Alice In Chains, Ghost & The Walking Papers Newport Centre
Once again we step into the weird world of the Newport Centre, half venue,
half swimming pool it is truly a sight to behold as the black t-shirted hordes
queued for entry as families frolicked in the pool. Still once inside the
oddness was replaced by the familiar sight and smells of a rock venue, albeit
one that doubles as a squash court. There was talk of Joey Jordison's band
Scar The Martyr being one of the supports but that honour was bestowed
upon The Walking Papers.
The Walking Papers
Made up of members of The Missionary Position, Screaming Trees and Guns N
Roses The Walking Papers play blues based soulful rock with a
slight alternative/punk edge. Bedecked in a suit Jeff Angell played a
mean blues guitar and howled his way through tracks off the band’s debut
album accompanied by the expert time keeping of Barrett Martin who knows
how to smash a drum kit, keys, synths, orchestrations and general madness came
from keyboardist Benjamin Anderson and Bassist Duff McKagan added a refined
coolness that only someone of his magnitude can bestow by taking a backseat
somewhat to Angell's bluesman persona. They were a good start to the
night mixing some laid back blues with heavy punkier riffs. There was very
little banter as the band locked into a groove that gathered a healthy
crowd excited by what they saw as a new band (The Walking Papers' album was not
widely released in the UK until this month). Worth checking out on
both record and in a live setting The Walking Papers were a good warm
up for the rest of the night. 8/10
Back to the bar for a few light refreshments (so long as it's Guinness or
Cider) and then we took up our seat again. Yes folk’s seats, history
dictates that you should not stand in close quarters to metal fans in a venue
that is essentially a sauna...
Ghost
A band always seeming to play the odd one out, Swedes Ghost were
next and the crowd gathered as the room filled for their grey mass
(somewhere between black and white). Despite all their Satanic lyrics the
band are a bit of fun and after the intro and instrumental of
Infestissumam
the Nameless Ghouls locked in for the retro occult rock set before
the Cardinal of Sin himself Papa Emeritus (II?) arrived on stage for
the pounding
Per Aspera Ad Inferi which moved into
Con
Clavi Con Dio. The tracks are now ingrained into the bands set list
and with the sweet smell of incense (that's INCENSE Newport isn't that bad
yet!) wafting through the hall the band showed how heavy they are
live in comparison to their albums which are bit lighter. The night of the
witch began with of
Stand By Him followed by
Prime Mover got
the crowd moving to the Devil's beat before the band did something that I
haven't seen them do live yet. Papa began to talk to the crowd
like a normal human, this took a little away from their ghostly aurora but
it make them a little more accessible as they introduced their cover of Roky
Erickson's
If You Have Ghosts from their
Dave Grohl produced covers E.P. The song fitted the band well
and gave a brief break in the proceeding before awesome
Year Zero
and
Ritual led into the sing along quasi-spiritual
Monstrance
Clock ended the set. This was a short, precise set that took a
few risks that ultimately paid off for the band and brought the heavily
grunge loving crowd on side, something the band do very well. 8/10
Alice In Chains
I have only seen AIC at a festival and I'll let you in on secret I wasn't
that fussed, outside of their hits I didn't recognise much and thought
they were a bit boring. However due to my good friend Lee's super fandom I
picked up
Black Gives Way To Blue and was impressed enough to seek out
the back catalogue culminating with this years
The Devil Put
Dinosaurs Here. So I wanted to give them another chance
and I'm glad I did. The band came out and went straight into
Dirt
from the album of the same name, with the opening riff the roof nearly
came off the place not only due to the ovation but the sheer power of
AIC'c groove. The noise was up there with Gojira in terms of power, the riffs
of Cantrell just ripped the crowd a new hole, the bass of Inez was big
beefy and fuzzed to hell and drummer Sean Kinney broke every stick he used to
abuse his kit. Special kudos too goes to William Duvall who truly is
the singer of AIC now not just Layne's replacement he also plays a mean
guitar. Speaking of guitar it is only in a love setting you realise Jerry
Cantrell's guitar playing is, his riffs are unmistakable and his solos are
explosive and to the point. The first five songs of the set went by
in a big heavy noisy blast with no let up to catch your breath
Again into
the modern classic
Check My Brain, then the classic
Them
Bones. The band mixed songs from their early albums with tracks off
their latest album, the first of these was
Hollow which was followed
by my favourite track
Man In The Box. The aural assault
continued with light and shade mixing the slower more ballad-like songs with
the harder rock edged tracks.
Phantom Limb was excellent as was
No Excuses,
Stone and the final track of the main set the seldom played
Sludge
Factory. A brief break and speculation in which order
the encore would come, it was quickly answered with the acoustics brought
out for
Down In A Hole (cue excited squealing from my
right from Lee), the (downward) spiralling song set the tone for the
encore perfectly and led into the fan favourites and perennial set closers
Would?
and the timeless and trippy
Rooster which brought the house
down! This was a hell of showing from AIC who more than justified their
standing as one of the leaders of the Seattle metal scene. Definitely
a band that have proved how good they can be live and one I would see again,
just maybe at an indoor venue. 10/10