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Vibes Event Center

No stopping Corey "MF" Taylor in return to live music at Vibes Event Center

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No stopping Corey "MF" Taylor in return to live music at Vibes Event Center

An established axiom regarding any event held on a stage is that the most powerful person on such a platform is the one holding the microphone. So stood Corey Taylor on Friday night outside Vibes Event Center when, in an effort to elicit appreciation for opening act Cherry Bombs, he referred to the acrobatic musical dance troupe as “a very, very tough act to follow.”

Sure, unlike Cherry Bombs, Taylor did not twirl sticks of fire. He did not climb or dance around a rope with nothing but gravel beneath him. And he most certainly did not shake his moneymaker. Still, Taylor’s declaration practically begged a response along the lines of, “Tough to follow? YOU’RE COREY MOTHERFUCKIN’ TAYLOR!”

The unequaled frontman of Slipknot and Stone Sour said it himself. The $30 T-shirts at the merch table said it. And in case any of the sold-out crowd (albeit less than 100 percent capacity, of course) somehow missed it, the huge LED block letters spelling out his latest solo album CMFT on the stage said it too. For good measure, the exuberant nearby teenager, who frequently yelled the album’s complete title as a way of releasing the 14-plus months of his concert-going life that had been taken away by a pandemic emanating from China, said as much.

To be fair, Taylor’s four separate instances of urging the crowd to “give it up for the Cherry Bombs” were a byproduct of his being bound by (marital) law to do so. A happy wife is a good wife, and Taylor’s is Alicia Taylor, founder and leader of the dance group.

Although Alicia Taylor is more behind the scenes of Cherry Bombs these days compared to the group’s previous visit with Stone Sour inside Vibes Event Center in 2017, the troupe is by no means hurtful on the eyes. This time, however, there was more emphasis on showmanship rather than baring mostly all. In fact, one skit featured three performers covered in jackets while brandishing suitcases (see 68-photo slideshow below).

Alas, warmup acts don’t come much hotter than Cherry Bombs, regardless of the fact they’re dancing to metal hits such as Rammstein’s “Du Hast,” Metallica’s “Wherever I May Roam” and Rob Zombie’s “More Human Than Human.” They served their purpose of segueing into the man who was about to perform his own music with a couple of unexpected covers. Watch the Cherry Bombs in action via ATM’s Facebook Live footage here, here and here.

While Guns N’ Roses keyboardist Dizzy Reed brought his band Hookers & Blow to Sam’s Burger Joint this same evening, Friday’s shows were only the third set of national heavy metal acts to play in the Alamo City this year if you count Trapt with Flaw on March 27 and Tantric on May 15. Prior to that, it was Saliva with David Ellefson of Megadeth last Oct. 30.

Of course, there were noticeable differences from what everyone is accustomed to. General admission standing was set up in roped pods with fans being assigned a numbered lanyard corresponding to their party’s place on the gravel. VIP purchasers sat at tables in front of the stage complete with personal bar service. No moshing. No crowd surfing. Just enthusiastic, but polite, applause and approval with horns tossed in the air.

Had Slipknot been the band on hand, the plastic poles comprising the pods wouldn’t have made it past the first song. Hell, they would’ve been used as makeshift light sabers to bash people’s heads in or been tossed onto the stage. But Taylor is supporting his first solo album, thereby contributing to a different atmosphere. And he certainly wasn’t shy about using it to dominate his set.

Accompanied by Stone Sour guitarist Christian Martucci, guitarist Zach Throne (who, according to “Metalsucks,” provided the singing voice of Greg Brady in “The Brady Bunch Movie”), Prong and sometimes Ministry bassist Jason Christopher and Walls Of Jericho drummer Dustin Schoenhofer, the do-it-all Taylor performed nine of CMFT’s 13 tracks. No professional video filming was allowed, but you can watch ATM Facebook Live footage of latest single “Samantha’s Gone.”

Along with other CMFT tracks such as opener “Hwy 666,” “Black Eyes Blue,” “Meine Lux,” “Culture Head” and “Silverfish” — although arguably its best tune “Everybody Dies On My Birthday” was omitted — Taylor leaned heavily on Stone Sour songs. Of those nine such numbers, four came from 2012’s House of Gold & Bones: Part 1 including “Taciturn,” “The Travelers: Part 1,” “The Travelers: Part 2” and “Tired.” Watch ATM Facebook Live footage of “Made of Scars.”

For those expecting a slew of Slipknot, you would’ve gone home disappointed. Taylor only offered up one track from his masked unit. But he made it count with the rarely played and mostly acoustic “Snuff” from 2008’s All Hope is Gone.

While musicians across the globe are just starting to whet their touring feet again, Taylor was in classic form in musicianship, crowd banter, poignancy and humor.

Taylor reportedly taught himself to play the piano in order to write a song for his wife, which became CMFT’s “Home.” He dedicated it to Alicia “because when she met me, I was in a very dark place, and she saw something worth loving.” As Taylor strummed the introductory notes, he asked the crowd, “Not bad for only having played four years, huh?”

Outdoor shows at Vibes come with a bonus, depending on one’s perspective: passing locomotives. During one such moment, Taylor enthusiastically waved to the conductor mid-verse during “Taciturn.” And while introducing his bandmates, Taylor inadvertently said Christopher was on guitar. After receiving a playful yet sinister sneer from the left-handed bassist, Taylor quipped, “Well, it’s upside down. I couldn’t tell.”

Taylor, who has performed covers by everyone ranging from Chris Isaak to Ronnie James Dio, threw a curveball at the audience with John Cafferty and The Beaver Brown Band’s “On the Dark Side.” He then mixed the final encore of “CMFT Must Be Stopped” with KISS classic “Watching You” (see ATM phone footage below).

As always with Taylor, the energy and positivity was infectious. Rather than lamenting the mandatory absence of moshing, he stressed the importance of how a show like his was a gradual but important step in returning to some sense of normalcy. He then took a page out of Iron Maiden’s book after bidding farewell as the sound system blared the Monty Python theme “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life.”

In these instances of recovery from a worldwide event no one would’ve seen coming in our lifetimes, there may not have been a more apropos way to leave the stage. And San Antonians could be grateful to Taylor, promoters Twin Productions and the Vibes Event Center staff that provided food booths and began overall setup the day before for the opportunity to once again witness one of metal’s most diverse, talented, energetic and vital-to-the-scene musicians America has to offer. It shouldn’t have mattered which rendition of his acts was paying the visit.

Either way, he’s still Corey muthafuckin’ Taylor.

SETLIST: Hwy 666, Meine Lux, Halfway Down, The Travelers: Part 1, Tired, Samantha’s Gone, Silverfish, Song #3, Snuff, Taciturn, Made of Scars, Culture Head, Home, Zzyzx Rd., Black Eyes Blue, Bother, Through Glass, On the Dark Side (John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown Band cover), The Travelers: Part 2/CMFT Must Be Stopped/Watching You (KISS cover)/CMFT Must Be Stopped

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Higher power reigns over lesser evils behind Stryper and local classic rockers

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Higher power reigns over lesser evils behind Stryper and local classic rockers

Stryper’s mission ever since it has been touring Texas from the mid-1980s has been as clear cut, and as opposite, as any band around: to spread the gospel of Christ in rocking fashion. Adorned with its customary yellow and black attire and instruments, that message has usually come in the form of a new album or, as in the case of its October 2016 visit to the now-defunct Alamo City Music Hall, a 30th anniversary celebration of its most successful album To Hell With the Devil.

This time, Stryper expressed its colors with a greatest hits tour.

For the second consecutive visit, last Sunday’s concert at Vibes Event Center performed by original members in vocalist/guitarist Michael Sweet, his brother and drummer Robert Sweet and lead guitarist Oz Fox was accompanied by new bassist Perry Richardson, who used to be in Firehouse. Richardson made his San Antonio debut with Stryper in June 2018 at Sam’s Burger Joint as the band toured behind God Damn Evil (coverage here).

But it nearly got off to an ominous start.

The band was three hours late to the venue, according to Rock Box/Vibes Event Center co-owner Steve Rodriguez, due to having witnessed the aftermath of a horrific motorcycle accident between Austin and San Marcos en route to the Alamo City from Dallas. Stryper understandably was shaken up upon its arrival, Rodriguez said, eventually going through a brief soundcheck after ensuring the concert would be switched from the originally scheduled Rock Box stage — where a sold-out Stryper performance in July 2016 minus air conditioning had band and patrons sweating profusely, as Michael Sweet recalled in our interview shortly thereafter (listen here) — to the larger Vibes stage.

Fortunately, the band had a few hours to gather its bearings before going on at 10 p.m. and made no mention of its travails during a rockin’ 85-minute showing before approximately 500 fans (as revealed by Din Productions promoter Alfred Mejia). Richardson, too, looked more comfortable a little less than two years into being a member than at the Sam’s show that was one of his first in yellow and black. Seven of the 16 tunes performed (setlist in 52-photo slideshow below) were from To Hell With the Devil, including “Free” and “More Than a Man” (ATM Facebook Live footage here) and the double encore of “Sing-Along Song” and “To Hell With the Devil” (watch here). Watch ATM footage of three other classics below.

While Stryper was ending the Texas and American portion of its greatest hits tour on the eve of the inaugural performances of its 37-year existence in Mexico, the stage was set for them by a pair of local bands that formed in 1987, the year after To Hell With the Devil’s release. Direct support act Byfist and openers Wicked Angel have carved their own niche in San Antonio metal history.

Byfist’s lineup path has been well documented, but for those not in the know . . . rhythm guitarist Nacho Vara, who also plays in local classic rockers Seance, remains the lone original member. The band lost original vocalist Vikk Real and guitarist Dave Lee but persevered through the inevitable uncertainty of what the future might hold. Byfist’s 1989 EP Adrenalin was produced by the late Metal Church and Reverend vocalist “Reverend” David Wayne. As such, Vara tends to get emotional while dedicating “Mary Celeste” to the former two, and vocalist Raul Garcia pays homage to Wayne on traditional finale “Scattered Wits” (ATM footage of both below).

As is the group’s custom, it opened with the up-tempo of “Universal Metal,” which features a portion of Ernie B.’s guitar solo that reminds one verbatim of George Lynch’s solo in Dokken’s “Tooth and Nail.” Another standout was “In the End,” as bassist Stony Grantham and drummer Scott Palmer’s efforts were not to be outdone. New music is definitely being looked forward to regarding Byfist.

Wicked Angel is planning on having its own new tunes in the not-too-distant future. Though the band doesn’t play nearly as many shows as other local acts in the scene, that could change this year. Wicked Angel’s presence opening this night was a welcome sight, and quickly served notice as drummer Ernie Chavarria took to the stage by lighting his China Boy cymbals on fire. It was also music to the ears for those longing to hear 1987 tracks such as opener “Realms of Chaos.” Afterwards, vocalist Dave Caballero set the tone for the evening’s theme by describing how it was necessary to root out all evil. When some in the crowd laughed thinking he was just playing, Caballero replied, “No, really!” Watch ATM Facebook Live footage of “Stealer of Souls” and below of closer “Lucifer’s Hammer.”

So whether being healed by yellow and black stripes, the memory of band members who have moved on or an inspirational look to what lies ahead, Stryper, Byfist and Wicked Angel demonstrated in their own way that the rock remains strong within them. Righteously speaking.

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Victorious Sky tour features a bit of honey, trains & plenty of rock

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Victorious Sky tour features a bit of honey, trains & plenty of rock

When Skillet and Alter Bridge announced a co-headlining tour in June, the Alamo City was on the docket to receive a power-packed duo. Both bands have played the Fiesta Oyster Bake (with Skillet headlining it in 2017; coverage here). Both have made their mark over the years on the rock charts. And both know how to deliver the goods on stage.

Armed with a band headed in the same direction in its own right, Dirty Honey, the Victorious Sky tour made its way to the Vibes Event Center parking lot last Saturday night. Named as such as a combination of album titles for Skillet’s 10th release Victorious that dropped Aug. 2 and Alter Bridge’s Walk the Sky that came out the day before the show, each artist played 75 minutes with Skillet going on last. The length of time proved to be the only aspect that linked both bands as co-headliners.

Not used to playing as early as 7:50-9 p.m., Alter Bridge put on a methodical (for them) performance. They had lighting that was more befitting of an opening act than a band of their stature, zero production and played with less energy and fire than these eyes and ears are accustomed to seeing and hearing from them. Walk the Sky is not nearly as strong an album top to bottom as predecessor The Last Hero, starting with opening track “Wouldn’t You Rather.” That was one of three songs performed from the new album (setlist and 88-photo slideshow below), though Alter Bridge’s energy did pick up on older tracks “Come to Life,” “Metalingus” and “Rise Today.”

While supporting an album that was only 24 hours old in the public eye, vocalist/guitarist Myles Kennedy, guitarist Mark Tremonti, bassist Brian Marshall and drummer Scott Phillips left tracks from The Last Hero off the menu. Had they gone on last or been the true headliner, that likely would not have been the case.

By contrast, Skillet came out blazing, had its full use of production and lit up the night’s victorious sky with bright lights and its patented risers utilized by rhythm guitarist/keyboardist Korey Cooper, lead guitarist Seth Morrison and unofficial fifth member, cellist Jonathan Chu. But it was singer/bassist John Cooper who made the biggest impression.

John Cooper, spouse of Korey, was a man possessed from the get-go, headbanging and powerfully singing on opener “Feel Invincible.” Cooper’s mojo never let up as he donned a smoke-blowing contraption on new track “You Ain’t Ready.” He gave his patented description of Texas having way better Mexican food than California, saying the latter “pretends” to have a good palate while jokingly asking the crowd not to put his comments on YouTube. He also waxed poetic, as is his custom, about the Lone Star being his favorite state to play but this time left his impression of former Britny Fox vocalist “Dizzy” Dean Davidson screeching “Fun in Texas” at home. Or maybe on the tour bus.

Even when Cooper mellowed for just a bit, he did so with passion. Cooper dedicated the title track to Victorious to the late Chester Bennington of Linkin Park, saying in part: “He wasn’t a friend. I never met him, unfortunately. But that’s what his music and lyrics did for me. So I’d like to dedicate this song to Chester and to anyone struggling with depression and suicide.”

With Korey Cooper demonstrating her own spark and energy on guitar and keys, drummer Jen Ledger, who is embarking on a solo side project, also made her mark behind the kit and with her backup vocals as Skillet shined on “Hero,” “Undefeated” and crowd favorite “Monster.” Another new track, “Legendary,” is currently lighting up the WWE Universe as the theme song to World Wrestling Entertainment’s “Monday Night Raw.”

Skillet’s energetic performance, however, was missed by a quarter to one-third of the amount of people who came strictly to see Alter Bridge, according to two sources. The downsizing proved to be the loss of those who left early and didn’t get their full money’s worth. But that didn’t include the train conductors.

That’s right. Train conductors.

The Vibes parking lot sits adjacent to railroad tracks, an all-too-familiar fact for Kennedy, who tried to joke about it during Alter Bridge’s set. After giving props to Dirty Honey and the actual headliners, Kennedy said, “Speaking of friends . . . was anyone here the last time we played here? I think we were doing a sensitive ballad or something. Woo hoo . . . honk, honk,” he said of the trains’ frequent presence. “Anyways, it’s back. Great,” he added sarcastically. Perhaps unbeknownst to Alter Bridge, this concert came five years and one day to the day of Kennedy’s referenced Fall Ball festival, which he discussed exclusively with me in November 2017 here. Drummer Scott Phillips also engaged ATM in conversation shortly after the 2016 Houston Open Air (listen here).

John Cooper got into the railway act as well when he told fans, “I’ve never played a concert with a train going by. My ADD is kicking in. All I can think about is songs with ‘train’ in them.” He then began to sing Blackfoot’s “Train, Train,” which was also covered by Warrant on its Cherry Pie album, before asking, “You remember that one? No? Oh well.”

Not to be outdone was Los Angeles blues quartet Dirty Honey. Armed with the task of warming things up for Skillet and Alter Bridge, Dirty Honey didn’t lack for bravado or confidence on stage. And with good reason.

Dirty Honey is the first band in the history of mainstream rock charts to have a No. 1 song — “When I’m Gone” — without being signed to a label. They already had familiarity with Kennedy, having opened for Slash, as well as supporting some band called The Who plus Guns N’Roses on the final two dates of the “Not In This Lifetime Tour” in Las Vegas.

For those locally who debated whether Alter Bridge should’ve been the true headliner, the bottom line was that you couldn’t go wrong with either band. Skillet has four consecutive albums that have reached gold or platinum-plus status, no small feat in this day and age. Alter Bridge’s resume speaks for itself, with Kennedy holding down the fort as the frontman for Slash while Tremonti leads his own Tremonti Project — not to mention the Creed trifecta of Tremonti, Phillips and Marshall. But yes, it would’ve been nice if both groups had equal headlining characteristics and gave performances worthy of such rather than simply sharing the amount of time they were on stage.

But again, Alter Bridge was playing one day after its new album dropped. This was Skillet’s time. You can bet your bottom dollar, or at least your train train, that AB will be back before the touring cycle is done. And hopefully then, media video footage will be allowed to present to you all.

SKILLET SETLIST: Feel Invincible, Not Gonna Die, You Ain’t Ready, Whispers in the Dark, Legendary, Awake & Alive, Back From the Dead, Save Me, Hero, Undefeated, Victorious, Comatose, Monster, The Resistance

ALTER BRIDGE SETLIST: Wouldn’t You Rather, Isolation, Come to Life, Pay No Mind, Rise Today, Addicted to Pain, Waters Rising, Take the Crown, Cry of Achilles, Blackbird, Metalingus, Open Your Eyes

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International flair of females brings roaring Vibes to Alamo City

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International flair of females brings roaring Vibes to Alamo City

The seventh annual River City Rockfest was all set to feature one of the most sought-after and intriguing bands to hit the scene recently for the first two-day Rockfest in San Antonio history last weekend. Except for one problem.

The Rockfest was canceled. Which led to the search and effort by Din Productions to atone for the cancellation by bringing some of those scheduled bands here on their own tours.

Jinjer was happy to oblige.

The quartet from the Ukraine, led by the mesmerizing vocal style of Tatiana Shmailyuk, swept into town, and demand was palpable. In what may have been the first metal show designed to be on the Rock Box stage of the Rock Box building, only to be moved to the larger Vibes Event Center within the facility, roughly 1,100 fans turned out last Saturday to hear and witness the Ukranian wonders.

Kansas City natives The Browning provided direct support in a shroud of darkness (watch ATM footage of “Awaken the Omega below), but it was Toronto quintet Sumo Cyco that had the crowd jumping early. Fronted by Catwoman-suit wearing Skye “Sever” Sweetnam, who body surfed her way into the audience on more than one occasion (see 80-photo slideshow below), Sumo Cyco increased the energy after locals Wulfholt and Desolate A.D. warmed things up. Watch Sumo Cyco perform “Move the Mountains” below and click here for Facebook Live footage of “Run With the Giants.”

While Sumo Cyco easily won over new fans with their energetic performance and meet-and-greet afterwards, it was Jinjer that most came to see. Set to release Macro on Oct. 25, Shmailyuk lured listeners in with her girl-next-door pink jumpsuit, white sneakers and sweetened clean vocals before unleashing her patented roars that would shame many death-metal male vocalists on tracks such as “Ape,” new single “Judgement & Punishment” and finale “Pisces.” Judge for yourself on ATM Facebook Live footage of “Dreadful Moments” and see the setlist in the slideshow below.

Guitarist Roman Ibramkhalilov, bassist Eugene Abdukhanov and drummer Vladislav Ulasevish brought their own sense of metal fury as Shmailyuk roared to her heart’s content in a nearly two-hour set. While many bands these days incorporate two singers splitting the clean and metalcore styles, Shmailyuk’s ability to handle both distinctively with ease by herself is a large part of the lure for Jinjer fans, making the band different than most.

Wulfholt and Desolate A.D. brought riffs, drums and heavy vocals to the local portion of the night, with the former band generating a slew of flying panties that made their way into the photo pit (see slideshow). Watch both bands in action, respectively, via ATM Facebook Live footage of “Volatility Quotient” and “Fight For Another Day.”

While the first of back-to-back Rockfest spillover shows delighted a near sold-out crowd that flowed into a room not originally anticipated, the entire weekend would not have been possible without the tireless work of Rock Box owners Micaela & Steve Rodriguez and their staff. In addition to making adjustments on the fly within the facility and ensuring admission was run as smoothly as possible, they had to turn things over immediately after the Jinjer show cleared out for Sunday night’s second spillover appearance of Geoff Tate’s Operation: Mindcrime.

Stay tuned for coverage of that show. And keep in mind that with a little more demand from the fans, those two acts won’t be the only Rockfest 2019 alums to actually appear on stage rather than just on paper.

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