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Welp, as one of the
biggest (self-proclaimed) Sabbath fans (me) went to see Sabbath last
night in Philadelphia, PA, I figured I'd post a concert review!
1) Non Musical Stuff:
I was going there
expecting to buy a concert shirt, and a tour program. Unfortunately,
there were no tour programs for sale there. Is this a common occurance
on tour? There were three shirt designs available. One was the album
cover on the front, and tour locations on the back, with
"Dehumanizer" and "Tour 1992" on the back as well.
Second was "Black Sabbath - Dehumanizer" on the front, with
a Right-Side Up Cross on it, with what looked like an "Angel of
Satan" on top of the cross. Third one was a variant of the
second, with the cross thing really small up around the chest area. I
don't recall what was on the back of the second and third. I ended up
buying the first one ($23). They had some other stuff avail as well. A
black Baseball cap with the Dehumanizer Black Sabbath logo on it. That
was $20, and there also was a small Black Sabbath pin available with
the Dehumanizer Logo ($8). I ended up buying the hat, and would have
gotten the pin as well, but I needed gas for my car to get home! :) I
know it was a bit of a rip, but hell, Sabbath is my favorite band, and
I've been waiting a long time for this one. There were also Prong
items available (more on Prong later). I didn't pay all that much
attention to that, but it appeared there were two Prong shirts, no
more. What else was really cool were there were *A LOT* of old Sabbath
shirts at the show. I saw some that seemed to be from the 70's either
because they had old designs, or just looked old. What suprised me
more were that I saw quite a few shirts from in between the two Dio
eras. Saw 2 or 3 Tyr shirts, and QUITE a few Headless Cross shirts. I
was glad to see the audience wasn't there just to see Dio. If you're
interested, the locations listed on the back of the shirt for other
concert places are (or were; as I think the Philly date was towards
the end of this "mini-leg" of the tour) Miami FL, Tampa FL,
Atlanta GA, Columbus OH, Toronto ON, Cleveland OH, Chicago IL, Detroit
OH, New York NY, Washington DC, Philadelphia PA, Boston MA. The
Philadelphia gig was technically played in a town called "Upper
Darby, PA", but it's a suburb of Philadelphia, and it's EXTREMELY
close to the Phila city line. It's generally regarded as Philadelphia.
2) Prong:
Prong played a really
good set. I'm not a really big Prong fan, but I do know a good bit of
their material, and this set was musically tight, and I enjoyed it.
However, Prong had a hard time getting the audience going, and that's
probably due to the fact that a good deal (I'd wager almost all) of
the people in the audience were expecting Danzig to open up. When
tickets went on sale, Danzig was announced as the opener, and with
almost no notice, it was changed to Prong. I myself didn't find out
about the change until about 36 hours before the concert. Can anyone
confirm that Danzig has actually played with Sabbath, and if not, why?
As I stated before, Prong isn't one of my favs, so I don't know much
of their material, but the people who were right down front (I was in
the 7th row), seemed to really get into it. What's nice about the
Tower Theatre is that the stage goes RIGHT into the audience. There is
no "pit" to speak of, and more suprisingly, I only saw one
"Stage Jumper" the whole night, and it was at the end of
Sabbath's last tune. A crazed, but overly well behaved group. It's too
bad people had this "Anti-Prong" mentality here, as the gig
would otherwise have been well received.
3) Black Sabbath:
('bout time, eh?)
Well, to start this off,
I'll list the tracks they played in order. I've seen a few people post
listings that were either incomplete, or not in any order. I decided
to circumvent this, and TOOK A PEN! :)
- 1.E5150 (Tape)
- The Mob Rules
- Computer God
- Children of the Sea
- Time Machine
- War Pigs
- I
- Die Young (only 1/2 of
the song, leaded into...)
- Tony Iommi Solo
(included Orchid, and a few other old Sab Instrumentals)
- Black Sabbath
- Master of Insanity
- After All (about 3/4
of the song, leaded into....)
- Vinny Appice Solo
- Iron Man
- Heaven & Hell
(included the extra "Big Black Shape" verse)
- Neon Knights (Encore)
- Paranoid (Encore)
- More of Heaven &
Hell. (No actual lyrics, just music)
- Fluff (Tape)
One minor complaint here.
I really wanted them to play TV Crimes, and the didn't. Of course,
After All wasn't in the early set listings, so my guess is that they
subbed it for TV Crimes. Kind of a bummer, as TV Crimes probably would
be more known than After All, but a good heavy Sabbath tune is always
accepted live! :) Plus we got a mini Geezer Solo with it.
I didn't time the gig, as
I wanted to enjoy it, instead of worrying about how long they played
(I've ruined a few shows for myself worrying if it will be longer than
x hours), but it seemed to be right around their usual 1 1/2 hour
timeframe.
This was a *VERY WELL
RECEIVED* concert. I was really hoping that the people there weren't
there just for the opener, and actually wanted to see Sabbath. I've
seen that a few times before (Born Again Tour, Seventh Star Tour). My
guess is that a good deal of 'em were there to see Dio. However, on
the more well know Sab tunes (especially the Heaven & Hell ones)
the audience REALLY got into it. The Tower only holds about 5,000
people, and it was SOLD OUT. You could tell. The whole place was
getting into the "horns salute" thing, and the fist throwing
at the right points. It really FELT good. People knew the tunes,
people sang, people got into it. And it was ***LOUD***. I've been to a
lot of concerts before, (and Sabbath 3 times before), but I don't
recall a concert as loud. In fact, I caught about 6 or 7 couples
having to leave early due to it. The couple next to me definitely left
early for this, as the woman was covering her ears during Iron Man,
and they left about 5 mins later.
The sound was clean,
heavy, but there a few feedback problems. I don't know if it was
Iommi, or the sound people, but there were about a half a dozen
feedback squeals during the night. They didn't last long, but you
*DID* notice them. The audience really REALLY got into this show.
There were a few Sabbath die hards (like myself) that knew everyhing,
and didn't stop during the show at all, but for the really well known
stuff, the audience really went berzerk. One of my favorite things was
during War Pigs, when towards the end of the song, there's a bit that
gets put in live. The audience harmonizes with Iommi's playing, and
while not on the studio version, it's happened every time I've heard
the song played live. Anyway, the WHOLE place was doing this, and
after about two bars, Dio quit singing, and just let us do it. It was
really good, and "funny" to watch Dio watching us sing the
song for him. Great moment.
3) Sabbath's Stage
Set:
The stage set was small,
but still not bad. The backdrop was a giant tapestry with the
Dehumanizer Black Sabbath logo on it, (with "Dehumanizer" in
the right spot), and had the Cross/Angel thing I mentioned before on
it. There were four sets of rope hanging down from the lighting truss,
which I assume was supposed to simulate the pillars on the front of
the album cover. There were QUITE a lot of speakers on the sides of
the stage, and ON the stage, there were 2 stacks of Marshall amps,
that ran across the entire length of the stage, except for the middle
where Vinny's drum set was. There were frequent burts of "Dry
Ice" smoke coming in from Geezer's side of the stage (the left),
and it covered the whole stage when used. The tapestry was also lit at
the right times, and the Sabbath logo, and the cross were
indepentantly lit with different colors depending on the song being
played.
4) Commentary on
Sabbath members:
Vinny Appice's drum set
was really small compared to sets I've seen him use in the past. The
one Vinny used on the Dio "Dream Evil" tour was positively
GIGANTIC, but this one was your basic drum set. It seeme to keep with
the "toned down, back to basics" Sabbath feel. Vinny himself
also seems to be in good shape. Drum solos usually don't do anything
for me, and this didn't either, except that he kept up a good fast
pace w/o the usual "small breaks" in the middle of drum
solos that dummers take. He looked like he had been working out, and
has gotten more "muscular" than I remembered him to be (last
time I saw him was on the Dream Evil tour). Vinny gave out an awful
lot of drumsticks at the end of the show. More than I remember seeing
ANYONE ever give out. Looked like 5 or 6 dozen! :)
Geezer Butler was his
usual self. He just stands there, jamming. His bass playing was as
usual, excellent. I don't know what I can really say about Geezer. He
did take a mini-solo in the middle of one of the songs, but I can't
remember which one. It was either After All, or Computer God. I really
can't remember. Anyway, at the end of the gig, Geezer usually just
walks offstage. Well, at the end, he walked to the middle of the
stage, and gave everyone a double thumbs up, and a rather large smile.
Very uncharacteristic (sp?) for Geezer. A rock solid performance here.
Tony Iommi was also not
like his usual self. He still didn't talk to the audience at all. In
fact, in the 12 years I've been a Black Sabbath fan, I've only ever
heard him speak once. About 3 years ago, he and Cozy Powell hosted
MTV's HeadBanger's Ball, and he spoke there. Cozy did most of the
talking, but I did get to hear Tony there. Does anyone know if he ever
talks to the audience? Anyway, Tony looked his usual self. He wore the
"million crosses" outfit that he wore at Live Aid, and
pretty much did more moving on the stage than he's done recently. He
did seem to be rather hot, as he wiped his brow MANY times, which I've
never seen him do before. *AND* he was all smiles. I think this was
due to the rather GREAT gig that was happening. The only other time I
saw Iommi smile so much, was during the recent Freddie Mercury benefit
gig, wheere Iommi was in the backup band with Queen. He smiled a lot
there, especially when he shook hands with James Hetfield. Anyway,
Iommi also smiled a lot during his solo, and gave a thumbs up a few
times as well, along with the "horns salute". Solid playing
here. His solo wasn't as boring and stale as some that I've heard of
his in the past. He threw in "Orchid" from the past, and a
few other old Sabbath instrumentals whose names elude me at the
moment. He seemed to REALLY enjoy this gig.
Ronnie James Dio also
really enjoyed the gig. He gave a small speech at the beginning of the
gig about Philadelphia. It went something like this. "Turn on the
lights here. I know where we are. My favorite place on the face of the
earth. Philadelphia, PA". Well, most bands say things like this,
and it's usally crap, just to gain a reaction from the audience.
However, with Dio, it's a different story. With Dio the band, a tour
either started or ended in Philly. Both of Dio's commercially
available concerts were filmed in Philly, and Dio hit here at least
twice on every tour he played. He really does love this town. Anyway,
Dio's vocals were solid last night, and I didn't notice any cracks in
it. And, surprisingly, he did the old Ozzy tunes better than I've
heard him do them in the past. IMHO, Dio's voice isn't suited to the
old Ozzy tunes, but he pulled 'em off really well. One thing though. I
would have liked to hear Sabbath do some "Tyr" songs, as
those are really suited to his voice, especially "Anno Mundi".
Dio was having a lot of fun at the gig, and is one of the few singers
left that actually uses a corded mike, and plays with it as a stage
prop. He also did his "twirl" the mike stand thing several
times, overall a classic Dio performance. All smiles here as well.
During Paranoid, someone up front gave Dio a group of roses, and a
shirt that I couldn't read. Dio REALLY appreciated this, as (after
Paranoid), he held 'em up the audience, pointed 'em out, and gave
another thumbs up. Also, during Paranoid, one of the red filters for a
spotlight fell down off the light truss, and Dio picked it up, and put
it in front of his face, and acted rather silly. Oh yeah, he was
actually *IN* the audience to get the group of roses. I almost missed
this headbanging, but I did see part of it.
There was no mention of
Geoff Nicholls, but he had to have been there. There were some
keyboards littered through the show, but we didn't see him, and no one
mentioned him. This annoys me, as Geoff is the longest serving member
of Black Sabbath other than Tony Iommi. Geoff's been there since right
before the recording of Heaven & Hell. :(
5) Summary:
Overall, a FUCKING GREAT
concert. One of the best I've seen before, and easily the best Sabbath
show I've seen, and I've now seen Sabbath 4 times. This is *NOT* a
band just going through the paces, just to get a quick buck. They were
out there playing because they wanted to. All the smiles, all the
audience interaction that was *NOT* part of Sabbath concerts for a
long time tells me that this band likes playing together. I really
wished they would have played longer than their usual 90 mins, as
Sabbath now has 18 studio albums, and they need more time to cover it
all. I was also hoping to hear at least one Dio solo tune, but I'm not
suprised at all I didn't get one. If you get a chance to go, DON'T
MISS IT. One of the best concert experiences I've had in a long time,
possibly ever.
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