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W.A.S.P., Armored Saint ensure nostalgia & rock never stop

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W.A.S.P., Armored Saint ensure nostalgia & rock never stop

Many metalheads, particularly those in their 40s and 50s, would likely reference the ‘80s era, specifically that which emanated from the Sunset Strip, as their favorite brand of music’s golden period. The slew of bands, over-the-top fashions, excess of after-show debauchery and hundreds of memorable songs stamped their place in the lives of countless aficionados.

Naturally, some of the bands from that scene and time made it bigger than others. Some barely lasted one album. All played a part in a culture of music that’s second to none.

W.A.S.P. and Armored Saint fall somewhere in the middle of that ledger, though — especially in the former’s case — much closer to the top when it comes to popularity and an imprint that still resonates today. Both undeniably passed the criteria that matters most: creating music and specific songs that have stood the test of time four decades later.

Anyone requiring more convincing needed to look no further than Saturday night at the Aztec Theatre as W.A.S.P. brought its Album One Alive tour with veteran stalwarts Armored Saint in a double dosage of Los Angeles-area metal gone modern.

W.A.S.P. eccentric frontman Blackie Lawless went more than a decade without performing in the Alamo City until Nov. 4, 2022, when — guess who? — Armored Saint (along with Michael Schenker) each celebrated their longevity at the Boeing Center at Tech Port. That performance, from a W.A.S.P. fan’s standpoint, not only lacked the overdue punch many were expecting from the rare visit, but it also featured Lawless shockingly changing lyrics to one of his songs to a PG version and barely found him addressing his audience (coverage here).

Two years and 26 days later at the Aztec may as well have been another lifetime. This show was a hundred times better and more “back to the beginning” than 2022.

Saturday night brought forth a longer (88 minutes approximately) and clearer (in sound and lighting) performance exclusive to songs from the first four albums covering 1984-89 even after W.A.S.P. had played the debut record in its entirety. It also featured Lawless sharing various anecdotes and stories with the crowd that never seemed long-winded. Judging by various fans approaching Alamo True Metal during the night with comments about Lawless’ pre-show meet-and-greet being “next level,” “unrushed” and “worth it,” it was as if Lawless’ banter with both levels of the Aztec was an extension of the M&G.

One of those spoken moments featured Lawless stating how he had called “half a dozen promoters that I know around the country” to ask them for their thoughts on his idea of bringing the Album One Alive tour to life. He stated that each of them was all for it but that the final one asked if he would perform the album in sequential order, only for Lawless to tell him, “No.” When that promoter referenced a mythical Led Zeppelin reunion playing their fourth album all the way through and asked Lawless if they would start with “Stairway to Heaven,” the singer relented, “OK, you got me by the ying yang there.”

Lawless then admitted that initial rehearsals with his band — 18-year tenured guitarist Doug Blair, 26-year bassist Mike Duda and drummer Aquiles Priester — “weren’t going very smoothly” because some of the songs hadn’t been played in 40 years.

Not only were they played at the Aztec. They served to put to rest any public doubt that Lawless isn’t singing. Take it from one who spent the first three songs in the photo pit and actually heard Lawless and Blair’s vocals flowing from their vocal cords and not just the microphones (watch ATM Facebook Live footage of “B.A.D.,” “School Daze” and “Hellion”). Even 40 years later, it’s not hard to get fired up upon hearing “a fire bell is ringing hell” and “at the altar of Rock N’ Roll you kneel.”

Lawless also shared that until this tour, he had never opened a show with “I Wanna Be Somebody.” While gazing at the MTV video for that tune (and subsequently several others) on the big screen, it brought back the memory of a 1987 syndicated radio interview Lawless did with Z-Rock in which he said the inspiration for that song came after he heard the line uttered on an episode of “Barney Miller” (Google it, kiddos) and that it “put a hook in me.”

W.A.S.P. had spent the majority of its tours opening with another first-album track, “On Your Knees,” one of many from back in the day that sparked Tipper Gore’s Parental Music Resource Center (PMRC) shenanigans and efforts to bring down metal because she viewed W.A.S.P. as “We Are Sexual Perverts.” Forty years later, the acronym may be as obvious, or mysterious, to some as it once was. Regardless, you can watch ATM footage below of “On Your Knees,” “Tormentor” and “The Torture Never Stops” as W.A.S.P. ended the first album in style adorned by a blood-red stage emblazoned with chains and skulls (again, more back to the beginning than its previous visit).

And unlike 2022, Lawless expanded the post-album one portion of the show. After a 5-minute break, the quartet tore into medleys from 1986’s Inside the Electric Circus and personal favorite The Headless Children from 1989.

A 35-year celebration of the latter would’ve been incredible to experience. But at least we heard sizable portions of “The Real Me,” MTV ballad “Forever Free” and the tyrant-inspired title track, which was non-existent at Tech Port.

Fellow Los Angeles natives Armored Saint are always heavy, dependable and energetic, and that didn’t change from the 2022 show.

Opening with an absolute ripping tune from 2020 and latest album Punching the Sky in “End of the Attention Span,” vocalist John Bush and company took aim at today’s perils of gotta-know-everything-now social media with a song they could easily open every gig with from now on.

Following that blazing track, it was nothing but classics beginning with the 1987 title track to Raising Fear. Bush introed 1984 title track March of the Saint by saying the band first played it in San Antonio during a three-night stint at the Cameo Theatre with Metallica — a group the vocalist could’ve joined back in the day but turned down, something he discussed with ATM in a turn-back-the-clock interview here.

Guitarists Phil Sandoval and Jeff Duncan, bassist Joey Vera and drummer Gonzo Sandoval round out the quintet that still has 80 percent original members, and they teamed up to play 2000 track “The Pillar,” a deep cut they didn’t perform when they headlined Come And Take It Live in mid-May in Austin with Dangerous Toys (ATM coverage here. Ironically, Dangerous Toys was also headlining its own show this night at Deco Ballroom). The well-oiled machine was in fine form all night, as demonstrated by ATM’s Facebook Live footage of “Left Hook From Right Field” and “Aftermath.”

Bush, who also referenced playing “the Majestic around the corner with Saxon back in the day,” took to the balcony during “Can U Deliver,” (ATM footage below) before the Saints capped it off with “Reign of Fire” (also below).

Unbeknownst to the crowd, it was reported by the band yesterday that Vera had surgery on his left eye in Fort Worth two days after the gig for Posterior Vitreous Detachment. In a prime example of “the show must go on,” Vera — who of course also has been in Fates Warning for many years with San Antonio natives Ray Alder and Bobby Jarzombek — showed no ill effects and continued to rock and perform like the trooper he’s always been on stage. Alamo True Metal wishes him well.

But you can’t end an evening with W.A.S.P. in San Antonio without performing “Blind in Texas” (ATM Facebook Live footage here), and Lawless gave the fans what they wanted. He prefaced it by telling them they had witnessed history in seeing the first album played live all the way.

There was no blood or raw meat. No pyro. No political flags. Just a kick-ass performance from beginning to end by one of metal’s important, influential, favorite and fun frontmen and artists.

Stay healthy and hungry, boys. And buckle up, metal brethren. Forty years of The Last Command is just around the corner.

W.A.S.P. setlist: I Wanna Be Somebody, L.O.V.E. Machine, The Flame, B.A.D., School Daze, Hellion, Sleeping (In the Fire), On Your Knees, Tormentor, The Torture Never Stops.

Medley 1 (The Big Welcome/Inside the Electric Circus, I Don’t Need No Doctor, Scream Until You Like It).

Medley 2 (The Real Me, Forever Free, The Headless Children), Wild Child, Blind in Texas

ARMORED SAINT setlist: End of the Attention Span, Raising Fear, The Pillar, March of the Saint, Left Hook From Right Field, Aftermath, Win Hands Down, Can U Deliver, Reign of Fire

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Salvation turned up to 10 as Armored Saint conquers Austin with Dangerous Toys

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Salvation turned up to 10 as Armored Saint conquers Austin with Dangerous Toys

Writers have their blocks. Baseball players call it the yips.

Those moments when the part of your craft you’ve been doing routinely for years — putting thoughts to paper or computer or throwing a baseball — suddenly gives way to something unexplainable that causes you to tighten up and either forget how to do it or do it horribly wrong.

Singers can take it further. Not that they forget how to sing. But when their voice lets them down in the middle of a tour, and there’s a show to play that night, all hell can break loose. Do you postpone or cancel the concert? Can you find a replacement, and even if you do, will fans accept it or demand a refund if the singer they came to hear can’t perform?

Thousands of vocalists have endured this nightmare at one point or another — especially if they’ve been in a band since 1982 and singing for much longer.

On Thursday night, Armored Saint vocalist John Bush not only showed the packed house at Come And Take It Live in Austin he was back and in rare form. He also got to thank, jam, and even cry with his temporary replacement at three gigs earlier this month that followed two postponements.

Playing in Austin on their “Saints Will Conquer” tour for the first time since 2001, Bush and Armored Saint headlined the Riverside Drive venue fresh off a tour supporting Queensryche. Supporting Armored Saint on this night were Austin natives Dangerous Toys and Snake Skin Prison.

Dangerous Toys frontman Jason McMaster, a member of the South Texas Music Walk of Fame among other illustrious honors, filled in for Bush to help save Armored Saint’s tour, much like McMaster had done last year for Accept vocalist Mark Tornillo.

This time, McMaster’s band was supporting Bush’s, and the significance of the moment overcame the latter when his good friend was in the front row watching Armored Saint’s set following his own performance.

After Armored Saint played 1985 deep cut “Aftermath,” the beginning of which Bush sang from the middle of the crowd, the veteran vocalist went over to McMaster, shared an embrace and came up teary-eyed. Not even a knucklehead from the back of the venue who didn’t realize what was happening, or simply didn’t care before shouting, “Why’s it so quiet? Play some fuckin’ music! Goddamn” could ruin the moment.

Bush called himself a “pussy” for crying, then shared with the audience his gratitude for McMaster and the emotion he felt while believing his prior vocal issues had let down fans and his bandmates, saying in part, “Only singers know, when you lose it, it’s utter misery,” before Armored Saint dedicated the title track to 2015’s Win Hands Down to McMaster (see ATM footage of it all below and 65-photo gallery).

But that wasn’t all of the feelgood story.

Bush referred to McMaster as “a diehard fucking fan” and thanked him for coming out “on a day’s notice” during the fill-in shows before giving him the ultimate compliment, calling him “an extra member of Armored Saint at this point.” So of course, the only way to punctuate the moment was to have McMaster come up and sing “Can U Deliver” with Bush and the band (ATM footage below).

If Bush hadn’t said anything about it, or you hadn’t kept up with the band’s recent happenings, you wouldn’t have had much indication that the singer was coming off a troubling couple of weeks because Armored Saint, as usual, was firing on all cylinders from the get-go.

Appropriately, the group hit the stage running by opening with the best song off 2020 and latest album Punching the Sky, the in-your-face “End of the Attention Span.” Founding brothers Phil Sandoval on guitar and Gonzo Sandoval on drums, along with veteran mainstay bassist Joey Vera and guitarist Jeff Duncan jammed as if their lives depended on it right into the title track to 1987 classic album Raising Fear, ensuring the headbanging was not about to stop anytime soon.

Considering they only played 13 tracks as the headliner in an approximate 75-minute set, the presence of multiple deep cuts such as “Head On” from 2010’s La Raza and “Tribal Dance” off 1991’s Symbol of Salvation had to please the biggest of Armored Saint diehards. The downside was the absence of personal 1987 favorite “Chemical Euphoria,” but the group nevertheless was absolutely killer on everything else including “Symbol of Salvation,” “March of the Saint,” and closers “Reign of Fire” and “Mad House” (ATM footage of both below).

Bush’s passionate style is something he spoke about exclusively with ATM during the Win Hands Down tour (watch here). One of the reasons McMaster was more than a suitable fill-in is because the Dangerous Toys frontman exhibits similar qualities.

Even though DT hasn’t released new music since 1995, you don’t have to ask McMaster and Co. twice to play a hometown show. And although they’re used to headlining their backyard, McMaster shared it was a no-brainer to support Armored Saint when that band came a-callin’.

Emphasizing tracks from their smash self-titled 1989 debut album, McMaster and original mates Scott Dalhover (lead guitar), bassist Mike Watson and drummer Mark Geary, along with rhythm guitarist Paul Lidel (McMaster’s onetime mate in Broken Teeth) rocked the house on “Outlaw,” “Take Me Drunk” and “Queen of the Nile” to help get things warmed up.

With Broken Teeth guitarist David Beeson among the crowd up front, Dangerous Toys kept the hits coming on the title track to Pissed plus cock-pleasing “Sport’n A Woody” (ATM footage of both below). The band ended the 12-song performance with obligatory closers and two biggest MTV hits: “Teas’n Pleas’n,” and “Scared,” the latter originally dedicated to Alice Cooper with McMaster telling the crowd that the king of fright “probably used the album as a coaster” (see setlist below).

If you missed DT in action on this night, don’t fret. They’ll headline Deco Ballroom in San Antonio on June 21 with Hollywood Guns N’ Monsters and Even In Death (tickets here).

Another Austin band, Snake Skin Prison, opened the night in a unique way that wasn’t necessarily by choice. But it benefitted the fans in an unusual way.

With space for three bands’ drum sets at a premium inside Come And Take It Live, Snake Skin Prison had their drummer not only set up in the center of the stage but pressed to the barrier as they rocked out five tracks including “The Great Texas Death Ride,” “Come and Take It,” and new tune “The End of the World.”

But the story on this night was Bush’s return to the stage. Yet Armored Saint is no longer his only obligation.

Bush recently became part of supergroup Category 7, which will release its debut self-titled album July 26 on Metal Blade Records (see a complete list of “New Releases” here; best viewed on a computer). Bush’s mates in that band are ex-Machine Head and current Kerry King band guitarist Phil Demmel, Adrenaline Mob guitarist and main songwriter Mike Orlando, Exodus bassist Jack Gibson and Shadows Fall/Overkill drummer Jason Bittner.

ARMORED SAINT SETLIST: End of the Attention Span, Raising Fear, Tribal Dance, Symbol of Salvation, March of the Saint, Head On, Standing on the Shoulders of Giants, Over the Edge, Aftermath, Win Hands Down, Can U Deliver (w/Jason McMaster), Reign of Fire, Mad House

DANGEROUS TOYS SETLIST: Outlaw; Take Me Drunk; Sugar, Leather & The Nail; Gimme No Lip; Bones in the Gutter; Ten Boots (Stompin’); Queen of the Nile; Pissed; Sport’n A Woody; Line ‘Em Up; Teas’n Pleas’n; Scared

SNAKE SKIN PRISON SETLIST: The Great Texas Death Ride, Come And Take It, The End of the World, Bury Me in the Mountain, Smokin’ Whiskey

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Armored Saint delivers opening punches on star-studded anniversary bill

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Armored Saint delivers opening punches on star-studded anniversary bill

Readers and followers of Alamo True Metal over the years have grown accustomed to concert coverage encapsulating each band on the bill in the same piece. But last Friday’s show at the new Tech Port Center + Arena staked claim to one of the rare exceptions of allotting each artist its own just due space.

After all, how can a guitarist celebrating his 50th anniversary such as Michael Schenker be limited to a few sentences buried within a report highlighting a headliner in W.A.S.P. not only marking its 40th anniversary but its first show in the Alamo City in more than a decade?

And for the purposes of this particular report, a more appropriate question would be: how can a blistering, heavy, veteran and talented-across-the-board group such as Armored Saint be treated as an “opening act” in writing given that its status as such on this bill was as much of a misnomer as misnomers can get?

So let the march of the review of the Saint begin.

You can’t open a three-act heavy metal concert with a song entitled “Reign of Fire” and not come out balls blazing, and that’s exactly what Armored Saint did. Thing is, vocalist John Bush, guitarists Phil Sandoval and Jeff Duncan, bassist Joey Vera and drummer Gonzo Sandoval sustained it throughout their 10-song, approximately 45-minute showing.

But should that really come as a surprise?

Not only has Armored Saint kept its original lineup with the exception of the 1990 passing of guitarist Dave Prichard due to leukemia resulting in Duncan’s addition to the band, but the strong and tight quintet is marking its own 40th anniversary this year. It showed on stage as Armored Saint displayed the crispest sound of all three acts and easily had the most energy. Watch them in action via ATM’s Facebook Live footage of personal favorite “Chemical Euphoria,” below on 1991’s “Symbol of Salvation” and 2015’s “Win Hands Down” and via the 27-photo gallery.

Phil Sandoval was a beast on guitar without demonstrating showmanship that was too flashy. He let his guitar skills and playing do the talking while striking brief poses that were appropriate for the parts of his riffs he wanted to emphasize without those poses distracting the audience from the sounds he was constructing.

There was no letup on the part of his brother Gonzo behind the kit either, as Armored Saint’s heaviness may have caught the roughly 1,300 in attendance off guard for anyone expecting the Saint to be a “warmup” act in every sense of the word.

Bush has always been one of metal’s most passionate vocalists, something we discussed in 2015 when Armored Saint opened for Saxon (watch here), and that was evident on old and new tunes alike such as classics “Long Before I Die” and “Last Train Home” plus 2020 Punching the Sky tracks “End of the Attention Span” and “Standing on the Shoulders of Giants.”

While most metalheads are familiar with Bush’s mid-’90s era as the vocalist of Anthrax that placed Armored Saint on an 8-year hiatus, fewer may know other interesting facts about him, some of which were discussed in the aforementioned video interview:

  • He appeared in the 1983 Huey Lewis & The News video “The Heart of Rock N’ Roll,” exiting the limo toward the end of the song. Bush told ATM his appearance came about because Armored Saint and Lewis’ band shared the same record label

  • Bush joined Metallica on “The Four Horsemen” during the latter’s 30th anniversary gigs in 2011 at The Fillmore in San Francisco, where Metallica went into detail about how Bush could’ve auditioned to be their vocalist in 1983 but turned it down

  • Bush used to do voiceovers in Burger King commercials

But on Friday night, Bush’s vocal cords did what they do best, and he and Armored Saint were still going strong on finale and 1984 title track “March of the Saint.”

The only complaint about Armored Saint’s set? It was too short. Somebody bring these guys back to the Alamo City as headliners, stat!

Can Armored Saint deliver?

Was there ever any doubt?

SETLIST: Reign of Fire, End of the Attention Span, Long Before I Die, Last Train Home, Chemical Euphoria, Standing on the Shoulders of Giants, Symbol of Salvation, Win Hands Down, Can U Deliver, March of the Saint

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