Nice and neat venue, Cheese & Grain, in the middle of nowhere (judging by my night trip) was hosting Uriah Heep, which I had managed to miss when I was back in Greece and only a few minutes away from the venue then - so had to bite the bullet and get on a 2-hour drive to see them...
I arrived just in time to miss the second support act (shame on me, mis-timed my journey) so just on time for the break. Heep were introduced by a local rock radio producer (did not catch his name) similar to what a local band in a local pub would have been introduced (felt like that but no harm really).
Mick Box, Bernie Shaw, Phil Lanzon (from the 'old' team), Russell Gilbrook (no Lee Kerslake due to health problems since 2007) and a session bass player (Trevor Bolder apparently recently had an operation) which no-one introduced to us.
They kicked off quite dynamically with
Against the Odds (Sea of Light, 1995) and
Overload (Wake the Sleeper, 2008) love that track and they played it spot on
and then dived in time with
Traveller in Time (Demons & Wizards, 1972) love that track and great performance, just as the original
Sunrise (The Magicians Birthday, 1972)
All my Life (Demons & Wizards, 1972)
before returning to weaker contemporary tunes from the new album
I'm Ready, Nail on the Head and
Into the Wild (Into the Wild, 2011) - which where the ones I enjoyed the least
however, in between we had the joy to listen to a lovely classic and a great one from their 90's discography
Stealin' (SF, 1973)
Between two Worlds (Sonic Origami, 1998)
Following the distant past/recent past mix, they then went on to please the audience with classics
Gypsy (Very Eavy Very Umble, 1970), nice heavy version
Look at Yourself (s/t 1971)
July Morning - ok no Byron but a decent performance from Shaw approaching it with respect
and
Lady in Black (Salisbury, 1971) - this sounded unfortunately quite poppy with the drum beat not helping...
encore
came back with
Free and Easy (Innocent Victim, 1977) bad choice and the fact that Box invited the ladies from the front to come up to the stage to 'headbang to one of their heaviest songs' spoiled the whole night for me there, even if they went on to close with
Easy Livin' (D&W, 1972)
All and all, a good, enjoyable night, worth the trip but a mixed bag and not a great by any means performance with the following high and low points
high - Mick's humbleness and "magic" tricks on the guitar, a beast of a drummer in Gilbrook, Shaw's spirit
lows - the actual guitar soloing did not seem convincing, a really short encore
I would appreciate comments from those having watched Heep lately, thanks for reading.
Edited by aapatsos - March 06 2013 at 17:52