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Covid-19 & 'The Heavy Metal Capital' Part 2: The anticipation

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Covid-19 & 'The Heavy Metal Capital' Part 2: The anticipation

The future is unclear regarding large-scale concerts. Perhaps meet-and-greets will come with a bottle of hand sanitizer or a mask with the artist's logo, if they continue to happen at all. Either way, Covid-19 is determined to be here to stay. So how do humans in the music scene combat the Coronavirus?

Do we rush back to freedom in public with no concern for the health of others? Do we take things gradually or ignore the opportunity to return altogether until it's deemed 100 percent safe to do so? Do metalheads practice the defiance and rebelliousness our music stands for in times of adversity and make their own rules?

The turning point toward abnormal in this country, arguably, came March 11 when Utah Jazz All-Star forward Rudy Gobert tested positive, causing that night's game at the Oklahoma City Thunder to be canceled moments before tip-off. The NBA shut down its season later that evening, and it was revealed Gobert touched several reporter microphones in jest earlier that week at one of the team's pressers. The remaining sports leagues were knocked down like dominoes, and the concert scene soon followed.

Since the state finals of the Wacken Metal Battle on March 14 in Austin that saw Austin band Hanna Barakat defeat five artists to advance to the national finals May 9 in Los Angeles, live music and bar socializing has disappeared and is only now beginning to crawl again. The national final and Wacken festival in Germany as a whole were no exception, denying not only Hanna Barakat the possible opportunity to perform at metal’s largest annual festival before roughly 80,000 but causing a ripple effect in general.

"After the Wacken Battle, we took a few weeks off to see how the virus closures would pan out," says Valkyrie vocalist Joe Gregory, whose band advanced out of the Feb. 8 regionals at Fitzgerald's, came up short against Hanna Barakat at the state competition, and last week released single "Submissive Decay" and has a video shoot scheduled for it at the end of June. "With that momentum, we’re going to keep writing new music."

Valkyrie was also supposed to play in Chicago on May 15. Drummer Rich Gomez, who like bassist Albert Kelly plies most of his musical trade with Under No One but was recruited to round out Valkyrie's lineup with Gregory and original guitarist Scott Stine, acknowledges he's still having a hard time adjusting.

"I've been out of retirement for over six years playing with Under No One," Gomez says. "Rehearsals every weekend was pretty much a normal routine. We didn’t schedule too many live shows, but the option was always there. (Valkyrie) would get together almost every Tuesday for rehearsal, (but) now going on three-plus months, everything has stopped! It’s just hard to grasp. My day job has been on a 24-hour around-the-clock schedule. It was a big adjustment for a while, (I) had to rearrange my studio office since my wife is working from home, so my studio became her office. I am pretty much stuck in the garage with a makeshift workspace. It took me almost a month after my last live show to get a kit set up where I could at least get some practice in whenever I got a break from work."

In the 2 1/2 months since the Wacken Metal Battle, everyone has been itching to get back. But while the number of Covid-19 cases slightly increases daily in Bexar County and surrounding areas, the realization that the job force and economy's reopening must get underway sooner than later has tested not only our checking and savings accounts but also our mental fortitude. Easter saw church services being conducted virtually. Now, with this weekend's Memorial Day being the second major holiday since the outbreak and the first to mark the road to recovery, albeit at 25 percent capacity in bars and 50 percent in restaurants, the eagerness in many is bursting at the seams.

"At first it was partying and doing acoustic videos online, but as stuff got worse, it became quite clear -- now is the time to get shit done," says the namesake, singer and guitarist of Jason Kane & The Jive. "We've been writing new songs like crazy and will start releasing singles and new videos for our page of livestream videos and live shows for however long this lasts and continue to do so even after this passes. This definitely put a kabosh on (our) upcoming tour to Chicago and tours planned throughout the year and our CD release for our third album Soggy Noggin, but we're still pushing the new album online like crazy. The rock stops for no one."

One of the hardest working artists in San Antonio since prior to 2008, The Heroine has had to weather the shutdown and the challenges the virus has brought forth while trying to transition to a return to playing live without knowing when that will be.

"One of our band members works in close proximity to people who are susceptible to spread this disease, and we have those in the band that are expecting, so we have pretty much shut everything down until we feel a little bit safer to be around each other," The Heroine bassist Wes "Guhlie" Vargulish says. "Our last show was on Feb 20. This has been the longest period of time that we have gone without playing a show, or rehearsing, for that matter. We’ve already had to cancel tours in June (and) July, and August is very questionable as it’s scheduled for the West Coast. In that regard, it’s been a little demoralizing. So for a band like ours that thrives on playing locally and touring, it’s been a real test of our resolve as a band. The positive side of all this is that it’s gotten everyone the ability to spend more time with their family. A lot of people don’t realize what the wives and family go through when dealing with a band. There’s a lot of frustration involved because they have to deal with the missed date nights, birthdays etc. I think once we get on the other side of this shutdown, I feel most people will appreciate live music a little more. Honestly, I think this magnifies the importance of live music; it’s such a cathartic thing."

A cautious, arguably realistic, approach is palpable in some.

"We will need to have a door person to count and sanitize hands of each person upon entrance per city's recommendations," says Dirce Eguia, co-owner of Bonds 007 Rock Bar downtown with her husband John Eguia. "The venue may open when we get to 50 percent, but only for local shows. At only 25 percent, we could only have 30 people plus our staff and bands, which is not enough to break even. Tribute shows will be canceled and not booked until we are at 100 percent. Who knows when that will be? We applied and received the payroll and disaster loans from the government. It will only be enough to pay my managers and 2 months rent. Our managers are still working -- cleaning, painting. The scary part is the reopen. With the fear that everyone has regarding the virus, it will be slow getting people out again. I would guess it may be 9 months after opening, just to get back to normal. Not sure how we will survive, but if anyone can do it, it will be Bonds. We have great regular customers that will eventually come back. Bands are really wanting to play. We are cancelling them as we go along, just hoping to finally say, 'Let's do the show.' "

Some emphasize the optimistic side of the spectrum.

"I’m very thankful to still be able to teach guitar via Skype and eliminate driving," says Aeternal Requiem singer, guitarist and band founder Austin Zettner, whose group recently released a documentary of its travels to Finland to record Rise with producer Anssi Kippo. "The extra time at home allows me to focus like never before. I hurt for the venues and gigging musicians whose livelihoods have been more affected than mine. I’m hoping that we come out of this soon, more hungry and inspired for great music than before!"

Bobby Jarzombek, drummer for Fates Warning and Sebastian Bach, says an eight-week North American tour with Bach had already been rescheduled for October and November before its original start date of March 13 had been axed.

"Sebastian's agent put it together that quickly," says Jarzombek, who played a local gig last night with Robert Demel at Max's Roadhouse in Spring Branch. "Instead of 33 shows, it's 31 shows, so we recovered just about all the dates if it still happens in October. So that's still the 'if' thing. I started on the Fates Warning record in late November after I got home from the Sebastian tour that we had previously done in 2019. I was able to finish that record and get a decent sized chunk of money for it, you know, at least something to where I'm not being killed right now like some people are -- (the ones that are) playing live music exclusively or didn't have anything else. But still, I'm not in a great position by any means."

Fates Warning singer and fellow San Antonio native Ray Alder has lived in Spain, one of the hardest-hit nations, for a few years. He slept in a recording studio for two weeks while completing vocals for the group's upcoming, as yet untitled, album.

"From what he tells me, they put restrictions on people in a vehicle," Jarzombek says of Alder's nation of residence. "You could have two people in a vehicle at one time if one of them was a child and the person riding, but not, like, two adults. Same with people walking down the street. If a mother was walking a child, you could do that. Or a father. But other than that, it had to be one person walking down the street to the store."

Even the old saying, or Cinderella song, "Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone)" applies for some.

"I really do miss all the live music. I had no idea it was that much a part of my life," says Wall Of Soul guitarist and The Edge Rock Radio concert photographer Allan Linkous. "No rehearsal, no shows. Had to cancel a few. Luckily, Wall Of Soul doesn't rely on that small bit of money to survive. We got signed to an independent label at the end of last year. I haven't really taken many photos of anything lately. Wall Of Soul has a show on June 13 in Houston. Let's see if that happens."

Covid-19 has also brought out numerous tales of touching moments in the midst of surviving a pandemic, particularly among frontline workers. Even those such instances have affected the metal community. Tim "Ripper" Owens, vocalist of K.K.’s Priest, A New Revenge, Charred Walls Of The Damned, The Three Tremors, Spirits Of Fire and formerly of Judas Priest, Iced Earth and Yngwie Malmsteen who last played here two years ago with Dio Disciples in Live Oak, saw girlfriend and paramedic Leilani Williams-LeMonier leave their Ohio home for the nation's Covid-19 epicenter of New York. She returned after 42 days, and Owens' cell-phone video capturing the emotional reaction of her three children was featured on "ABC World News Tonight with David Muir." Ironically, Muir referred to the unidentified Owens as “the voice” behind that clip (the ABC News version can be seen on Owens’ Twitter account).

Although each passing day brings a date with the unknown for everyone, the metal scene is doing all it can to prepare, even brace for, what it’s diving into. Because it has to try. For the community. For our sanity. For the survival of those directly impacted economically. And so tonight at Fitzgerald's, the Memorial Day Metalfest scheduled for 5 p.m. will mark the unofficial original live-music start to when phrases such as "social distancing," "the new normal" and "virtual reality" will be kicked in the ass and sent straight to the abyss.

"The bands that survived this storm have leaned to be more resilient, more creative and more accessible to their fans," says Sean Nations, vocalist for Metalfest artist Even In Death. "Fans have peeked behind the curtain and hopefully come to know the band better. The strong and focused will find ways to overcome!”

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River City puts the rock and fest in annual extravaganza with '90s flair

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River City puts the rock and fest in annual extravaganza with '90s flair

A day that began with a 70 percent chance of rain to the flooding extreme morphed into a 100 percent extravaganza of metal, food, beer, fun and nary a drop from the skies last Saturday. Nothing, evidently, was going to rain on the sixth annual River City Rockfest's parade.

Heavy on a roster of bands that flourished in the '90s -- something even Primus singer and bassist extraordinaire Les Claypool pointed out -- and heavy on the, well, heaviness, the festival treated more than 25,000 fans to a full day of partying headlined by Nine Inch Nails. Set up for the first time jointly in the parking lots of the Freeman Coliseum and a portion of the AT&T Center, with the Bud Light Courtyard serving as the halfway point, three distant stages provided a variety of metal talent and a field day for those who enjoy monitoring pedometers.

Stone Temple Pilots headlined the second stage with new singer Jeff Gutt, a virtual carbon copy of the late original frontman Scott Weiland in terms of look, mannerisms and sound. Which is to say STP is back in ‘90s form.

Living Colour came out of the Shade, the title of its new album, with original members Corey Glover on vocals, guitarist Vernon Reid and drummer Will Calhoun joined by birthday-boy bassist Doug Wimbish on a few new tracks and classic favorites "Type" and of course 99.5-KISS FM tune-on-repeat "Cult of Personality." They even covered The Clash's "Should I Stay or Should I Go," which can be found on the deluxe version of their debut Vivid, which is commemorating 30 years.

The Rockfest also brought out the "cycos" known as Suicidal Tendencies. Playing what was considered the third and smallest stage but which was lined up in the middle of the lots, original vocalist Mike Muir was so gung-ho on starting with his trademark, "What the hell is going on around here" on "You Can't Bring Me Down," but moisture on stage begged to differ as he slipped and fell on his keister. No worse for the wear, Muir picked himself up and got the set smashing with former Slayer drummer Dave Lombardo and hometown guitarist Dean Pleasants, a graduate of Sam Houston High School.

Chevelle, Bush and Clutch joined locals The Heroine, Lynnwood King & The Revival, Covina and Upon A Burning Body as well as All That Remains, which was added to the fest's lineup after Hellyeah bowed out following the death of drummer and former Pantera mainstay Vinnie Paul. The Heroine, fronted by King, and his jazz choir spinoff The Revival are the only bands local or national to play all six Rockfests. Covina, meanwhile, kicked off the day on the third stage with a noon set of San Antonio metalcore aided by friend and vocalist Paul Freedman of A House Divided.

Upon A Burning Body, as they did at the three-day, 55-band Knotfest in 2014 in San Bernardino, California (coverage here), incited the largest pits. Having played the second stage in 2015, the hometown national band received its first Rockfest main-stage opportunity and didn't disappoint with a 1:30 p.m. set. Vocalist Danny Leal donned a David Robinson Spurs jersey, and the party was on with opener “Red Razor Wrists" and “Texas Blood Money,” with its "Deep in the Heart of Texas" intro.

Bush and Stone Temple Pilots kept up the ‘90s vibe with frontmen Gavin Rossdale and Gutt, respectively, jumping off the stage and singing among the crowd. Primus won the unofficial award for Most Weird Vibe not only with its unique brand of rock that showcases Claypool’s ridiculous skill on the low end, but also the unpredictable event of body surfers making their presence felt on “Too Many Puppies” and “Mr. Krinkle.” Nine Inch Nails ended the joyous occasion with “Mr. Self-Destruct” himself, Trent Reznor, and Co. tearing through “Closer” and encores “The Hand That Feeds” and “Head Like a Hole” as part of a 90-minute set.

It's impossible to photograph every band at a festival such as the River City Rockfest, even when you're there from first note to last. Some bands’ set times overlap, the walks from one end-stage to the other can grow arduous, and there’s simply plenty of booths and games the fest has to offer that need to be enjoyed while the music is cranking. With enough food trucks, "Beer Beverage" and liquor tents and merch stands to fulfill a three-day fest let alone the one-day Rockfest, AEG's foray into the River City was done right in terms of setup, organization and opportunities for fun. Even if the musical roster was not as solid as previous years headlined by Guns N' Roses, Linkin Park, Disturbed and Def Leppard.

For the 2018 version, arguably the roster's most intriguing artist, Joan Jett & The Blackhearts, did not permit media photography. Jett must not have been feeling photogenic on her 60th birthday even though she was plastered on the huge stage screens throughout "Bad Reputation," “Cherry Bomb,” "I Love Rock N' Roll" and "I Hate Myself For Loving You." Stone Temple Pilots, meanwhile, was the lone artist mandating artist approval of all photographs prior to publishing but had not acknowledged Alamo True Metal's submissions six days ago as of press time. And unlike prior Rockfests, no media video footage was allowed.

So with that said, feel free to peruse the 232-photo slideshow now and when you begin coming down with a case of Rockfest withdrawals. Until next year, keep Rockfest-ing.

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