My first experience with Scale the Summit was just over four
years ago, when I saw them open for Dream Theater in Las Vegas on the 2009
ProgNation tour. I remember being taken aback by the band’s seemingly perfect
blend of emotion and technical complexity. The band name really described their
music, and by the end of their set, I was in awe. Fast forward four years to
last night. In what I heard was one of the fastest and best-selling nights of
their tour with UK proggers TesseracT, Scale the Summit amazed Vancouver with
some of the tightest musicianship I’ve seen live to date. The Tom Lee Music
Hall was filled to near-capacity, and as one of the first all-ages metal shows
Vancouver’s had in a long time, the crowd was a fair bit younger than I’m used
to seeing. Preceded by the progressive deathcore of The Body Politic, local
openers Icosian, and the heavy riffs of hometown favourites Ancieents, Scale
the Summit put on a solid show, well deserving of their status as one of the
new wave of progressive metal’s flagship artists.
Considering the technical complexity and emotional intensity
of their music, the first thing that strikes you when Scale the Summit go on
stage is how casual and down to earth they look. Contrary to the norm of metal
culture, Scale the Summit make no attempt to express a visual image or stage
persona. They focus exclusively on the musical performance, and don’t try at
all to colour their performance with unnecessary stage antics or showman’s
tactics to deter from the music itself. To an extent, this is a relaxing change
of pace from the typical state of things at a metal show. This focus on the
music is in turn reflected in the audience themselves- I don’t think I saw one
person out in the crowd who wasn’t drawn in by what they were hearing. By the
time the band began to close their set with “The Olive Tree” however, part of
the crowd got a little more worked up and began dancing, of all the things you
wouldn’t expect to see at a metal show.
Scale the Summit’s reserved and an uncompromisingly
music-focused approach to live performance will no doubt discomfort some who
experience it, and others drawn from the metal community might hold the band’s
lack of stage presence against them. Personally, I think there’s something
pretty hypnotic in seeing musicians wrapped up in their own private world while
an audience watches in awe. Although I interpreted their laconic approach to
stage performance as the result of lacking confidence and inexperience the
first time I saw them four years ago, it’s clear to me now that Scale the
Summit are presenting their music exactly as they want it, and without
succumbing to the typical stage gimmicks of more conventional metal bands.
With that being said, it wouldn’t have hurt for Scale the
Summit to have had some sort of visual counterpart. Given the lush and
jaw-dropping quality of their most recent album’s cover art, some sort of
background cinematic would have been a welcome addition to the experience. The
crowd was very receptive to the band’s performance throughout, with cheers
getting particularly enthusiastic when “Odyssey” and “Atlas Novus” (two of my
favourites from the new album) were both played. On top of those two, “The
Olive Tree” was another highlight, particularly the uplifting lead that opens
up the song. For what it lacked in visual bravado, there was a great musical
chemistry at work, particularly between the two guitarists at right and left
stage. Hearing two guitars counterpoint each other with finger-tapping is
something I’m pretty sure could never get old.
Here’s to hoping I’ll get to see these guys perform sometime
again soon!