Monday, February 4, 2008

LIVE, AT BUDOKAN (well, Toronto actually...)


Fact #1. I’m married with two kids, own 2 cars, have a ridiculous monthly mortgage payment, work full time and live 141.35 miles from the nearest major “city”.

Fact #2. I never go to concerts anymore.

When I was single, stupid and lived near Toronto, Canada (current Pop: 5,000,000+ and growing!) I saw TONS of amazing concerts. The good thing about living near a big cosmopolitan city like Toronto is that most major bands will stop there on their world tours. The sheer variety of clubs and smaller venues also attracted many up and coming underground bands, most of which were from England.
The majority of the concerts I saw I can still remember vividly, others will forever be lost in a haze of smoke and Molson Canadian induced amnesia. Some I'm damned proud of and some I'm...well, you gotta break a few eggs to make an omelete, right? My wife still won't forgive her parents for choosing to go see the Carpenters over Elvis, one of the worst decisions any parent ever made, I'm sure. Even after years of Primal Scream therapy she still has nightmares.

I thought I would take the time and jot down some of those more memorable shows for y'all. No real details, just a laundry list for my own (and maybe your) edification. Maybe it'll get you thinking of some of your favorite shows, and if you've got the time I'd love to hear about 'em.

For your consideration...

I saw INXS (they had just released Shabooh Shoobah) open for The Kinks in 1983. INXS were still pretty raw, the Kinks were fantastic! Seeing Ray Davies play those opening chords of Lola from 30 feet away was a magical experience.

I saw The Clash at Maple Leaf Gardens but I can’t remember who opened for them (amnesia), some reggae band I think. During London Calling the entire audience started kicking their seats to the beat and many came off their hinges and were thrown, Frisbee style, into the general vicinity of the security guards and police officers, metal frames and all. My friend hit someone in the head, I think it was a Mountie (Royal Canadian Mounted Police, for all you Yankees). Great gig.

I was fortunate enough to see Spinal Tap with Shearer, Guest, McKean and an unknown guy on the drums (can’t recall if he “blowed up” at the end).

I have witnessed a plethora of punk gigs, the most memorable of which were SNFU, Forgotten Rebels, NOMEANSNO and GBH. The Pogues opened for GBH and simply blew them out of the water!

I saw Henry Rollins and the Beastie Boys, which was one of the loudest concerts I have ever seen.

Alice Cooper and Motorhead were a good show. Alice was a little surreal and a little over the top but Motorhead was 100% brute force and extremely entertaining.

Some of my favorite gigs were those underground bands from England that played the smaller clubs, such as Pop Will Eat Itself, Happy Mondays, The Wonder stuff, Inspiral Carpets, Billy Bragg, Stereo MC’s and Primal Scream.
OK, Dave, which ones have I forgotten?

Some 80’s staples I’ve seen: Orchestral Maneuvers In The Dark, The Smiths (twice!), The Fixx (surprisingly good), The Cure, Simple Minds, U2, Depeche Mode, The English Beat, The Police, George Thorogood and Men Without Hats.

Concerts that friends had to drag me kicking and screaming to that I actually ended up enjoying were: The Rolling Stones, Jerry Garcia, John Fogerty.

Bands that I wished I had the good fortune of seeing: Neil Young (I scalped my tickets for beer money!), The Who, Joe Jackson, Elvis Costello, BLUR, Radiohead, Flaming Lips, and a host of others too numerous to mention.

There were probably a hundred or more bands, especially given the amount of Lolapalooza-type festivals I attended, but those were the most memorable. I may take some of THE best and expand on them in future posts, but I'll have to edit most of them to attain a PG rating.

Maybe.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Uncle E

Perhaps due to a narcotic haze on your rose coloured glasses, you may have forgotten:

- Bootsauce (!)
- Sons of Freedom
- King Cobb Steelie
- The Spoons (everyone in high school in rural Canada in the early 80's had to have seen them at least once)
- Images In Vogue (see Spoons, The)

(these above names may be of little meaning to my colonial cousins to the south)

- Mojo Nixon and Skid Roper
- Teenage Fanclub
- Paul McCartney at Skydome


plus a few others I'm sure I've forgotten as well.

I, for one, would like to hear your festival recollections, as I was likely there with you and would like you to jog my memory...

At this time, I would like to admit to seeing:

- Chilliwack
- Streetheart (with opener, Bryan Adams)
- Judas Priest w/ Molly Hatchet
- Styx (the unforgettable Kilroy Was Here tour)
- Thompson Twins
- Frankie Goes To Hollywood
- Propaganda
- Art Of Noise (post-ZTT)
- Jesus Jones

Uncle E said...

Yep, saw the Spoons, with Blue Peter headlining!
When did we see Teenage Fanclub? I really don't recall.

Holly A Hughes said...

My faves (in no special order):

The Kinks -- Schoolboys tour, primo

The Stones (nice vintage mid-70s shows, before the hair plugs and spandex)

Blondie & Talking Heads & B-52s back when they were still new

Multiple Elvis Costello shows over the years, each one better than the last

Joe Jackson -- amazing how much better he is live

John Hiatt, a great live performer

Patti Smith --there's an experience

Nick Lowe, naturally

Ray Davies solo shows -- I have to say I've enjoyed these more than the Kinks shows -- can I blame the drugs?

My worst concert experience ever: when a very drunk and sloppy Rockpile opened for Van Morrison, and then Van himself walked off after 4 or 5 numbers and left his guitarists (the incomparable Bobby Tench) to sing the rest of Van's set. Oddly enough, I have forgiven Van, but now realize that I have his weird behavior to blame for distracting me from Rockpile, and therefore cheating me out of several productive years of Nick Lowe fanship.

Holly