3.5/5
to 4/5, a very good show with a lot of energy, enthusiasm, and impeccable
musicianship.
I brought 'hearos' ear
plugs which were essential because the volume of the show was too loud for
comfort, particularly Mike Portnoy's drums (not surprised!). I depended on
these ear plugs.
I was impressed at the
high level of technical skills of all players, particularly the
multi-instrumentalist Neal Morse who I initially suspected as someone who only
mastered keyboard playing. Yes, his keyboard playing is ambient, melodic,
fierce, whatever is needed for the music. But his acoustic guitar duet with Roine
Stolt was a highlight. Speaking of Roine, his playing was phenomenal all the
way through. The drumming was adventurous and relentless, if somewhat overdone
at times. Pete Trewavas was a great support to the drums and his bass lines
were regularly complex and outside the box. There was a 5th member 'Ted
Leonard' that covered for some of the musical gaps and stayed in the
background. It was a good idea to bring a 5th member as opposed to
pre-recording some musical textures, bringing authenticity to whatever you
heard. Ironically, he was the best singer and it was a shame they didn't have
him as lead singer. Egos?
The negatives that
prevent me from a 5/5 show (or even 4.5/5) include the exhaustiveness of
back-to-back 'epics' (really long epics!) with epic riffs, and epic solos, and
epic outros that sometimes last more than an average song. Given similar
structures being used epic after epic, it can get tiring.
Also, the lyrics were
often one-dimensional good vs evil evangelical type of christian dogma which
tend to rub me the wrong way depending on how they're written as the 'evil' may
not necessarily be 'evil' (not being Christian is not evil). The theme of
''things are terrible, but I'm good because I found God' which get repetitive
after a while. On the bright side, they weren't preaching to us in between
songs.
Anyways, Into The Blue
(~25 minutes) from the new album was among the worst offenders in terms of my
lyrical complaint, alternating hopeful passages about 'the dreamer and the
healer' (who's that? let me guess) with 'evil' heavy rock/metal riffs and
negative lyrics. However, the quality of the music helped tremendously and the
5th member had a great vocal moment in the middle of it.
'My New World' (~15
minutes) from the first album followed and had none of the problems I have with
Transatlantic. The band was firing on all cylinders and shifting between
various moods and genres.
Neal Morse joked that
'Shine' (~7 minutes) is about his foreheard, then mentioned that it was written
by the band in tribute to a sick person they know, but earlier on it was
mentioned it was a Neal Morse leftover from his latest solo album (huh?).
Anyways, the wimpy Christian Rock song with the repeated 'We want no one left
behind' (it offends me as a non-christian) was more muscular and coherent this
time around.
They then grabbed a few
moments of the Whirlwind album and made a medley out of it (~25 minutes). The
whirlwind main theme is not that great, but 'Rose Colored Glasses' was an
outstanding and emotional moment, a deeper and better use of christian lyrical
content (IMO) and it reached a great climax. 'Evermore' was energetic and it
segued into 'Is it Really Happening?' with imagery of a hurricane obliterating
a city. This composition built up from a minimalist mantra into the equivalent
of a tornado ripping you to shreds. Really really lively (and destructive)
music. Later, the main theme comes back and lyrically … more of the same.
We All Need Some Light
(~9 minutes) began with a great guitar duet, very tasteful playing that shows
how talented Stolt and Neal Morse can be. The song is pretty much 'dreamer and
the healer' or 'shine' melodies all over again, but I shouldn't criticize this
one as it's from their first album. Also, I can't knock down the Christian
lyrics here as they're harmless and mean well.
'Black as the Sky' (~6
minutes) was a shorter, highly energetic song that worked perfectly with
memorable choruses and an instrumental section dominated by synthesizer, even
the drums were following the synthesizer. I wish the band writes more songs
like these in the future.
'Kaleidoscope' (~30-35
minutes) didn't seem to have a lyrical problem but it seemed a bit fragmented
and overly long, and I started getting tired at this point. There's so much
'epic' one can take, but there's no denying that this epic, while somewhat
weaker than their other ones, had an amazing instrumental section on the second
half, some of their very best music.
Then we have an encore
(~20 minutes) of ... MORE EPICS *sigh*, but given the epics we're talking about
(pieces of 'All of the Above' and 'The Stranger of Your Soul'), it's obviously
strong material and they nailed it, but the ending was drawn out once again.
Given my snarky
comments, I still believe it was worth the trip and the expense to see these
guys. They're extremely talented musicians with great chemistry. I recommend
seeing them, but I hope you like epics! I mean, I hope that you really really
like epics!
Edited by Zitro - February 09 2014 at 17:09