energy being thrown into the performance onstage. The fireballs that erupt during ‘Famous Last Words’ transport the crowd right into the song’s music video. We are in the zone, with arms pumping, screaming the battle cry chorus that serves as a defiant middle finger to the sensationalist sections of the media that misunderstand this band so gravely.

It comes as a surprise that the highlight of the show is an altogether more quiet and sombre one. Gerard, alone on the stage and silhouetted by a huge white light introduces the next song simply as ‘Cancer’. It is a simple piano and vocal piece written as a tribute to victims of the diease and those that are left behind. It is a unique and moving spectacle to witness thousands of people uniting in grief, reflection and hope through this one song.

As the band’s alter egos ‘The Black Parade’ close the show, Gerard Way spits into his microphone; “My Chemical Romance are up next….if you’re into that kinda sh*t!” What follows is a lesson in the art of the encore. The band re-emerges in their classic bulletproof vests and black jeans. Without so much as a pause for breath they proceed to aurally assault every ear in the building with cuts from the awesome and energetic debut album ‘Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge’. The stage is transformed into the band’s older red and black artwork and once again, united by nostalgia and raw emotion, the crowd lap it up. Two full sets later and the band end the show with the anthem that is ‘Helena’. At that moment in time, there is nothing else in the world apart from hall 4 of the SECC in Glasgow. Gerard Way snaps one final breath before venomously delivering his final line; ‘So long, and Goodnight.’

Introduction



Hello. My name is Joel Neill, and ever since I told my Playschool teacher at the age of three that my favourite nursery rhyme was 'Pump Up The Jam' I have been addicted to music. As soon as I was old enough to leave my house alone I joined a local punk rock band, and over the following ten years we recorded three CDs, received radio airtime and played together in venues all over the island of Ireland.

I have been an avid consumer of music CDs, tapes, records, VHS tapes, DVDs and concert tickets for many years. This blog is the result of one of the passions in my life meeting another; writing. After graduating from University my ambition has been to break into the world of journalism. To that end, I hope to use this site as a portfolio, but also as a way to keep my writing skills up to scratch and hopefully to entertain anyone who takes the time to have a read. If any of that applies to you, thanks for visiting and feel free to get in touch.

Joel