Seasonal Concert Wrap-up-Classic Acts, Quirky Newcomers Still Rocking Regional Venues
Seasonal Concert Wrap-upâ
Classic Acts, Quirky Newcomers Still Rocking Regional Venues
By John Voket
Despite the economic slowdownâs lingering effects here in Connecticut, it seems concert fans were not left wanting. And those who enjoy the familiarity of classic acts where they could sing along and pump their fists enjoyed a robust choice of shows and venues to patronize over the last few months.
Below find a glimpse at some of the best acts to grace local stages this concert season:
Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
Comcast Theater, Hartford â August 19
Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, N.J. â October 2
The Boss brought it to a sold-out crowd on this steamy August night in Hartford, playing the regionâs largest amphitheater for the first time. He celebrated with a high energy show that gave fans a taste of his latest material, including the haunting âOutlaw Peteâ and the rousing title track from Working on a Dream.
He hit the stage after nearly two weeks off from a European leg with a revival sprit, giving up classics like âSherri Darling,â âOut in The Street,â and an appropriately sweat-drenched âSpirit in The Night.â
That show was so good that a trip to the series of shows staged to close out Giants Stadium out in the former swamps of Jersey was warranted, and our reviewer landed there on a particularly good night. As a tribute to the âgrand old ladyâ of a stadium that has hosted dozens of Springsteen appearances over the years, The Boss opened the show with âWrecking Ball,â a brand new song he penned just for the occasion.
But the last Giants Stadium run was also made special by the full-length recreation of several of Springsteenâs earlier albums, played in sequence â with the incomparable Darkness on The Edge of Town landing during our visit. Each number that rolled out across the legion of ecstatic fans seemed better than the last, with a particularly affecting take on âRacing in The Street,â which gave âProfessorâ Roy Bittan ample time to pound those grand piano keys.
This tour also saw Bruce taking requests, in the form of large posters and cocktail napkins from the audience. On this evening, The Boss saw fit to try out a familiar cover he had never played before â getting the whole house swinging to an extended âJailhouse Rock.â
Chickenfoot
Mohegan Sun Arena, Uncasville â August 20
Super groups may come and super groups may go, but this configuration of former Van Halen members Sammy Hagar and Michael Anthony, The Red Hot Chili Peppersâ Chad Smith and electric guitar virtuoso Joe Satriani, collectively dubbed Chickenfoot, was the concert not to be missed this summer.
Originally rumored for the spacious Danbury Ives Concert Park, the show eventually settled in the confines of the Mohegan Sun Arena with surprisingly good sound and an energetic show that bravely steered away from any hits from any of its individual members.
For a rock and roll lover, this was a great achievement, because the band pulled off a nearly two-hour set drawing almost exclusively from their debut album, and tapping Satriani to work his magic through spectacular extended solos to beef things up. Hagar was candid, telling the audience that the collective members were in a good place playing their new material, with little or no desire to venture backwards into their own individual catalogs â which are pretty swarthy.
The showâs strongest numbers, âSoap on a Ropeâ and âOh Yeah,â were the ones the group performed the most during a rash of television and media appearances celebrating their coming out in recent months, with the encore of covers from Montrose (âBad Motor Scooterâ) and Deep Purple (âHighway Starâ) leaving the crowd hungry for Chickenfootâs next regional appearance.
Foreigner
Warner Theater, Torrington â October 4
Despite what founding member Mick Jones said was a case of laryngitis, singer Kelly Hansen led classic rockers Foreigner through a blazing hour and a half set of back-to-back hits in their third appearance in as many years at Torringtonâs Warner Theater.
Blessed with a repertoire of global hits stretching back to the late 1970s, Foreigner remained loyal to the core arrangements, throwing in a few variations like vocal breaks and acoustic takes on a few of the numbers just to keep things interesting.
Nobody went home disappointed as the band pumped out âCold Blooded,â âJuke Box Hero,â âI Want to Know What Love Is,â and âUrgent,â with a killer sax solo from multi-instrumentalist Jeff Pilson.
One of the high points of the show was Jones taking to the microphone for an extended rendition of âStar Rider,â from the bandâs debut album, sounding as fresh as he did on the bandâs first tour back in 1977.
Juliette Lewis and The New Romantiques
Chevrolet Theater, Wallingford â August 7
The quirky actress, perhaps known best for her Academy Award-nominated role in Natural Born Killers, or her touching characterization in The Other Sister, showed her true rocking self to a surprised and receptive crowd during an abbreviated opening set supporting The Pretenders.
This was the first evening for Lewis on this opening stint, but she and her new band were revved up and ready to deliver a blend of buzz saw punk and bluesy, psychedelic grooves, all enhanced by their singerâs animated stage mannerisms and unique vocal style.
Chatting with Lewis following the show, she lavished praise on producer Omar Rodriguez Lopez and bandmate Chris Watson for crafting a finished product in her new album Terra Incognita, which she first heard in snippets in her own head during what she said was an emotionally charged writing process.
It appears based on her live show, and the quality of her latest release, that Lewis is much more of a musician who acts than an actor taking a break to experiment or pump up their her prancing around fronting a rock band.
Alice Cooper
Warner Theatre, Torrington â September 27
This latest tour, beyond all others, proved that both figuratively and literally that you just canât kill Alice Cooper. His classics-laden set is sounding better than ever, with âThe Coopâ himself in the best vocal form of his 40-plus-year career.
And the stage show for his âTheatre of Deathâ tour takes every opportunity to knock the guy off Ââ guillotine, gallows, sword, giant âPoisonâ-filled syringe â and like a leather-clad sneering Energizer Bunny, he just keeps popping back up.
In between some very elaborate stage shenanigans, Cooper and his steel jaw tight backing band showcased âSchoolâs Out,â âUnder My Wheels,â âWelcome to My Nightmare,â and nearly two dozen other numbers â barely touching on his latest release Along Came a Spider. He managed just a sample from that offering, albeit one of the better songs of the show, âVengeance is Mine.â
And while any fan would have been thrilled to see the show, it was the after-show gathering that was a high point as former Alice Cooper Band bassist Dennis Dunaway and drummer Neal Smith stopped in backstage and swapped a few tasty war stories from their early days back in the late 1960s and early 70s.