Bloodstock Festival, Catton Hall, Burton On Trent Day 3
So our final day on BOA's hallowed turf had a leisurely beginning and a
hectic end. We missed the two opening bands and made our way in for the third
band on the bill as once we were in the arena it would be all systems go!
Sacred Mother Tongue
These Northampton bruisers came out flying with riff after riff from
virtuoso Andy James peeling off heavy grooves and technical solos with
every song. His muscular riffage is as always complimented by the strong
melodic vocals of Darrin South. The band does what they do very well and were a
nice mid paced start to ease into the day. However my one criticism would be
that they only played tracks from their latest album and nothing from
their debut. I can see the logic in this but as a fan of the band since the first
album I would have liked
Two Thousand Eight Hundred but we got
Demons,
Bleeding Out and
Seven. So a strong showing from SMT but
not one for the hardcore. 7/10
Passing up Fozzy we had a small break before our party halved with half
going to see Amorphis and the others heading towards Evil Scarecrow
Amorphis (Chris Hutchings)
Looking at the 45 minute set and thinking “wow, only 7 songs; that’s not
very much at all”. However,
watching Amorphis was pretty damn absorbing and those seven songs went by
extremely fast. Tomi Joutsen (Vocals) did an excellent job, chatting to
the crowd in-between songs whilst keeping it short and kept the rhythm going
making it a pleasure to watch as well as wind milling with his extremely long
dreadlocks which was incredible! His microphone was also uniquely shaped and
rather impressive to see. There were not many technical difficulties for these
guys at all considering that all weekend there had been problems although they
did come on stage about 5 minutes late. When they did arrive, they paced
the set just right, interacting with the crowd just enough to not over play it.
The atmosphere down the front for these guys was superb and it was very easy to
get caught up in it and sing along and head bang and just generally rock out to
this band. From the set list, it was clear that
Sky Is Mine was the favourite
song of the set and the most commonly known judging by the reaction of the crowd
who comprised of some diehards and more than a few first timers. So when
Amorphis next tour I would definitely go and check them out. Well worth it and
to quote the wise words of Mr Brett Perry get down the front! 7/10
Evil Scarecrow
The Sophie tent was at first empty while the band warmed up however it
filled quickly, as we waited two lovely girls came through the crowd and handed
out party poppers and gave specific instructions that they should not be
used "Until Dr Hell tells you". With the instructions taken on
board we waited and the band stormed on stage to Verdi's
Messa da Requiem
throwing their trademark shapes to this classical piece. From then on
it was outright metal from the off, things started with
Choose Metal their
opening track of choice and the now massive crowd was shouting right back,
banging heads, throwing horns and enjoying the metal party for what it was.
Some call Evil Scarecrow a parody band, they aren't they are a band that
have more fun than any other playing the music they love! With the first song
out of the way the noticeably impressed Dr Hell exchanged
expletives that were used to convey his disbelief and then plunged into
the second song the bands emo anthem
Blacken The Everything which was
the first part of the bands legendary crowd interaction, getting the
packed tent to fake cry (although Hell do it for real) for them.
The song is led by the hypnotic drums of Monty Blitzfist and
the keys and samples of Princess Luxury and got the crowd chanting along
with its hook filled chorus. After this brief slowing in pace we were
told that the bands and I quote "no expense spared" pyro
display would be used during the next song so we got out party poppers
ready and let them off when told to during the song
War And Seek covering
the metal heads in attendance with coloured streamers adding to the party
atmosphere. More crowd participation on the fantastic new song
Crabulon which
involved much pincer moving, scuttling form one side of the tent to the
other and the disturbing sight of man mountain bassist Kraven Morrdeth
sitting on Dr Hell's knee. The early guitar filled
Ra Vs. Thor was
next showing off the guitar talents of Dr Hell and Brother Pain, before
things got serious for the future classic
Robotoron which came with
the obligatory perfect robot circles and the massive metal knees up of
cover
Final Countdown which I'm sure they will stop playing at some
point and we were treated to the bands resident mad man Brother Pain
solo from atop the bar and crowd surf at the end of the song. This was a
triumphant show from the Nottingham natives that left no doubt in anyone's
mind that Evil Scarecrow are defiantly one of the best live bands in the
UK. 10/10
So suitably knackered with the largest grins ever seen on our faces we made
our way back to rendezvous with the rest of our group.
Exodus
Now I've never seen the American thrashers live but I've been told
that they are excellent and boy was I informed correctly. After the
initial strains of an intro faded it was full speed, head smashing thrash
mayhem from the outset with very little let up.
The Ballad
Of Leonard and Charles was first and proved it is anything but a
ballad with the razor-sharp riffage of Gary Holt (pulling double duty) and Lee
Atlus trading riffs at light speed determined to kill the crowd and aided
by Tom Hunting's drumming. The pit was ferocious for all of the songs
especially on
A Lesson In Violence and the perennial
Bonded
By Blood which was used as a tribute to Jeff Hanneman and
former Exodus vocalist Paul Baloff. There were no safety warnings
here oh no. The music was thrash in its purest form and the imposing
presence and shouts of Rob Dukes make Exodus a forceful live act that are
quite willing to destroy the crowd with pit inciting songs and the
occasional wall of death. By the end of
Strike Of The Beast those
down the front were battered bruised and some bloody but most of all they had
been blown away by the full on fury of Exodus in full flight. Good show indeed!
8/10
Devildriver
I'm sorry Dez but I'm afraid you've lost your touch a little. First it
was a Coal Chamber reunion and now it's tarnished your day job as on my third
viewing of Devildriver it was them that looked like the parody band. While
trying not to sound like an uncool parent every song does indeed sound the same
and rather than aiming for new sounds with some melodic light and shade
they just go for relentless fury primarily to incite pits. These were appearing
but I think many were already beaten by Exodus and were saving themselves for
Anthrax who were coming next. Because of this Devildriver would have been
better suited earlier meaning there was a glut of thrash following each other
before the main event. As it was they just got a little lost in the
mix. 5/10
Anthrax (Paul, Chris & Alex Hutchings)
After a less than inspiring set by Devildriver the front of the stage
rapidly filled as
Worship blasted out into the summer evening.
Racing onto the stage, Anthrax flew into one of their many anthems, the
appropriately titled
Caught In A Mosh. Down the front the
pits opened up, and every word was mouthed. Say what you want about Anthrax,
but they sure have some tunes and the opener is an all-time classic. Frank
Bello as always racing around the stage, Scott Ian exchanging some frank and what
looked like harsh words to his guitar tech, and there he was, the human sultana
himself, Joey Belladonna urging the crowd to sing along. Now Belladonna can be
a bit irritating but he was on top form, hitting the notes and running across
the stage throughout ensuring that everyone got his attention. Following the
opener they launched into an awesome version of
NFL before the
obligatory cover of Joe Jackson’s
Got The Time. A little momentum was
lost with dedications to RJD and Dimebag for
In The End, leading to a
couple of questions about why there was no dedication to Jeff Hanneman, given
their membership of the Big 4. However, the band picked it right back up with a
blast from the first album,
Fistful Of Metal, delivering the opener
from that album
Death Rider with full force brutality. New guitarist,
ex-Shadows Fall’s Jon Donais looked right at home stage right, hitting the
solos whilst Scott Ian continued his usual energetic performance. He really is
a legend. Anthrax then treated the crowd to a storming version of
TNT
(sigh of relief it wasn’t
Anthem!) from their latest release, before
wrapping up with
Indians,
Fight ‘Em Til You Can’t, and then
the arrival of Dredd, for
I Am The Law. Belladonna brought out the
Judge that had been stomping around the festival site all weekend. As the crowd
lapped it up, Anthrax finished off with their third cover of the day, Trust’s
Antisocial.
Like Priest with the
Green Manalishi,
Antisocial and
Got
The Time are now staples of the set and are treated very much as their own.
Like ‘em or loathe ‘em, they always put on a show, and at BOA 2013 Anthrax were
very much in the mood. One of the sets of the weekend. 9/10
Slayer
So with everyone getting a 40 minute rest bite from the madness we waited
eagerly as the stage was set. No fancy stage dressing no fireworks or props
just one backdrop that had the one word bellowed by metal fans all around the
world. Yes it was time for Slayer, probably the heaviest and still the most
underground of all of the Big 4 a band that appeals to mainstreamers and those
that worship at the tomb of Euronymous and everyone in between. No intro tape
no fuss no messing the band were onstage in heartbeat and launched into
World
Painted Blood which was followed in quick succession by
Disciple it
is an odd sight to see thousands of heads all moving in tandem but Slayer are
one of the few bands that command this. Unrelenting and violently aggressive
they are band that don't do crowd interaction but let their music do the
talking. A small break ended with Tom Araya's shriek that signals the still
dazzling, breakneck riffage of
War Ensemble which proceeded to incite
the mother of all pits down the front forcing us at the back to take a few
steps back. Not one to play a slow song the pace continued with
Hallowed
Point the Bill Bailey approved
Mandatory Suicide before
Altar
Of Sacrifice and
Jesus Saves continued to inflict more damage on
those that dared to venture into the pit. With only two original members left
Slayer are still a dominant live force with Gary Holt equally matching the
speed and dexterity of Kerry King and Paul Bostaph showing why he has now
replaced Dave Lombardo twice, Tom Araya was on keen vocal
form hollering every line and shrieking like a banshee when needed. The
set was punctuated by small episodes of silence meaning that it was not just
one wall of noise, these little rests meant that the show flowed a lot
smoother and stopped anyone from getting bored, although most of the crowd were
mesmerised by the cacophony of violence unfolding before them. After
Snuff
and
Hate Worldwide it was time for the greatest hits part of the
programme the final crowd pleasing part of what had been
a varied set. Firstly the dirge like doom intro of
Seasons In
The Abyss built up to its main pounding riff before another slow
burner in the shape of the old school
Hell Awaits this led to Araya's
'poem' of the refrain "Dance With The Dead In My Dreams" which
signalled
Dead Skin Mask which ended with the audio downpour that
starts the evergreen(red)
Raining Blood. Another pit and the main set
was closed a small break and the back drop fell to reveal a large Hanneman
memorial which incited a massive cheer from the crowd and was the only mention
of it. Slayer are not a band to live in the past and dwell on sentimentality,
no words were spoken the band just paid tribute to their fallen brother in the
best way possible with two of his best songs the uber-doom
South Of
Heaven and the full on head ripper of
Angel Of Death which showed
both sides of the great man's talents. As the final chord hit there was silence
and the band left the stage Araya walked straight off leaving Kerry King and
Gary Holt to thank the crowd briefly before also making their way to the back.
The crowd released their breath simultaneously and started to pour out of
the arena. A simply stunning set from Slayer that will not be beaten for a
good while awesome! 10/10
Roundup
So another Bloodstock and this one was the biggest ever mainly for the
'mainstream' draws of Slayer and LOG, it will be hard to see where
BOA will go from here whether they will keep courting the arena bands or will
go back to the more underground bands that made their name. Still a stunning
set of bands, great music, great (and painful) memories and a hell of a good
time! Roll on next year! My personal picks are Emperor (already
confirmed), Amon Amarth/ Nightwish and Saxon!