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Maidens of Swiss metal Militia sizzle in live San Antonio debut

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Maidens of Swiss metal Militia sizzle in live San Antonio debut

A check of nearby flagpoles last Friday night appeared to portend another evening of serene inactivity outside.

Inside Fitzgerald’s, however, was a different story.

A gale force of power blew in from as far as Switzerland, courtesy of five maidens of metal known as Burning Witches, and as near as Austin and locally thanks to a grouping of bands that helped form the backbone of the South Texas Legion scene in the mid-’80s.

Featured attraction Burning Witches made their live San Antonio debut one to remember with a powerful 14-song, 75-minute set in the quaint “party hearty at McCarty” bar with San Antonio stalwarts Byfist, Austin veterans Militia and a rare appearance by local trio Grind.

And because it was their debut in the Alamo City, the Swiss witches were basically touring in support of, at least in North America, their entire five-album catalog and not just 2023 effort The Dark Tower.

Dutch vocalist Laura Guldemond, Swiss natives Romana Kalkuhl (founding member & guitarist), bassist Jeanine (Jay) Grob and drummer Lala Frischknecht and newest guitarist and lone American Courtney Cox — formerly of The Iron Maidens and Femme Fatale — came out flying on new opening track “Unleash the Beast” and 2020’s “Wings of Steel.”

No ballads and no fillers comprised the highly energetic performance (see all setlists in 55-photo gallery), and it continued on “Necronomicon” and ATM’s Facebook Live footage of “Lucid Nightmare” and “Evil Witch,” which were just samples of Cox’s scintillating shredding capabilities and featured Guldemond leaving the stage to join the audience on the former track.

Burning Witches is already working on its 2025 album, which included the release of new single “The Spell of the Skull” just three days prior to the concert. It marks the first song the band has worked on with Cox on guitar, although Burning Witches did not play it live or even mention it.

By the way: sign me up for a Cox-vs.-Nita Strauss guitar battle any day of the week.

Although Burning Witches has covered Savatage’s “Hall of the Mountain King,” Ozzy Osbourne’s “Shot in the Dark” and W.A.S.P.’s “I Wanna Be Somebody” on their two latest albums — and Dio’s “Holy Diver” going further back — none of those were offered up at Fitzgerald’s. That decision was very respectable given the whole inaugural San Antonio concert thingy and fans wanting to hear more of their own music. However, Frischknecht and Cox’s predecessor, Larissa Ernst, spoke about the Savatage cover and more exclusively with ATM in 2021 upon the release of The Witch of the North, which you can watch here.

Guldemond was also a terror — in a good, evil, demonic way — on one of Burning Witches’ heaviest tunes: the 2018 title track to Hexenhammer which was followed by new song “World on Fire,” both of which can be viewed below.

Guldemond, Grob and Kalhuhl in particular made themselves readily available to meet fans throughout the performances of the trio of Texas artists, and Guldemond’s personal website goes a step further. The singer offers to lend her vocal talents to other artists with the following message: “Yes, I also would love to help you out with vocals for your project. Just send me a message with a demo and lyrics and a plan if you have them at ‘contact.’ “

Go ahead. ATM will make it easier for you here.

The only downside of the group’s performance came via something not within its control.

An unfortunate occurrence at many Fitzgerald’s gigs is artists telling their fans they can barely see them, only hear them. (Grind said so as well in the middle of ATM’s Facebook Live clip of that band below).

Burning Witches’ performance may have been one of the first in which that scenario unfolded at the end of the set when the band simply requested to take a photo with the crowd. Guldemond asked twice to have the lights shined upon the patrons, but each inquiry was to no avail. As a result, no keepsake was taken for the group’s initial foray into the Alamo City, and it never should have come to that. But once again, ATM obliged regarding the ladies’ final bow in the photo gallery.

Byfist provided direct support with the usual hard-hitting crew of power vocalist Raul Garcia, lead guitarist Manny Santos, rhythm guitarist Nacho Vara, bassist Stony Grantham and drummer Scott Palmer.

Byfist has basically been playing the same set since 2020’s release of In the End, but it’s an entertaining show each time. Their 1989 EP Adrenaline was produced by the late Metal Church vocalist “Reverend” David Wayne, whose band Reverend included Vara until Wayne passed in 2005. Watch ATM’s Facebook Live footage of opening tracks “Left to Die” and “Universal Metal” and below on “Guaranteed Death” and “Mary Celeste.”

Why yes, that is an ATM photo under the “Born of Shredders” section of the band’s site.

Militia, on the other hand, doesn’t come around to San Antonio that often despite hailing from the nearby live music capital. Vocalist Mike Soliz, guitarist Tony Smith, band founder and bassist Robert Willingham and drummer Chip Alexander formed the impetus of the hard-hitting group in the mid-’80s, which recently added guitarist Phillip Patterson.

Although they were inactive for many years, Soliz made an appearance in 2018 at Fitzgerald’s when the South Texas Legion brotherhood of metal that included mainstays such as Jason McMaster, James Rivera, Bobby and Ron Jarzombek, Art Villareal, Pete Perez and others united on the same stage for a memorable evening of Q&A, storytelling and rocking everyone’s hearts out. (ATM coverage here).

On this night, Militia delivered the goods on seven tracks including ATM’s Facebook Live footage of “Search for Steel” and “And the Gods Made War” plus below on “The Judas Dream” and “Salem Square.”

Soliz at one point apologized to the crowd for his voice being hoarse. But, seriously, the man’s pipes were in incredible form, and this opinion wasn’t the only one who felt that way as fans assured him they couldn’t even tell. That was further evidenced by the fact he screamed more than the other three vocalists on the bill combined — and nailed it every time.

However, the guitars were super loud, often drowning out Soliz’s chops unless you were at the barrier — but thankfully not resulting in anything near the Perry Farrell/Dave Navarro episode that occurred recently at a Jane’s Addiction concert over a similar situation.

Militia will shortly be marking a momentous occasion in the group’s history, as Nov. 30 marks the 40th anniversary of the famous “Slayer vs. Slayer” show at The Villa Fontana that included Militia as a support act for the Los Angeles Big 4 outfit and S.A. Slayer in 1984.

The trio of Grind began the Fitztivities (as the bar likes to often say) at 8 p.m. with a 30-minute set that delighted and made one wonder why the band doesn’t perform here more often. Guitarist Bob Perez may hold the key to that, as he spends the bulk of his musical time with Vara in Seance, while bassist Rudy Munoz may just need some nudging from his circle of friends to convince him there’s perhaps more of a demand to hear the band live than the band itself may think.

Judge for yourself below on “Who Do You Think You Are” and via ATM’s footage of “Pain” and “Surreal.”

Hopefully this initial viewing of Burning Witches in South Texas will serve as a warmup act. By the time the next album arrives, it wouldn’t be a stretch to have them perform with the likes of an Armored Saint, or even on Helloween’s 2026 North American 40th anniversary tour at a place such as Boeing Center at Tech Port or the Aztec Theatre.

So, local promoters, get on it. Let the witches set our world on fire once again. And give them a proper Kodak moment to remember.

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Generations of classic power metal reign thanks to Riot and friends

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Generations of classic power metal reign thanks to Riot and friends

The greats of power metal from yesteryear joined forces Friday night at the Rock Box with South Texas legions of the early 2000s and the future of Alamo City metal to form a conglomeration of rock that many concert billings would be tough to match.

Led by Riot once again playing the hometown of bassist Don Van Stavern, but this time doing so 45 years after 1977 debut Rock City, the program also featured Austin’s Ignitor plus classic locals Byfist and the youth of Jessikill.

Playing their first show since late 2019 in Europe, Riot stormed out of the gates with an 18-song, 95-minute set covering a bulk of its career with some newly played tunes. With Hall informing Alamo True Metal that he landed in town from Michigan the day before, Riot held a two-hour rehearsal Thursday, according to a source. Then with Jessikill vocalist Jessica Alejo and guitarist Jyro Alejo donning Riot’s seal-head mascot masks preceding the group’s entrance, Riot treated dedicated South Texas fans — and even visitors from Virginia and Pennsylvania — to another reliably riveting set (setlists in 82-photo slideshow below).

Opening with “Victory” from 2018 and latest album Armor of Light, Riot unleashed a slew of tracks from 1988 powerhouse Thundersteel including second song “Flight of the Warrior.” Thundersteel is arguably Riot’s signature album, though you can’t go wrong with 1981’s Fire Down Under claiming such a moniker either, and you can watch ATM’s Facebook Live footage of more Thundersteel classics “Sign of the Crimson Storm” and “Johnny’s Back” sandwiched by “49er” here.

No one remains in Riot from the debut-album days, as Van Stavern is the longest reigning member, having joined for the 1988 Thundersteel era. He was followed the next year by current lead guitarist Mike Flyntz. Hall etched his place in Riot vocalist lore in 2013 joining drummer Frank Gilchriest, but Friday’s show — coming a day before Riot’s participation in the Hell’s Heroes Fest in Houston — included a new second guitarist, at least for these Texas shows.

Lance Barnewold exhibited his skills with Riot for the first time in the Alamo City, bringing a unique background. Barnewold is not only the drummer in the solo band of Manowar co-founder and former guitarist Ross “The Boss” Friedman but his nephew as well. Friedman played a guest solo on “Warning Fire” on Jack Starr’s Burning Starr’s 2011 powerhouse of an album Land of the Dead, a band fronted at the time by Hall.

For those unfamiliar with Hall’s background as a heavy metal singer in his current and former bands, as well the group Reverence once upon a time, they may likely recognize him from television. Hall was a contestant in early 2020 on “The Voice,” wowing mainstream fans and viewers with his rendition of Foreigner’s “Juke Box Hero,” which we discussed a year ago to the day of Friday’s show via Zoom (watch here). Hall also released solo effort Sonic Healing at the time of the interview in the vein of classic rock tunes after teaming with Metal Church guitarist Kurdt Vanderhoof on the album.

On a night Alice In Chains guitarist/vocalist Jerry Cantrell was playing the Aztec Theatre, Riot continued with the good vibes inside the Rock Box on other classics such as “Outlaw” and “On Your Knees.” Watch more ATM Facebook Live footage of “Altar of the King,” “Angel’s Thunder, Devil’s Reign” and “Road Racin’ “ and ATM videos below of six additional tracks.

Van Stavern and Flyntz took swigs of their patented tequila bottle while dedicating multiple moments to the late guitarist Mark Reale, who’s buried here in San Antonio, plus vocalists Guy Speranza and Rhett Forrester, rhythm guitarist Louie L.A. Kouvaris and famed local DJ Joe “The Godfather” Anthony. The band added a nice touch by inserting the Forrester-sung title track to Restless Breed (watch below), though Van Stavern inexplicably left Armor of Light track “San Antonio” off the set in the one city that deserved to hear his written homage to his hometown. But there was another hometown reference when it was revealed Gilchriest was playing the drum kit of former Riot backstopper and San Antonio’s own Bobby Jarzombek, incidentally with his guitarist brother Ron Jarzombek in attendance.

Ignitor provided direct support to Riot, and that meant the powerful demonic vocals of South Texas Music Walk of Fame star, Corpus Christi native and longtime Austin resident Jason McMaster. Ignitor guitarist Stuart Laurence remains the lone original member of the band that formed in 2003 and once had two women in the group, on vocals and guitar.

Backed by rhythm guitarist Robert Williams, bassist Billy Dansfiell and drummer Pat Doyle, you can watch them perform “Heavy Metal Holocaust” plus footage below of “Secrets of the Ram” and the title track to 2017’s Haunted By Rock N’ Roll.

McMaster has placed his stamp on a variety of original bands including Watchtower, Evil United, Broken Teeth and the group that introduced him to an MTV generation, Dangerous Toys. McMaster has even had Van Stavern as a guest on the podcast he conducts with a former colleague of yours truly, “Metal” Dave Glessner. So when’s the musical collaboration, boys?

Byfist continued its run of local shows since dropping In the End in September 2020. With original rhythm guitarist Nacho Vara once again accompanied by bassist Stony Grantham and drummer Scott Palmer, like Riot the group unveiled a new guitarist stage left.

Manny Santos made his live debut with Byfist on this night having replaced Ernie B. Fans may recognize Santos from Zero The Hero, but he’s also played the axe for 40 years, according to the band’s socials, which included being a 3-peat winner of San Antonio Guitar Wars. Watch Santos and his bandmates in action below on “Mary Celeste” and on finale “In the End.” You don’t even have to be a “worthless scum” to enjoy it.

Jessikill kicked off the night as a prelude to what figures to be the most important and rewarding stretch of its young career. The band embarks on a national tour supporting Yngwie Malmsteen starting this Sunday in Hartford, Connecticut, (ATM details here) But the first order of business was opening for Riot.

Taking the stage to latest video single “Lightning,” the Alejos joined bassist Arturo Knight and drummer Marcel Biel in giving a taste of what national fans about to watch them live for the first time can expect over the next six weeks. Witnessing Alejo on guitar never gets old, but it’s also a pleasant sight seeing the band grow and mature with every new song and performance. Watch them on “Save Me” and below on “Midnight Rush.”

If the presence, and performance, of Riot, Ignitor, Byfist and Jessikill indicated anything, it’s that South Texas heavy metal is in good hands and not going anywhere anytime soon. How lucky do you get to be living here when it comes to the heavy metal scene, San Antonians?

True, there could always have been a larger turnout. But for those who understood the special significance of it all, the Rock Box was the place to be Friday night.

And we could all share a toast of tequila to that.

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