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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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Titanic klash of thrash turns Aztec Theatre into hell on earth

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Titanic klash of thrash turns Aztec Theatre into hell on earth

Fans entering the Aztec Theatre on Saturday night may have expected a heavy metal concert. What they got was so much more: a conglomeration of historical celebration, hell unfolding into not one but two walls of death, and one of the genre’s most inspiring examples of living life to the fullest all wrapped up in a clash for the ages.

The Klash of the Titans tour featuring Testament, Kreator and Possessed delivered on more fronts than simply reinvigorating memories of the 1990-91 Clash of the Titans trek that tore through North America behind Slayer, Anthrax, Megadeth and a then-novice Alice In Chains.

Testament’s 1-hour, 7-minute closing co-headlining set brought its first two albums, 1987’s The Legacy and 1988’s The New Order, back to life — something the Bay Area thrashers originally did during the inaugural 70000 Tons of Metal cruise in 2011, which Alamo True Metal also witnessed up close.

This time, Testament may have become the first band in history to tour in support of the remastering of classic albums. And this time, the mainstays of those two records in vocalist Chuck Billy and guitarists Alex Skolnick and Eric Peterson chose not to play them in sequence or in entirety but to mix the best songs from each into a melting pot of mosh pit inducing fury.

Along with bassist Steve DiGiorgio, who began the set with a five-string instrument and ended it with a unique three-string version and new drummer Chris Dovas, Testament allowed itself to recreate deep cuts such as “A Day of Reckoning” and “Do or Die” and mix them with all-time favorites “Over the Wall,” “The New Order” and “Trial By Fire.”

Much like the cancer-surviving Billy dedicated “Do or Die,” the first song he ever worked on upon joining the group as it was transitioning between calling itself Legacy and Testament, to a friend of his restricken with a disease, ATM would like to produce this article especially for those in and around the author’s former stomping grounds of St. Petersburg, Florida, and all along the Florida Gulf Coast still persevering through the aftermath of Hurricane Milton. That includes personal friends unable to watch this tour three days before the San Antonio stop at Jannus Landing in St. Pete due to that visit’s cancellation. Hopefully through this piece of work and its art, they will feel as if they were at the Aztec as well, and they can get a taste of Testament’s set through ATM’s Facebook Live footage of “The Preacher” and “The Haunting” (no professional video was allowed).

Testament ended its performance eight minutes earlier than the venue’s official set times, which would’ve been ample time to include the first album’s “Curse of the Legions of Death” and second album’s Aerosmith cover “Nobody’s Fault.”

Nevertheless, watching the Aztec’s patrons overcome a dearth of available room to mosh their hearts out thanks to the venue’s multi-layered levels of general admission space in close proximity to one another by body surfing on “A Day of Reckoning” and letting it all hang out on closer “Into the Pit” was a sight to behold.

And here’s something to put the albums’ longevity into perspective for ya: The Legacy and The New Order are 11 and 12 years older, respectively, than the drummer who performed them on this night.

The confined space, however, did nothing to stop Kreator frontman Mille Petrozza from performing with the same intensity as if he was in front of 80,000 maniacs at his home nation’s annual Wacken Open Air festival.

Making their second appearance at the Aztec in 17 months after supporting Death Angel here May 23, 2023, Kreator made it clear that hell was about to morph into the laps of those who dared to allow the band to take them on the journey.

Six stage-prop corpses hung from the rafters while three inflatable demons towered over Petrozza, guitarist Sami Yli-Sirnio, former Dragonforce bassist Frederic Leclercq and drummer Jurgen Reil. Petrozza bellowed all of his lyrics with bombastic fury as Kreator (and Testament and Possessed, for that matter) played roughly 80 percent of their respective sets in a flurry of bright blood red lighting.

Petrozza demanded two walls of death (see 65-photo gallery), but even more menacing and horns-inducing was his desire to know “Is there something following you” during the riff mastery of “Phobia.”

The hellacious tone continued throughout the co-headlining performances of “666,” “Phantom Antichrist” and “Enemy of God.” Watch ATM Facebook Live footage of “Hail to the Hordes,” 1989 classic “Betrayer” and “Satan is Real” and view the setlist in the photo gallery, as Kreator was arguably one of the clearest-sounding bands in Aztec history. Everything about the band’s set was crisp, hard-hitting and memorable.

Petrozza and Possessed vocalist Jeff Becerra first met when the Berlin Wall in the former’s country still existed. Now in 2024, they’re touring together, and the latter has served simultaneously as arguably one of the founding fathers of death metal while exhibiting his own brand of perseverance through personal tragedy.

As most vocalists tend to do in concert, Becerra asked the Aztec’s visitors who was seeing his band live for the first time. While many raised their horns and voices in approval — with many of them likely not familiar with Becerra’s story — the singer carried on musically as can be viewed via ATM’s footage of “The Exorcist” and “Demon.”

But to say he’s carried on in life would be the ultimate understatement.

Becerra was shot during a 1989 robbery while buying cigarettes and is paralyzed from the chest down. For 3 1/2 years, he was on a waiting list just to try out a pair of robotic legs before finally receiving the chance three decades later to walk for the first time in 2019.

Chew on that for a few minutes.

That year, Possessed released its third and most recent album Revelations of Oblivion, the follow-up to 1985’s Seven Churches and 1986’s Beyond the Gates. Becerra continues to make music, sing for the masses, headbang and will likely forever be known as the one who invented death metal.

Oh, by the way, Becerra also has had nine eye surgeries for cataracts.

Saturday night wasn’t simply a klash of the titans. It was an occasion to unleash pent-up emotions in remembrance of someone those in attendance may have lost recently. It served as a reminder those on stage have had their lives disrupted in horrible ways too but have worked immensely hard every day to come out on top and continue to do what they were put on this earth to do. And it was simply another chance to enjoy classic thrash and death metal at its finest.

Whatever your reason for attending, there’s no denying that Testament, Kreator and Possessed could not have provided a more ideal soundtrack and antidote to each and every fan’s own personal hell.

May the metal titans continue to heal us all as only they know how.

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Skid Row, Buckcherry grind out good time for dedicated slaves to rock

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Skid Row, Buckcherry grind out good time for dedicated slaves to rock

On paper, a tour pairing Skid Row and Buckcherry would have “fun-filled night of rock and debauchery” written all over it. And Saturday night’s gig at the Aztec Theatre certainly delivered. But it was more.

Headlined by a mostly ‘80s band that’s still putting out new music in the past year, directly supported by an early 2000s artist that’s also continuing to put out killer fresh material and opened by a frontman who only hit the music scene in the past couple of years but was already making his third appearance at the Aztec in 22 months begged the question: why don’t more tours combine bands from various eras who are still going strong?

In other words, there was something for everyone, or at least for the approximate 1,200 in the 1,600-capacity historic downtown venue (according to a staffer).

Skid Row’s visit was especially long-awaited since, well, who remembers when? You could make the joke that the band has had nearly as many vocalists (five) as full-length albums (six) since its smash 1989 self-titled debut — only surpassed by last year’s release of The Gang’s All Here — but the New Jersey outfit’s timeless music is nothing to sniff at.

While “Youth Gone Wild” still resonates as the FU anthem to corporate America 34 years after its unveiling on MTV, it’s the kick-in-the-crotch heaviness of 1991 follow-up Slave to the Grind that cemented Skid Row’s place in rock after only two albums.

So it should come as little surprise that 11 of the 13 songs performed were from those two mainstay efforts combined, even with new vocalist Erik Gronwall making his live San Antonio debut. Following in the footsteps of former Dragonforce vocalist ZP Theart, TNT singer Tony Harnell, the late Johnny Solinger and of course original voice Sebastian Bach, Gronwall endeared himself to the Aztec audience with his stellar mix of vocal prowess and crowd banter.

Backed by the original trio of guitarists Dave “Snake” Sabo and Scotti Hill plus bassist Rachel Bolan, along with drummer Rob Hammersmith, Gronwall packed his own punch to Skid Row’s classics. It would’ve been nice to hear at least one track from vastly underrated third album Subhuman Race from 1995 such as “Bonehead,” “Frozen” or the title track, because it’s a record that’s not solely appreciated by a famous rock DJ and journalist.

The new album can also stand on its own, though the group only performed two new tracks including “Time Bomb” (ATM footage below) and the title tune. But considering how many popular songs reside on those first two albums, you can’t argue with the group giving the people what they wanted, again taking into account the fact Skid Row doesn’t come around to the Alamo City as often as its support acts on this night.

Gronwall was a particular force when he held the “I’m so far awaaaaaay” part on 1991’s “Quicksand Jesus” in admirable fashion. He also proved he could multi-task without issues when he borrowed not one, not two but three fans’ phones and filmed himself and the crowd singing the new album’s title track 12 songs into the 13-track performance (see setlist in 65-photo gallery). It was also nice to see generations older and newer getting into Skid Row’s two new songs, something practically unheard of at concerts in a city that worships its classic rock. Watch the band via ATM Facebook Live footage of “Piece of Me'“ and “Livin’ On A Chain Gang.”

On a night in which Skid Row had plenty of competition for fans’ adoration given that Glenn Danzig was playing his 1988 self-titled solo debut in its entirety at the Boeing Center at Tech Port, Yngwie Malmsteen and Glenn Hughes joined forces at the Tobin Center and Texas wrestling legend Kevin Von Erich was hosting a story-telling show next door at the Charline McCombs Empire Theatre, the fact Sabo and Skid Row were on stage at all cannot be taken for granted.

Sabo, who’s also the tour manager for Down — the New Orleans outfit fronted by Pantera’s Philip H. Anselmo — recently spoke with RockCelebrities.net about his multiple suicide attempts. Anytime a musician perseveres through never-ending struggles such as mental illness, depression and suicidal thoughts and comes out the other end playing live on stage, well, he or she deserves ultimate props, applause and support.

Unlike Skid Row, Buckcherry has been a live staple in San Antonio for many years. This time, vocalist Josh Todd and guitarist Stevie D. and their newest bandmates are touring in support of June’s release of Vol. 10. Like Skid Row, the band only performed two new songs — one of them being its cover of Bryan Adams’ “Summer of ‘69” — due to the bevy of hits it needed to squeeze in for what amounted to a 53-minute showing. Watch them via ATM Facebook Live footage of “Ridin’ “ and “Hellbound.”

Buckcherry is shake-your-head amazing in that here’s a band whose biggest hit is “Crazy Bitch,” has the balls to release an entire EP entitled Fuck in which every song burns the magic word into your brain cells — yet can also write a song raising awareness about child abuse (“Rescue Me”; not performed on this night, however) or hit you with its soft side on 2005 ballad “Sorry” (ATM footage below).

And Buckcherry carried the fun oxymorons a step further at the Aztec. Todd, who spoke exclusively with ATM in 2017 about his side band Josh Todd & The Conflict (listen here), might be the only vocalist who could interject a “Rolling On A River” ode to the late Tina Turner in the middle of “Crazy Bitch” and still have it ring out as the ultimate compliment.

Along with bassist Kelly Lemieux and recent guitarist and Jetboy co-founder Billy Rowe, it’s the 2019 addition of drummer Francis Ruiz that may be rock’s best-kept secret, at least to the general public and fans if not those on the inside of the industry.

A native of Albuquerque, Ruiz has been known to appear at shows in South Texas when he’s not on stage, such as checking out Judas Priest last Thanksgiving Eve at the Boeing Center. More importantly and incredibly, Ruiz has served as the drum tech for legends and standouts such as Tommy Aldridge (Ozzy Osbourne, Whitesnake), Mikkey Dee (King Diamond, Don Dokken, Motorhead, Scorpions), Charlie Benante (Anthrax), Paul Bostaph (Slayer), “Wild” Mick Brown (Dokken, Ted Nugent) and Jeff Fabb (Black Label Society, In This Moment).

For good measure, Ruiz has also been a member of Great White and Samantha 7, the latter the side band of Poison guitarist C.C. Deville. Moments after getting off stage, Ruiz patrolled the VIP section of the Aztec and wished fellow drummer, friend, San Antonio native and — ironically — longtime drummer for Bach’s solo band Bobby Jarzombek a happy 60th birthday (see photos).

Opening up the evening was Cincinnati native Kurt Deimer, who was making his third Aztec Theatre appearance after opening for Geoff Tate in November 2021 and Tesla in September 2022. On this night, Deimer was accompanied behind the scenes by Tesla bassist Brian Wheat, who took photos of Deimer’s performance from the soundboard.

Deimer and guitarist Phil X spoke with ATM prior to the Tesla concert (watch here). With the latter just coming off a tour of Indonesia with Sons Of Apollo keyboardist Derek Sherinian, Deimer this time was backed by guitarists Brandon Paul and Sammy Boller, bassist Brendan Hengle and drummer Dango Cellan.

Much like Deimer’s appearance with Tate was mostly unbeknownst to the crowd that would show up at the Aztec, so too was the third time around. Deimer has been doing his own self-promotion for this tour with scant mention by Live Nation or the main acts. In fact, the show began at 7 p.m. — 20 minutes prior to the official start time that had been given to media and venue personnel by Live Nation.

Nevertheless, Deimer and his band got things going with the crowd-pleasing sing-along and message-inspiring “Hero,” the Pink Floyd cover “Have A Cigar” and forthcoming album track “Live or Die.”

Many may have wished they could’ve been in three venues at the same time on this particular evening. But for those on hand at the Aztec, a chance to see these three staples of the rock scene past and present was too good to pass up.

After Skid Row took its well-deserved bow and exited the stage, “Margaritaville” graced the P.A. as an ode to the man who passed earlier in the day. It was a classy touch and end to a show that will go down as one of the best 2023 has offered up in this neck of the woods — and one those in attendance would certainly pay to see again.

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Heed The Warning: Trio of female rocking bands are here to stay

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Heed The Warning: Trio of female rocking bands are here to stay

When three siblings from Monterrey, Mexico, opened for Halestorm last Sept. 29 at the now renamed Boeing Center at Tech Port, frontwoman Lzzy Hale referred to them as “my sisters from another mister” (coverage here).

That evening, the Villareal sisters — singer/guitarist Daniela, drummer Paulina and 17-year-old bassist Alejanda “Ale” — served notice that headlining status for their group The Warning wouldn’t be far away.

As it relates to the Alamo City, that evening came this past Thursday at the Aztec Theatre. And much like the position they were in that rocking night, this bill’s support acts — Plush and Holy Wars — weren’t exactly slouches either, showcasing musicianship and/or personality that keeps them true to themselves and that should serve them well for years to come.

The Warning’s hour and 17-minute set thrilled many dedicated fans who sang practically every word to most of their songs, even in the balcony on a weeknight at a venue in which bands with bigger names have found the upper level closed off.

Making waves with last summer’s release of third full-length album Error, the Villareals dominated their set with 10 of their 17 tracks performed coming via that effort (see setlist in 50-photo gallery).

While Daniela fluidly orchestrates the audience with her banter and sheer focus on simultaneous guitar playing and vocals, Paulina — or Pau to her siblings and closest fans — delivers the infectious enthusiasm of woman-handling the kit with bubbly backup and sometimes lead vocals. Alejandra — or Ale — is easily the most laid back of the three, at least on stage, as she provides the low end of the rhythm section.

Watch the sisters in action via Alamo True Metal’s Facebook Live footage of Error tracks “Choke” and “Amour” and below on “Dull Knives (Cut Better)” and “Kool Aid Kids.”

It was The Warning’s unique take on Metallica’s “Enter Sandman” in 2014 that earned the attention of Kirk Hammett himself and garnered the band a spot on the Metallica Blacklist tribute album. Naturally, that monumental feat opened doors like no other for The Warning. Watch ATM’s footage of Thursday’s version below.

Continuing the entertaining set with the likes of the title track, Spanish-sung “Martirio,” new non-album single “More,” the story behind “Ugh” (ATM footage below) and finale “Evolve,” The Warning demonstrated how far they’ve come since 2017 independent full-length debut XXI Century Blood (which did not feature any songs played on this night).

Boasting musical maturity beyond their years, The Warning will undoubtedly be a major player in the rock and metal scene for as long as they choose. If they’re already headlining theaters now, think of the possibilities that lie ahead.

And speaking of maturity . . .

Middle band Plush showcased a heavy dose of lyrics serving as middle fingers to relationships gone sour led by the Ann Wilson-esque sound and vocals of singer/rhythm guitarist Moriah Formica.

Along with lead guitarist Bella Perron, bassist Ashley Suppa and drummer Faith Powell, the group ranges in age from 18-22.

Formica, however, was carving a niche long before, having shared the stage with Stryper’s Michael Sweet on his solo tour seven years ago when she was only 15. They performed Heart’s “Crazy On You” together — did we mention Formica’s resemblance in sound to Ann Wilson? — and Plush did the honors at the Aztec following Billboard Top 40 charting original “Better Off Alone” with Heart’s “Barracuda” (ATM footage of both here). Formica also guested on Sweet’s “Can’t Take This Life” from his 2016 solo effort One-Sided War.

Suppa is not to be outdone when it comes to her own solo material that can be checked out via YouTube and her socials.

Other standout tracks at the Aztec included “Sober” and a non-fanfare but riveting cover of KISS’ “Heaven’s On Fire” with Paul Stanley’s famous intro tailor-made for Formica’s chilling vocals.

Watch Plush shine below on “Hate” and new single “Left Behind.” The latter was “written for anyone who has ever felt like an outcast or a misfit,” Formica said in a press release. Plush is celebrating the new track with a limited edition “Left Behind” bundle that features a signed CD single and a T-shirt. It’s available for pre-order here and will begin shipping next month.

The evening began with Holy Wars from Los Angeles. Megadeth references and influence not included.

The three-pronged attack is actually a full-time duo featuring vocalist Kat Leon and her guitarist/boyfriend Nick Perez.

Bringing the heat and energy with her fiery redheaded 5-foot-1 frame, Leon and Co. played several songs from last year’s release Eat It Up, Spit It Out including “1% Milk” and “Suck It Up” with “Little Godz” (ATM footage of the latter two below).

Leon informed the audience that she got bullied a lot when younger and that she learned to combat it with “Invisible Dick Syndrome.”

What she didn’t reveal was the fact Holy Wars was birthed out of tragedy from 2015.

“The Holy Wars project was born out of my personal story of losing my parents,” Leon told “High Times” in 2021. “It was never even meant to be a band at that time.”

After her mother and father died six months apart eight years ago, reportedly from a heart attack and non-smoking lung disease, respectively, Leon carved a musical path prior to Holy Wars that is virtually completely opposite of what she exhibited at the Aztec.

Leon’s solo career includes emotional ballads and music that has been featured on Fox, Fox Sports, ESPN, Amazon Prime and more as part of special-event theme songs, TV show trailers and commercials.

With Holy Wars, however, Leon turns her personal heartache into pent-up angst and metal excitement on stage. Watch her and the band in further action via ATM Facebook Live footage of new single “Deus Ex Machina.”

Females may have been the dominant factor on this night at the Aztec, but each band brought its unique style, personality and showmanship to the forefront. Whether you only liked one, two or all three wasn’t as significant as simply seeing them and knowing that if their performances were any indication, the hard rock and metal landscape will thrive so long as bands such as these stay together and continue to grace us with their sound — and vision for what the future of their groups may hold.

In the cases of Plush and Holy Wars, they are prime examples something major and positive can result from life-altering experiences and bad relationships.

And in the case of the headliners — a little sisterly love can go a long way when families stick together.

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Geoff Tate unwraps classics and rarities with melting pot of musicians

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Geoff Tate unwraps classics and rarities with melting pot of musicians

Geoff Tate’s love affair with San Antonio, and in particular the Aztec Theatre, continued last Saturday night before a devoted, sometimes raucous crowd of approximately 1,000 fans.

But unlike Tate’s three prior Aztec stops, the Dec. 17 show with special guest Mark Daly spanned most of his iconic 30-year stint as Queensryche’s vocalist rather than singling out albums performed in their entirety. No, Tate’s sixth Aztec visit since 2014 in his last seven San Antonio stops — a 2019 trip to the Rock Box being the exception — featured a cornucopia of hits from various albums during a rocking, and Christmas-y, 1-hour and 39-minute showing.

Eleven months removed from performing Rage for Order and Empire from beginning to end last November (coverage here), and only half a year since requiring open-heart surgery as we discussed in our pre-show interview below, Tate continued to amaze as only he can.

Opening with the title track to 1990’s Empire (setlist in photo gallery), the former Queensryche vocalist dug into his vault on seldom-played tracks “Desert Dance” from 2003’s Tribe, “Sacred Ground” off of 1999’s Q2K (ATM Facebook Live footage here) plus “Cold” from 2013’s Frequency Unknown and the emotionally moving "Bridge” courtesy of 1994’s Promised Land (watch both here).

Other than omitting the entire introductory buildup on 1984 classic “Take Hold of the Flame,” to the point where the start of Saturday’s version was nearly unrecognizable, Tate’s and his band’s performance was nearly flawless. The inclusion of deep cuts mixed with Operation: Mindcrime standouts “Breaking the Silence” and “I Don’t Believe in Love” (ATM footage of both below) plus Empire staples “Jet City Woman” and “Silent Lucidity” made the evening as well-rounded as it could be.

And before one reads this and thinks they don’t need to hear the latter ballad anymore and be perfectly fine with that, let it be known that the best note emanating from Tate’s oft-imitated never duplicated voice came when he sang the “will protect you in the night” part. The last word of that stretch wasn’t held. It wasn’t screamed. It just sounded as perfect as it could get, enough to raise these eyebrows as the ears perked up. It was one of those moments where you just had to be there to see and hear it.

With the exception of a slight backing track on opener “Empire” — a song that calls for it given the abundance of mixes of Tate’s vocals particularly during the chorus — and a brief echo on finale “Queen of the Reich,” the entire show was devoid of distracting, lengthy delays.

In fact, Tate’s reinsertion of “Queen of the Reich,” a tune he had said he couldn’t relate to lyrically anymore — necessitating an elaboration on his part during our interview below — was a pleasant surprise given that he had insinuated fans would never hear him sing that tune again. Donning a Christmas hat and handing out more to his bandmates, Tate and his crew played a metal version of “Silver Bells” prior to ending the night with that first track from the 1983 self-titled debut EP (ATM footage of both below).

The fact that he not only played the song but attempted the patented opening scream on “Queen of the Reich” especially since he no longer tries it on “Take Hold of the Flame,” and specifically at that point in the show and given his open-heart surgery reeked of Tate sending the message to critics: “Yep, you bet your sweet ass I can still do it if I want to.”

And speaking of Tate’s band . . .

Guitarists Kieran Robertson of Scotland, Alex Hart from Boston and James Brown of Ireland, bassist “Smilin’ “ Jack Ross of Scotland, keyboardist Bruno Sa of Brazil and drummer Daniel Laverde from Cincinnati have also been coming to San Antonio with Tate the past several years. Sa, in fact, played guitar during the 2018 Operation: Mindcrime band performance.

On this night, all but Sa and Robertson pulled double duty as Ross, Brown, Hart and Laverde played with opening act Daly.

The Irish singer and guitarist released four-song EP Nothing to Lose two weeks earlier and hooked up with Tate for this tour thanks in large part to having songwriting credits on Tate’s trilogy of Operation: Mindcrime band albums from 2015-17.

In addition to putting on a stellar showing, Daly impressed perhaps even more with his sense of humor and banter with the crowd. Most of it can be seen via ATM’s footage of his Highly Suspect cover of “Lydia” and the EP title track below, so we won’t give it away. But another non-filmed dose of funny came when he introduced the band and got to Brown.

Referring to him as The James Brown, Daly asked his fellow Irishman how he felt. When Brown shrugged and said, “I feel alright,” the crowd serenaded him with tongue-in-cheek boos.

There’s not much left to say when it comes to Tate performing in San Antonio that hasn’t been mentioned in this space previously. He’s a model of consistency that always gives the crowd what it wants yet still has the gumption to mix things up with obscure tracks when he’s already performed the same classic albums repeatedly.

The fact that Daly opened up the audience’s eyes and ears to his talented musicianship as well made the evening a double whammy of fun and entertainment for those who continue to be dedicated to one of the Alamo City’s virtual adopted sons. And it appears musician and fans wouldn’t have it any other way.

GEOFF TATE SETLIST: Empire, Another Rainy Night (Without You), Desert Dance, I Am I, Sacred Ground, Best I Can, Real World, Breaking the Silence, I Don’t Believe in Love, Cold, Bridge, Screaming in Digital, Walk in the Shadows, Take Hold of the Flame, Jet City Woman, Silent Lucidity. Encores: Silver Bells, Queen of the Reich

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Steve Vai's hydra-licks whet appetites of Aztec's guitar aficionados

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Steve Vai's hydra-licks whet appetites of Aztec's guitar aficionados

Considering he’s a guitarist who’s just a tad accomplished, Steve Vai doesn’t need any special gadgets or concoctions to draw attention to himself in concert.

But that’s the operative word: need.

Vai loves to play with toys, especially of the expensive and six-string electrical variety. His latest gadget — which might appear to some as if it came from a guitarist’s junkyard at the same time the instrument’s enthusiasts would classify it as a thing of beauty — simply added to his legacy and was on display last Sunday night during a 2-hour, 10-minute sans opening act performance at the Aztec Theatre. In support of Jan. 28 release Inviolate, Vai broke out his three-fretboard (acoustic, electric and bass) Hydra for new track “Teeth of the Hydra” (ATM footage below).

If only Vai had three hands to play each fret simultaneously.

It’s always a challenge for an instrumentalist to captivate an audience’s attention for an entire show, but the veteran musician made it look easy. Which came as no surprise.

After all, Vai began his recording career in 1980 with Frank Zappa. He’s won three Grammy Awards and released 10 studio solo albums. He appeared in the 1986 movie “Crossroads” with Ralph Macchio. And of course, there’s that whole David Lee Roth and Whitesnake thing.

Vai focuses strictly on his solo career on tour, and his bandmates not only help him do that, but they each get to enjoy a brief solo of their own time in the spotlight. Guitarist Dave Weiner, bassist Phlip Bynoe and drummer Jeremy Colson brought the rhythm, the rock and the “Greenish Blues” (ATM footage below) to the Aztec while Vai periodically interspersed dialogue with the appreciative two-level crowd. Watch him in further action via ATM Facebook Live footage of “Tender Surrender” and “Whispering A Prayer” and “Dyin’ Day.”

Vai at one point explained that he had to move his entire North American tour to the fall after injuring a shoulder while yanking some tough dough from his pizza oven while cooking for former Roth bandmates Billy Sheehan and Gregg Bissonette — a mishap that required surgery.

As if his virtuoso guitar playing and occasional story telling weren’t entertaining enough, Vai delivered variety to his show in other ways.

Prior to popular Passion and Warfare track “For the Love of God,” Vai forewarned he was about to oversee “something a little different.” He brought out a member of his European tour crew, a man named Dani G., who serves as Vai’s video editor but is also a chef, mixed martial arts fighter and opera singer. With that, Dani G. provided the only vocal accompaniment of the evening, opera style — and did so while wearing a Gojira shirt (ATM Facebook Live footage here).

On finale “Taurus Bulba,” Vai made the evening one not to forget for a young boy, bringing him on stage to jam on one of his many conventional guitars (see 25-picture photo gallery below). After he and his band acknowledged the final round of applause, Vai ended up posing for pics and signing autographs outside the Aztec, thereby making the night memorable for plenty of adults as well.

Variety. Multi-talented. Mega-accomplished.

Simply Vai.

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Into the Pit: Kurt Deimer & Phil X

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Into the Pit: Kurt Deimer & Phil X

When it comes to touring the country, Kurt Deimer hasn’t exactly been playing hooky. Then again, that depends on your definition of the word.

No, Deimer and his band haven’t been calling in sick or choosing to do things other than what they’re supposed to be doing. Rather, the self-described “hooky rock band” has been hitting the road providing direct support to some of rock and metal’s best.

And the dates just keep on coming.

Deimer will return to the Aztec Theatre on Thursday, Sept. 15, as part of a string of Texas shows opening for Tesla (tickets here). The trek, with scheduled stops in Dallas, Houston, Midland and Lubbock, follows Deimer’s first major tour last year opening for original Queensryche voice Geoff Tate that included a performance at the Aztec (coverage here) plus a jaunt this past spring that found Deimer supporting Yngwie Malmsteen. The latter tour featured San Antonio’s Jessikill as the opening act.

Fresh off last November’s release of debut EP Work Hard, Rock Hard, Deimer and crew possess a sound different than the current state of rock music, in large part to Deimer’s deep voice that combines singing with telling stories through his lyrics in a talking state, as evidenced in videos such as “Hero,” “My Dad,” and the Pink Floyd cover “Have A Cigar” that can be seen below. In addition, not only did Tate provide Deimer with his first major touring opportunity, but he co-stars on Deimer’s tune “Burn Together” (also below).

Guitarist Phil Xenidis, affectionately known as Phil X, has teamed with Deimer to provide stellar licks throughout the EP and on stage. The Canadian guitarist sports his own band The Drills and took over in some group called Bon Jovi nearly a decade ago when Richie Sambora left that mega-successful band and, to the surprise of many, never returned. Phil also spent time in Triumph and with Aldo Nova.

Deimer and Phil X spoke with me exclusively on Tuesday to discuss these and other topics — not the least of which is Deimer’s forthcoming horror movie project, Hellbilly Hollow, and the two major American actors who paved the way for it.

Click on the video box below to watch and hear our entire conversation.

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Arch Enemy, Behemoth bestow metal madness upon Aztec's patrons and heathens

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Arch Enemy, Behemoth bestow metal madness upon Aztec's patrons and heathens

During his band’s co-headlining performance Monday at the Aztec Theatre, Behemoth frontman Adam “Nergal” Darski instructed the locals not to take their freedom for granted while dedicating “Conquer All” to the people of Ukraine. Then as the group wound down “Chant For Ezkaton,” Nergal stated it was an honor to play for the crowd, urging fans to stay safe.

Those couldn’t possibly be the actions of a musician who had been banned from playing his native Poland once upon a time after tearing up a Bible on stage, could it?

Then the face-painted vocalist/guitarist bellowed two words that took the energy to a whole nother level (Alamo True Metal footage below) and indicated that this show with nightly alternating co-headliners Arch Enemy plus Napalm Death and Unto Others was unlike 99.9 percent of the concerts that come to the Aztec:

“Hail Satan!”

As the jam-packed lower level and half-filled balcony roared their approval, memories harkened back to why Nergal has often been regarded as one of metal’s most controversial figures.

But along with his emphatic religious statements, Nergal has persevered through personal adversity after having been diagnosed with leukemia and undergoing a bone marrow transplant. Those long-ago life-changing moments made the second night of this tour possible in the first place for Behemoth and its San Antonio fans.

Additional tracks such as “Bartzabel,” “Slaves Shall Serve” (ATM footage of both below), “Evoe” and the heartwarming “Christians to the Lions” (ATM Facebook Live clip here) cemented why it was good to see and hear Behemoth back on the scene post-pandemic and back in the States. And the group’s punishing and darkened hour-long showing set the stage for Arch Enemy to top with its own hour-long set.

Between all four bands, it was refreshing to see a concert devoid of exaggerated echoed vocals or longer-than-necessary “delay throws” meant for effect that instead served as a distraction by giving the impression backing tracks were used to assist actual singing efforts. Rather, this night was filled with pure molten metal singing and instrumentation that not only encouraged patrons to chant along but to keep up with the pros who led the way on stage.

Then it was Arch Enemy’s turn. Commence sore throats.

After kicking off two nights earlier in Tempe, Arizona, Arch Enemy unleashed its own brand of metal behind the sinister vocals of Alissa White-Gluz, dual shredding riffs of founder/songwriter Michael Amott and former Nevermore and Sanctuary guitarist Jeff Loomis, thumping bass of Sharlee D’Angelo and pounding drums of Daniel Erlandsson.

Whereas Behemoth’s anti-Christian dominated songs call for dark imagery throughout the stage show, Arch Enemy is a photographer’s delight by employing some of the best lighting in the business, as exemplified in the 145-photo slideshow below. The lavish scenery often belies the brutality of the band’s music, but it’s far better than the abhorred red and blue light most bands relegate themselves to.

You mean the audience can actually see the band play? What a concept!

Set to unleash new album Deceivers on July 29 via Century Media Records, Arch Enemy devoted one-fourth of its 12-song performance to the three singles that have been released: “House of Mirrors” (ATM Facebook Live clip here along with “My Apocalypse,”), “Handshake With Hell” (ATM footage below) and “Deceiver Deceiver.” Of course, the quintet didn’t forget their older tunes originally sung by Angela Gossow, who continues to be the group’s manager, such as “Dead Bury Their Dead” and “Nemesis” (ATM footage below; full setlist in slideshow). To tide fans over till then, Arch Enemy is releasing a fourth single, “Sunset Over the Empire,” on May 20 via 7-inch vinyl.

“I am thrilled that we are releasing our next single 'Sunset over the Empire' not only digitally everywhere as usual, but also as a physical 7-inch vinyl record,” Amott said in a press release. “I'm a big fan of the vinyl format myself, and I think this killer looking 7-inch will be a nice collector's item as it's a limited run. The B-side is an instrumental we've never released before on a record, and the A-side is one of my fave tracks off our new upcoming album Deceivers.”

As with any band that has replaced singers along the way, Arch Enemy was taking a big risk eight years ago when White-Gluz took over for Gossow. Unlike many that have failed doing so, however, Arch Enemy has continued to flourish if not expand on its horizons, in large part to the leadership of Amott and D’Angelo. One of those favorite personal moments in the band’s latter-era history came aboard the 70000 Tons of Metal cruise in 2017 when the group held a press conference to select media in world premiering the “As the Stages Burn” live at Wacken Open Air DVD. Watch ATM’s footage of that entire news gathering here and here.

Deceivers will mark the third album with White-Gluz on vocals, and with the band’s overall star continuing to rise and shine, it’s only a matter of time before Arch Enemy graduates from mid-level theaters and branches out into larger American venues. If any melodic death metal band is going to lead the way into such a scenario, it figures to be this metallic melting pot comprised of Swedes, Canadians and Americans.

Yet another part of the world was represented at the Aztec in the form of England’s Napalm Death. Visiting the Alamo City for the first time since supporting Slayer on their final tour in 2018 at the Freeman Coliseum (coverage here), the veteran outfit full of self-described “noise” unleashed a carnage of distortion and rage espousing socialism, pro-choice and other topics not for the faint of heart.

With longtime vocalist Mark “Barney” Greenway declaring his band’s hometown a “luxurious shithole,” Napalm Death provided the 30-second “The Kill” and backdrop of a Texas woman being arrested for attempted murder by virtue of an abortion on “Suffer the Children” (ATM footage of both below) as a small taste of its history. Minus the suit and tie, Greenway is reminiscent of Angus Young in his relentlessly bounding energy as he runs a marathon back and forth across the stage, a testament to his lanky English frame. Napalm Death performed tracks as far back as 1987, but you can also watch them via 2020 and 2021 offerings “Invigorating Clutch” and “Narcissus,” respectively, here.

The night began with the debut Alamo City showing of Portland, Oregon, natives Unto Others. Formerly known as Idle Hands, the group released Strength last September, its initial effort via Roadrunner Records, featuring video and Monday’s opening track “Heroin.”

On the one hand, vocalist/guitarist Gabriel Franco pulls you in with his eerily calm yet haunting vocals that made one wonder who the familiar sound resembled, only to revisit an earlier received press release that referred to The Cure’s Robert Smith, resulting in a “a-ha!” moment. And the next, Franco sucks you in with “Heroin’s” most telling line, the chilling “I swear to Godddd!”

Along with bassist Brandon Hill, guitarist Sebastian Silva and drummer Colin Vranizan — none of whom had any room whatsoever to maneuver around the stage amidst the gear and props of the forthcoming bands — Unto Others’ 30-minute set was built around the premise of turning fans onto its newest material. Watch them in action via ATM Facebook Live footage of “Nightfall” and below on closer “When Will God’s Work Be Done.” Unto Others is definitely a band that will hook listeners in the first time and, more importantly, keep them hooked and looking forward to future music and visits.

Arch Enemy, Behemoth, Napalm Death and Unto Others didn’t just kick the two-year Covid-19 layoff in the ass at long last. All four bands provided a much-needed respite from hell on earth due to the pandemic and daily grind we all go through, giving ticket-holders plenty of reason to cheer, sing and thrust their horns skyward.

The way metal was meant to be. Whether Satan was lurking or not.

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Sevendust honors 'Animosity'; Tetrarch makes its mark at Aztec

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Sevendust honors 'Animosity'; Tetrarch makes its mark at Aztec

Throughout their various visits to San Antonio over the years, Sevendust has delivered the goods as one of rock and metal’s most consistent live acts. Last Monday’s visit to the Aztec Theatre was similar . . . and different.

Similar in that Sevendust once again put on its stellar rockin’ show to an appreciative crowd. Slightly different in that this time, the Atlanta natives played an album in its entirety and brought along another Atlanta band that arguably stole the show.

Sevendust marched through 2001 album Animosity, playing it in full while changing the order of the songs a bit. Lajon Witherspoon belted out his stellar vocals, guitarists John Connolly and Clint Lowery provided the riffage, bassist Vince Hornsby handed out picks as if they were going out of style, and drummer Morgan Rose brought the intensity particularly on tracks such as “T.O.A.B. (Tits on a Boar),” “Praise” and “Crucified.”

No professional or Facebook Live video from professional photographers was allowed during the headliners’ set, but you can still access a taste of the bands, which also featured openers Dead Poet Society, in action via the 44-photo slideshow below.

Surprisingly, Sevendust appeared to utilize more recorded backing tracks for its vocals than ever before, particularly for Rose’s contributions. That was especially evident during the three encores of non-Animosity tracks “Bitch,” “Blood From a Stone” and traditional closer “Face to Face.” The latter is largely defined by Rose’s voice, particularly on the angst-ridden line “Fuck me for the last time!” But on this night, a crew member was adjusting Rose’s headset during the song, yet the drummer’s voice still boomed throughout the Aztec.

Nevertheless, Sevendust’s highlights included Witherspoon’s interactions with the crowd. No surprise given that the singer has been known to get emotional with a San Antonio audience. It was at the 2015 Fiesta Oyster Bake where he announced that after a 3-year attempt to become a parent, his wife had texted him prior to the show that she was pregnant, saying “I just felt I had to share that” before smiling and joking with the crowd, “Don’t tell nobody.”

At this show, Witherspoon was close to turning on the waterworks again while describing how fortunate he and the band felt playing a 20-year album in its entirety before a crowd that cared enough to hear it, especially after a global pandemic. The next moment, he turned serious when dedicating “Angel’s Son” to “all the beautiful people of Ukraine.”

Later, Witherspoon garnered a few laughs when he brought up Sevendust’s history with the Alamo City.

“Was there a place called the White Rabbit?” Witherspoon asked. Then, holding his fingers a couple inches apart, he said, “It was like, this big, and there was a Mexican restaurant across the street. The promoter was a bit shady, but he was cool. We have a lot of great memories, San Antonio!”

But not as many fans heard the banter as would normally have been the case for a Sevendust show. A portion of the Aztec’s first-level railing areas were not completely filled, and the balcony was roughly 50 percent empty for a couple of reasons:

  • Monday nights are the worst day for a concert

  • San Antonians had grown accustomed to the Aztec Theatre requiring proof of Covid-19 vaccination. Although that ended up being rescinded on this night with the virus situation improving everywhere, fans wouldn’t have known that would be the case until they were about to have their tickets scanned. Of course, they would’ve had to show up in the first place for that to happen

No matter what part of the venue from which fans may have been watching, those who showed up early enough were rewarded by Tetrarch, easily the most energetic and passionately fueled band on the bill. Playing with a chip on his shoulder, vocalist / rhythm guitarist Josh Fore fired up the Aztec by encouraging fans to live out their dreams no matter what type of negativity they encounter. As an example, Fore told a “true story” about how Tetrarch had played at the Rock Box on its previous San Antonio visit “to one person in the crowd.” He also recounted how his band was often told it wasn’t heavy enough.

Tetarch has taken those attempted roadblocks and had the last laugh. Finally able to release debut full-length Unstable last year, Tetrarch has seen single I’m Not Right” crack the Mediabase Active Rock Top 30 as one of the record’s three Top 40 Active Rock Radio hits. Watch ATM’s footage of “You Never Listen” and “Unstable” below plus Facebook Live footage of finale “Oddity,” during which Fore encouraged fans to tell any of their friends who may have planned to only arrive in time for Sevendust what they missed out on.

In addition to bassist Ryan Lerner and drummer Ruban Limas, Tetrarch is proud of the fact, and rightfully so, that Diamond Lowe is the first African-American female lead guitarist to be featured in major magazine publications. So proud, in fact, Tetrarch sold a T-shirt solely dedicated to her that said as much on the back of it.

Now she and her band can add Alamo True Metal to that list. And Tetrarch is sure to see much more than one singular fan on the rest of its subsequent visits to the Alamo City.

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Red Rocker makes Aztec's devoted Texas fans part of his musical Circle

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Red Rocker makes Aztec's devoted Texas fans part of his musical Circle

The latest version of a Sammy Hagar-fronted band is called The Circle, but Saturday night at the Aztec Theatre, it could have been referred to by a number of other names: Sammy Hagar & The Signatures. Sammy Hagar & The Autographs. Or by the essence of its nature, something along the lines of Sammy Hagar and the Just Know How To Have Funs.

During Sammy Hagar & The Circle’s four-date December trek strictly devoted to Texas, a packed Aztec repeatedly returned the loyalty and approval for Hagar, bassist Michael Anthony, guitarist Vic Johnson and drummer Jason Bonham. So Hagar took it upon himself to give his John Hancock to whatever was thrust upon him on stage including hats, shirts, banners and towels, never losing a beat as he vocalized 17 songs dominated by his stints in Montrose, a storied solo career and that little era in Van Halen (see setlist in 32-photo slideshow below).

Sammy Hagar & The Sharpies? OK, maybe not.

In their return to the Alamo City following performances in 2019 and 2020 at the San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo (coverage here), the famed quartet went on shortly after 8 p.m., with a significant contingent of fans still getting their tickets scanned outside during second song “Rock Candy.”

The Aztec and/or Live Nation would be wise to swallow their pride and abandon, or at least alter, their policy of not releasing set times and simply stating that the ticket time (7 p.m. in this case) reflects when the doors open. Moreover, the Aztec’s Facebook page didn’t even make reference to the show on the day of, so those believing they were showing up during the opening act may have been surprised to find there wasn’t one.

The show ended at about 9:50 p.m., begging the question: when’s the last time a concert ended prior to 10 p.m., particularly on a Saturday? Hagar and Co. were mindful of the fact its fanbase is comprised of an older generation that doesn’t want to stay out past midnight watching a gig. Hagar and his crew undoubtedly count themselves, too, as performers who don’t want to be on stage around that time.

But don’t mistake those vignettes as a sign the 74-year-old “Red Rocker” is going to be rocking out of a rocker anytime soon. On the contrary. Maybe it’s Hagar’s penchant for always seeing the positive out of life. Perhaps it’s all those trips to Cabo Wabo. Or maybe it’s just that he’s naturally wired by “Mas Tequila” (ATM Facebook Live footage here).

Sammy Hagar & The Circle certainly had their share of competition throughout San Antonio on this night. Right around the corner performing at the Majestic Theatre was comedian George Lopez. There were also other rock and metal shows such as a rescheduled August Burns Red metalcore gig at Vibes Event Center and Dallas natives To Whom It May headlining Fitzgerald’s. But the Aztec was the place to hear classic party anthems and even a few jokes and anecdotes from Hagar, Anthony and Bonham — the unassuming Johnson notwithstanding — for roughly 90 minutes.

And The Circle didn’t disappoint.

Seven of the 17 tracks were of the Van Halen variety, including “Right Now" and “Why Can’t This Be Love” before The Circle devoted the lone Led Zeppelin tune to Bonham — the son of the late Zeppelin drummer John Bonham — “Rock ‘N’ Roll” (ATM Facebook Live footage of all three here). Anthony dedicated “Right Now” to Eddie Van Halen, but surprisingly, that appeared to be the only time the late iconic guitarist was mentioned by name.

Van Halen died Oct. 6, 2020, of a stroke at a time he and Hagar remained mostly on non-speaking terms, though the frontman of Montrose, Sammy Hagar & The Waboritas, Chickenfoot and the era often referred by others — affectionately or not — as Van Hagar had frequently stated he would be open to returning to Van Halen with Anthony.

The Circle also gave the Aztec patrons what they came for with “Three Lock Box,” “There’s Only One Way to Rock,” “Heavy Metal” and “I Can’t Drive 55” (ATM footage below) and more Van Halen tunes such as “Top of the World,” “Best of Both Worlds” and “Finish What Ya Started,” the latter featuring Hagar’s patented cry of “I need some PUSSY!” (see slideshow).

Johnson, one of Hagar’s cohorts with The Waboritas, may not play the Van Halen solos the way the namesake of that band did, nor may he make anyone forget about EVH. But that’s not even close to being the goal with The Circle, and if you show up to a Circle show expecting as much, well, you’ve likely had too much Beach Rum or tequila.

The band ended the night with an a cappella version of Van Halen’s “Dreams” that included Bonham filming live to his Instagram page, along with the lone Circle offering of the evening “Affirmation” and Van Halen closer “When It’s Love” (ATM footage of all three below).

Whether he’s on stage living out his dream and spanning his career, celebrating a birthday at his nightclub in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, or jamming with and interviewing musicians on “Rock & Roll Road Trip With Sammy Hagar” via Mark Cuban’s AXS TV network, Hagar only knows one way to live and rock. That refreshing outlook may be as influential as anything he has sung the past five decades.

The Circle’s first rodeo two years ago at the AT&T Center may have been a rockin’ good evening. But its post-pandemic toast to Texas in 2021 could not have been any brighter or come at a better time.

Hello, Baaaaby, indeed.

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Ryche & roll never gets old when Geoff Tate delves deep into vault

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Ryche & roll never gets old when Geoff Tate delves deep into vault

“It was November 4th . . . it seemed our time would last forever.”

So sings Geoff Tate on the 1986 Rage For Order song “London.” Last Friday night at the Aztec Theatre, the original voice of Queensryche was only off by 24 hours. November 5 was a day fans of the singer and his renowned, yet former, band will remember, well, perhaps forever. Because Tate graced the Aztec last weekend and San Antonio, the third city Queensryche ever played upon the release of its 1983 self-titled EP, by doing something he had never done: perform Rage For Order and 1990’s Empire in their entirety.

And the two-song encore wasn’t half bad either.

Tate’s prior two visits to the Aztec consisted of 1988’s Operation: Mindcrime in its entirety. So if you went to this show simply knowing Tate was in town but not aware of what he had in store, or expecting to hear “I Don’t Believe In Love” again, you may have left the venue a bit underwhelmed. But truly, Queensryche’s first four albums plus the EP, a span covering 1983-90, is what Tate will always be known for. His latest stop meant he has covered three of those records entirely stretching across his last three trips here that just happened to be sandwiched around a global pandemic (see 54-photo slideshow below).

Friday’s performance marked the third time the Rage/Empire coupling was supposed to be performed here, and it definitely was the charm. While there will always be Queensryche fans drawn to “Jet City Woman” and “Silent Lucidity,” Tate’s exhibition gave diehards the chance to hear rarely and never played tracks from those albums such as “Surgical Strike” and the aforementioned “London” plus Empire’s “Resistance,”Hand On Heart” and “One and Only” (click the links for ATM’s Facebook Live footage).

Supported by opening act Kurt Deimer and backed by Scottish guitarist Kieran Robertson, guitarist Alex Hart, bassist Darren Milsom and drummer Daniel Laverde, Tate played both albums in sequence — the way they were originally meant to be heard 35 and 31 years ago, respectively, and the way albums are supposed to be performed. He didn’t play them in reverse order (talking to you, Metallica, with the black album) or open with the second song on the record so that the opening track could be played last (that means you, Sebastian Bach, with Slave to the Grind).

Tate has performed several of these songs in the past in San Antonio with Queensryche but never as part of the album all the way through. In 2005, on the night the Spurs were celebrating their third NBA championship with a River Walk parade, Queensryche opened for Judas Priest at the Verizon Wireless Amphitheater in support of 2003’s Tribe but comprised roughly half of its set with Rage For Order songs. In 2009 during the American Soldier tour at Sunken Gardens Theater, Queensryche broke its headlining set into three parts: Rage, the new album, and Empire tracks.

And on Thanksgiving Eve 2012 in the parking lot at Backstage Live, Tate made a solo stop that saw him play several Queensryche deep cuts. Some of them, such as “Until There Was You” — a reissue bonus track from 1999’s Q2K — were so deep, many fans walked out of the show thinking Tate was solely concentrating on his solo career and abandoning his Queensryche past. In fact, it was during a Rage For Order track, “The Killing Words,” that fans were still exiting, causing Tate to address the departing as “pussies” for not recognizing a song not only as a Queensryche offering but a tune that came from one of its popular albums.

But Tate’s undertaking for this tour and show made this visit a little extra special. Check out ATM footage below of “Screaming In Digital” and the rarely played soothing ballad and Rage closer “I Will Remember” as well as Empire closer “Anybody Listening?”

The day after this latest show, Tate revealed on social media that Laverde nearly didn’t make it to San Antonio in time: “Yesterday, our drummer, Danny, had a delayed flight and none of the band or crew knew if he would make it to the show. After several flight changes and a lot of stress, he walked in minutes to show time. He had changed into stage clothes on the plane. Queensryche music is hard on drummers, and we couldn’t substitute just anyone. Danny is one of the best drummers I’ve had the pleasure of playing with. Never have I been so happy to see this young man than before last night’s show. Here’s to Danny and my entire band and crew for handling a very stressful situation and putting on such a fantastic show.” That may have explained why Laverde played a kit resembling an electronic ensemble an aspiring drummer would receive under the Christmas tree. But he made it work through two albums and the encores — not an easy feat under normal circumstances.

Ah yes, the encores. Tate threw a curve ball (surprising unless you like to examine the set list prior to the show, which means you probably like to know what your Christmas gifts are before opening them or how a movie ends prior to buttering your popcorn). He pulled out of his archives the 1990 “Adventures of Ford Fairlane” track “Last Time In Paris” before providing a dose of 1984 full-length debut The Warning with “Take Hold of the Flame” (see ATM footage of both below). The finale was the only track Tate sang at a slightly lower octave than he did on vinyl 37 years ago, and he omitted the introductory part many would argue is the whole purpose of performing the song at all which is punctuated by his patented “Nahhhhhhhh!”

Tate’s selection of “Take Hold of the Flame” was all the more curious given seven years earlier during our interview at the Aztec, he mocked fans who harken for such songs, saying “The past is over” and that he had moved on as an artist and didn’t find himself in a headspace wanting to play those classics anymore (watch here). Last Friday night, Tate sang a different tune, literally and figuratively, telling the audience one of the reasons he pulled out Rage For Order and Empire for this tour was “because I wanted to.”

While the unveiling of both albums played live should not have been unexpected by anyone sporting a ticket, one surprise was the inclusion of opening act Kurt Deimer. Even the Aztec Theatre’s website and event page on Facebook the day of the concert listed Till Death Do Us Part, the band fronted by Tate’s daughter Emily that also includes her boyfriend on guitar, the aforementioned Robertson. Emily played the role of Suite Sister Mary during her father’s previous visit to the Aztec and her band opened that show, so Deimer’s participation this time was something fresh and new.

Deimer didn’t exactly have an easy task warming things up for a crowd hungry for Queensryche classics, let alone given that many didn’t know who he was or that he’d be on the bill. But if the vocalist and his band were nervous about that, they didn’t show it. Deimer also won some fans over by thanking first responders and military members in the crowd as his way of concluding “Big Toe” and introducing “Whatcha Sayin’ '“ (ATM footage of both below).

While the Aztec is one of the few San Antonio venues requiring proof of Covid-19 vaccination or a negative test within 72 hours of the event, the fact it is able to resume hosting live acts such as Tate and Deimer was another sign of life returning to normal even if society is not 100 percent there yet.

So, the balcony was closed for the first time involving a Tate show at the Aztec, and yes, Accept was playing at Shrine Auditorium. But whether it would’ve been the performance of new songs or, in this case, a 31- and 35-year trip down Memory Lane — even the ability to hear Tate’s vocals on the Avantasia song “Seduction of Decay” via the Aztec’s loudspeakers between acts — the sheer opportunity to enjoy live music again with your buddies or significant other, with or without $15 beers in hand, was a victory in and of itself.

Now that Tate seemingly has exhausted the performance of Queensryche’s three most well-known albums, it will be more than interesting to see what he has up his sleeve for his next visit. Some of us can hardly wait.

Bring it on.

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