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Joy
27 February 2008 @ 01:22 pm
music meme again!  
I've done this before, but it's great because the answers keep changing!  Tagged by [Bad username: day_eight.]
List seven songs you are into right now. No matter what the genre, whether they have words, or even if they're any good, they must be songs you're really enjoying now. Post these instructions in your Live Journal along with your seven songs. Then tag seven other people to see what they're listening to.



1. Streetcar by Funeral For A Friend.  This is one of those emo bands whose songs often seem flat and generic to me, but I really love this tune.  It's got such a catchy and sad chorus hook that I can't stop playing (and singing) it.

2. Salty Eyes by The Matches.  I just discovered these guys, and they have a unique sound and a great theatricality to them. 

3. Ghost of York by As Tall As Lions.   I jut got this album this week and it's fantastic.  Beautiful stuff.

4.  The City That Reads by The Graduate.  More emo, simple, yet good.  There is also a sweet acoustic version on their free EP available from AbsolutePunk.net. Also, note that this is not a download but a link to the song on thesixtyone, which you all should check out as it's how I found half of these songs in the first place.

5. Ode to LRC by Band of Horses.  I almost got to see these guys play in January but missed the boat on getting tix in time.  They're an amazing band and if you haven't heard them yet, check them out.

6. Delilah by The Dresden Dolls. This is one of my go-to songs when I'm down.  So much better than that other song about Delilah that's been all over the airwaves for the past year. 

7.  About Last Night by The Mascara Story.  I swear this band would not have broken up if their name weren't so godawful stupid.  Great upbeat punk-pop fuzz.

8. The Light by The Album Leaf.  Every once in awhile an album will have an opening track that just catches you off your guard with its sheer beauty.  This is one of those.  Since it has no words, I throw it in as an eighth song for free.  :D


I tag cruelest_month, notorium, rabid_fangrrl, paperninja, davyn, lazy_writer , and bombasticduck.

Tags: ,
 
 
Joy
20 February 2008 @ 11:34 pm
The Bravery at the Paradise Rock Club, 2/18/08  
It had been over a month since I'd been to a show, and yeah, I missed it.  So we went to the loveably grungy Paradise Rock Club to see The Bravery -- me, Philip, and his friend Duncan, also British.  Flanked by British lads, I was in good spirits.

 We arrived a tad late and missed about half of the opening set by Your Vegas, but from what we heard they had potential.  However, they were overshadowed by the rocking Switches.  This British quintet had a great sound -- a kind of classic rock throwback thing, with four-part harmony, loud guitars, infectious energy, and awesome hair.  Unfortunately, their lyrics were,in Philip's words, "insipid."  Their formula for a song seems to be choose a two- or three-word phrase for the title ("No Hero," "Every Second Counts," "Lovin' It"), and then repeat it as many times as possible within the chorus.  Once the crowd had figured out this formula, it got old quickly. They were clearly talented musicians with skills and commanding stage presence, however, so I think they could be  quite big if they learned how to diversify their song structure.  They've only got a couple of EPs out so far, so they've got time.  Good stuff.

Waiting for The Bravery was the usual trial of patience, and we fell back into our pattern of making hypocritically snide remarks about the crowd.  In this case, it was the most "mainstream" looking crowd I'd been in for some time.  (To counterbalance the general lack of self-conscious hipness, I suppose, we had to encounter the single ugliest couple I have ever seen in my life.  I shall not even describe the horror, lest it be read by said couple.  This is the internet after all.  We actually didn't see them until midway through the set, when they pushed their way from the bar up to the front for "An Honest Mistake."  Goodness, I've said too much.)  At an ideal Bravery concert, people would jump around.  Their new-wave influenced, synthesizer-infused pop-rock about as close to dance music as legit guitar rock gets.  And some of the people filling the Paradise that night were unhip enough, or tipsy enough, to do that.

The Bravery came onstage with "Split Me Wide Open," which, though a great song, was somewhat disappointing live.  Perhaps it was a poor choice of starters.  Singer Sam Endicott sounded strained, sounding like a pale echo of a young Robert Smith, to whom he is sometimes compared.  However, he sounded much more confident on "No Brakes," and that confidence lasted through the solid set, which was more or less split between 2005's self-titled debut and this year's The Sun and the Moon.  Before playing "This Is Not the End," he announced they would soon release a new album, entitled The Moon, made of of alternate versions of all the songs from The Sun and the Moon.  I'd still rather have an album of new compositions, but the "Moon" versions of familiar tracks they performed were interesting, especially the sped-up takes of Sun's two slow songs.  "Tragedy Bound," the sparsest, bleakest song The Bravery has recorded, benefited from an injection of tempo, while "The Ocean," which is beautifully wistful and dreamy on record, became a more generic Bravery filer track when backed up by a disco drumbeat.  It was decidedly refreshing to hear the variation, which, after all, is part of why we go to shows.

Sam Endicott has a long face that makes him look a bit like a cross between a more outgoing Conor Oberst and a less intimidating Trent Reznor.  He's passionate and dynamic on stage, all angular motion.  Emo-haired guitarist Michael Zakarin also loved the crowd, pacing the edge of the barrier and bringing out the fangirls in all of us.  The shy guy and unsung hero was clearly keyboardist  John Conway, who, with bassist Mike Hindert, contributed backing vocals in places I hadn't realized existed. The band made it clear that they were rockers, relying only minimally on synth power and more on the charisma and musical muscle of the Endicott-Zakarin combo.  Drummer Anthony Burulchich's  killer solo almost consciously spat in the face of drum machines everywhere.

The poppy "Public Service Announcement" was a highlight, as were the three biggest hits: "Believe," "Time Won't Let Me Go," and "An Honest Mistake." The last, saved til late in the evening, was the crowd's obvious sentimental favorite and brought the place as close to a dance floor as it could get.  They also played an old song called "The Dandy Rock," which Ellicott assured us had never been recorded.  Featuring Zakarin on vocals, who was hard to hear, it was forgettable but a welcome surprise.

When they left the stage, I was hoping for  "Fearless" and "Bad Sun" as encores.  While I didn't get the latter, I did get the former, as well as the single "Unconditional," for which Endicott pulled out all the stops.  "I just want I just want love," he wailed, and we shook our heads because it was so obvious that we loved him.

Setlist (well out of order):

Split Me Wide Open
No Brakes
This is Not the End (Moon version)
Public Service Anouncement
Tyrant
The Dandy Rock
Believe
Every Word From Your Mouth Is a Knife in My Ear
Time Won't Let Me Go
An Honest Mistake
Tragedy Bound (Moon version)
Swollen Summer

Encore:
Fearless
The Ocean (Moon version)
Unconditional
 
 
Joy
14 December 2007 @ 04:22 pm
Another show review, and hope for the holidays  
Okay first things first -- my much delayed review of the AWESOME show I went to last Sunday.
Jesse Lacey, I will seduce you from your emo yet. )


Other things: It's almost time for winter break! I finished my last test for Origins of Agriculture today, and the museum exhibit I was organizing for my China class is all set up (and looking fantastic if I do say so myself). I still have a short paper to do by Wednesday, but it's almost done. Unfortunately, our semester ends at the end of January, so I will have to spend Christmas break researching my two term papers and have a take-home final when I get back. D: At Yale I was used to having everything finished before Christmas, so this is kind of annoying, but at least it made the last couple weeks much less painful than they would have been and probably enabled me to do NaNoWriMo. Which is my other big project for break: finally digging out Bodies In Flight from its winner-sparkly coffin and EDITING the thing. :D I'm taking the weekend to get ahead on research so I can relax a little over break, but I did some Christmas shopping today and it made me happeh.


Finally, on a manga/anime note:

Spoilers for Naruto 382 and Shippuuden Episode 39

SPOILERS, I REPEAT, MAJOR MANGA SPOILERS )
 
 
Current Mood: rejuvenated
Current Music: Death Cab For Cutie, "The Stable Song"
 
 
Joy
08 December 2007 @ 09:28 pm
Bayside and the Victory Records Tour  
The trouble with winter shows is that waiting outside for the doors to open is kind of a pain when it's 30 degrees outside, and you know that when you get inside you are not going to want the twelve layers of fleece, wool, and down you could have been wearing so you opt for a parka, a tee and some armwarmers and realize too late that you did want that hoodie after all.

But I digress.  I arrived at the Middle East, an optional T-stop away, and got in line behind a bunch of semi-obnoxious kids.  Oh, the trials of the all-ages show.  I noticed right away that the crowd was young, but not unusually so; and consisted of not only the typical sce/mo brigade but also some relatively jock/skaterish looking dudes with baseball caps.  I also saw something that I had hitherto not thought possible: a guy in skinny jeans who was sagging.  I kid you not.  I wanted to hand him a belt until I saw he was already wearing one.  Then I just wanted to hand him a sandwich.

The Middle East is a great venue for getting up close and personal, if the acoustics left a little to be desired.  A Day To Remember came on first.  They made it clear from the get go that this is a genuine hardcore band. The floor, which was not yet quite at full capacity, opened into a genuine pit with genuine hardcore dancing. I just love to watch that. It's better than ninja fights in anime. It's what I imagine electrons doing when they randomly pop up in different places at every instant. I have a hard time getting into hardcore musically, but being there live was awesome.  Apparently a sizeable pack of people -- the jockish guys from the line -- had shown up just for ADTR.  The rest of the lineup was too "emotive" and not "hxc" enough for them I guess. I overheard a couple of boys saying, "Dude, let's go. I kinda don't want to see the rest of the show." Good riddance if you ask me. This species of fans are a little too much like a sports team for me to want to be wedged in between them for more than an hour.  ADTM was pretty fun, though, and played a couple songs I liked the sound of and some rousing covers.

Next up was June,  the only act that didn't enthrall me completely.  It is too bad, because I think I might really enjoy their style if I had been able to hear the vocals (which were clearly meant to be heard) over the guitars. They played a kind of generic punky pop, sung by a guy who looked like a taller, manlier version of Elijah Wood, and the lead guitarist was bouncy and flaily and vaguely seemed to wish it were the 1970s.  He was the best thing about the set, exploding all over the stage and all but hacking into the crowd with his guitar like a hatchet.  The sound mixing just killed any personality the songs themselves might have had, but I'll probably check them out online anyway.

My loyalties are forever with Bayside, but I really must say that The Sleeping stole the show. Their brand of progressive screamo was made for live performance. The singer, Doug Robinson, looked like the deranged love child (as if there would be any other kind) of Jack Black and King Kong himself. This is not to say he was bad looking, just something about his large face, shaggy hair, beady wild eyes, and primal energy said cave-man on speed. He stared out at the audience with an intesely manic gaze, standing up on the barrier and practically swinging from the pipe attached to the low-hanging ceiling. The music was pretty rocking too (a song called "The Climb" was particularly memorable), and I made a note to add them to my ever-growing list of watched bands.  The crowed went wild for these guys, and since there was not enough room for dancing anymore, we had kind of a static overstuffed mosh-pit that most closely resembled the garbage compactor from that scene in Star Wars. I had never gotten so pushed around, not even at MCR, or at the O.A.R. Spring Fling show. I probably should have left my headband at home, as I almost lost it several times. At one point I literally imagined I was underwater. But it was great fun. Doug crowd surfed over us and I touched his arm.  They're on the way to being much bigger.

Bayside came on at last, blasting into the froward-surging crowd with "They're Not Horses, They're Unicorns." They were a very chatty and grateful band onstage, which is almost mandatory in a venue that small.  Singer Anthony Raneri mentioned that they had played in Boston every time they toured, and that they had played the Middle East a few times, but only on the small auxiliary stage "Upstairs."  They had always wanted to play Downstairs, and now they finally were.  They played a mix of tracks from their past three albums, especially this year's The Walking Wounded.   "Duality," the hit single, and "Carry On," which they announced to be the next single, maintained the energetic vibe that had built during The Sleeping's set.  Lead guitarist Jack O'Shea is skillful in a way that sets Bayside apart from some of the clone army of similar bands, and fortunately the mics were better coordinated so that both his parts and Anthony's spot-on vocals were clear.  They played two or three songs from their first album which I don't own, and they sounded so young and fresh and punktastic. The maturity in the new tracks is audible, though.  "Landing Feet First" was introduced as a heartfelt love song, and everyone swayed and sang along.  The classics "Blame It On Bad Luck" and "Montauk" were injected with new life, and Anthony dedicated the triumphant "I and I" to all the other bands that had played before them. The finale was "The Walking Wounded," my favorite Bayside song, and to top it all off, they returned for an encore that included "Devotion and Desire," the signature hit from their self-titled sophomore disk. It was a fantastic crowd-rousing, almost shiver-inducing moment, when he let the crowd sing the buildup "You're not ready / you're not ready /Please, stop acting like you are."  During the last round of chorus, the singers from ADTR and The Sleeeping sat on the top of the crowd, facing outward, and joined in the singing. It was a fantastic end to what truly seemed to be a label tour made of friends.  Bayside is tight and approachable live, and I was glad they played such a  chronologically diverse set.  The only other song I really missed was "Dear Your Holiness," but you can't win them all.  What a deal of a show night.  Victory indeed.

Tomorrow I'm off to Lowell to see Brand New, Thrice, and mewithoutyou.  Super whoot!  I'm trying to work hard today because have SO MUCH work to do this week and I can't make myself do it.  I have presentations on Wednesday and Thursday, a paper due Wednesday, and an exam Friday.  After that though, I'm basically free of deadlines until mid January.  Just keep breathing.
 
 
Current Mood: busy
Current Music: "Who Stays Behind," The Sleeping
 
 
Joy
01 December 2007 @ 03:37 pm
Surprising, isn't it  





Which Naruto ninja are you most like?
created with QuizFarm.com
You scored as Sasuke

You're Sasuke, the angsty popular kid.
Good-looking, cool and smart , you're admired by many. However, you don't care about people that much. You have one ambition, one goal in your life, and when it comes to that, people are just in your way. Try to give up the hatred you might feel because of your past and learn to show your caring side.


Sasuke


 
88%

Neji


 
75%

Iruka


 
69%

Rock Lee


 
69%

TenTen


 
63%

Hinata


 
63%

Genma


 
56%

Shikamaru


 
44%

Naruto


 
44%

Kakashi


 
44%

I'm not sure that the stated reasons are the real reasons why am I like Sasuke, which I've spent way too much time rambling about, but alright.  Angsty and popular (finally) is probably true.  And apparently I'm good looking?  News to me.

I went shopping with Peter today.  I haven't been spending enough time with him and I had forgotten how fun he was.  He gets so excited about going to Abercrombie (they don't have it in England), which makes me roll my eyes but he's too adorable about it to hold it against him.  I got some little things for my parents as well as the most recent Bayside CD for myself.  They're coming to Cambridge next week and I'd like to go, but I might not just because the week is already so loaded down with shows.  On Tuesday I'm probably going to see Cold War Kids, Spoon, and Against Me! with Chris and Giorgio, and on Sunday Guy and I are driving to Lowell to see Brand New.  Phew.  I'm excited, but also getting a little stressed. 

In school I'm starting a new project!  I'm going to be doing stable isotope analysis on a collection of Native American bones from Florida, to see how they compare with an earlier population from a nearby site.  We're looking at diet and subsistence patterns over time. I've never done this type of analysis before, since I've only worked with ceramics, not bones, but this project is kind of a race against time, since our museum will probably have to return all our Native American skeletal material when the new NAGRPA amendment goes through January 14.  I'm the only one in lab without a project now, and its straightforward nature should make it a good training project for me.  The idea of learning lab skills finally has gotten me a little more excited about school.

But damn, is it cold.
 
 
Current Mood: blank
Current Music: Bayside, "Landing Feet First"
 
 
Joy
26 October 2007 @ 12:55 am
Two shows in five days, woot!  
So Tuesday night, Philip and I went to see the New Pornographers in Boston.  If you've never heard this band, you need to.


Here are some songs!  One of them might not work because I bought the latest album off iTunes (yes I'm a tool).  But the other four should.

The Laws Have Changed
Jackie, Dressed in Cobras
Sing Me Spanish Techno
Go Places (this one might not work because I bought the album off iTunes *is a tool*)
The Bleeding Heart Show


 
 
Current Mood: pleased
 
 
Joy
20 October 2007 @ 06:56 pm
Tori is a goddess.  
This is who I wish I could be:

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

 
 
Current Mood: calm
Current Music: Tori Amos, "Virginia"
 
 
Joy
16 October 2007 @ 05:07 pm
Wow, a FANDOM post for once!  
Yes, for once Joy is not whining about therapists and unrequited love. I know right? Hell just froze over.




I downloaded the new Radiohead album, which they have famously released on the internet only at whatever price the individual fans choose to pay.  I'll be really curious to see if this starts a trend or sends a message or anything like that.  So far I really like the sound, but I'm only a couple tracks in.

The Umbrella Academy Issue 2 is coming out tomorrow! Wheee.  I saw a preview and it looks so good.

I can’t decide if it’s more important for me to catch up on the last two months of Bleach, or to start FINALLY watching Avatar. Votes?
Poll #1072554 Bleach or Avatar
Open to: All, results viewable to: All

Should I catch up on Bleach manga or watch Avatar?

View Answers

Um, AVATAR, duh. How have you not watched it yet???
8 (36.4%)

Read Bleach! We miss you in the fandom.
5 (22.7%)

Both, of course!
8 (36.4%)

Meh, I don't care.
1 (4.5%)

 
 
Current Mood: nerdy
Current Music: "Bodysnatchers," Radiohead
 
 
Joy
21 September 2007 @ 10:32 pm
My ~ Comical ~ Romance  
So yesterday, I met this man:

I met him at Newbury Comics on Newbury Street.

I need to start friending some more MCR people if I'm going to keep being such a teeny fangirl.  *sigh*  It's still a manga-journal (I promise).  XD
 
 
Current Mood: geeky
 
 
Joy
07 September 2007 @ 02:59 pm
I HAS A GUITAR.  
Loooook at my baby!!

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

There's mother-of-pearl all around the soundhole. Is purty.

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

I got a case for it , which is hugely heavy.  I felt so cool getting on the subway with my guitar! XD  I need to think of a name for it. 

Also, the wasps can no longer get in my room!  *dances*

While I'm feeling musical, here's and iTunes meme stolen from [info]_cherrywolf_.
 
 
Current Mood: happy
Current Music: Jets to Brazil, "All Things Good and Nice"
 
 
Joy
27 August 2007 @ 01:59 pm
He can stand under my umbrella.  
My girlfriend, on Gerard Way of MCR:

(In the Helena video): "He looks like a woman.  A beautiful, dead woman...He has my haircut."

And later:

"I have kind of a lesbian crush on him."

For the Naruto fans:

"He's not a real person.  He looks like an anime character.  He looks like Itachi."
(Me:) "No he doesn't."
"Okay,more like Sasuke with wet hair."

And finally:

"Yeah, I'd do him. About the only way you could get me near a dick is if you and I had a threesome with Gerard....We'd both buttfuck him."


And speaking of G. Dub, I was way too amused by this little clip from last night's Projekt Revolution tour:





Rihanna, girl, you just got pwned. I kind of wonder what the other guys in the band thought when G pitched this idea.

Gerard: So uh...how about between songs I bust out some Rihanna?
Ray: *blink*
Bob: *blink*
Frankie: I'm down.  I'm feelin' it.  I'll hit a few notes to back you up.
Mikey: I'm so glad I'm on hiatus right now and don't have to be responsible for my crazy brother's actions.
 
 
Current Mood: cheerful
Current Music: Umbrella lol
 
 
Joy
09 August 2007 @ 09:31 pm
Ramble ramble ramble  
Wisdom teeth update:  I felt so much better today.  Sooo much better.  The swelling has even gone down a little, and I was able to eat a normal meal with my family.  Woot.  But I'M STILL UGLY.  D:

Jenny is moving into her apartment in SF today, and I miss her.  She's coming back to LA Saturday though, and we'll have the rest of the summer.  But school is coming up soon.  I started thinking today about what I'm going to need for my room.  It's exciting from a distance. :)  I also got a call from one of my best high school friends with whom I don't keep in close touch anymore.  It was really nice to hear from her; she's the kind of person where it doesn't matter if you haven't spoken in a year, it doesn't change your friendship or create any barriers.  She just got kicked out of her house in Montana by a psychotic roommate and her even more psychotic boyfriend.  : /  I could do without that.

Got Tori Amos tickets for October!  They were expensive and our seats aren't even that great, so I felt broke.  I thereby decided to have a MASSIVE garage sale and sell all my old crap that is filling up my house.  I got my mom on board too, and we spent the whole day digging up old Beanie Babies and Barbies.  It was nostalgic like woah.

I got turned on to this AMAZING band, LostAlone.  I downloaded their debut album and I was instantly in love.  They're British, and apparently they're getting rather big in Germany, but are almost unknown in the U.S.   Check out the samples on their MySpace .  Actually my favorite song "The Gospel," is just a demo and not on the album.  Apparently they released a single of it under their previous name, and I haven't gotten my hands on it yet, but it's on their MySpace (and on mine.)  God the album is so good.  It's what the new Smashing Pumpkins comeback album should have been.

Who among you are on MySpace, anyway?  I just started actually using it for non-music stuff,  and I'm in the mood for stalking. XD

I need to catch up on the Bleach manga.  I haven't watched any of the new filler episodes and I don't plan to, but that's no excuse to let myself fall out ofthe fandom when I have an epic ByaRen fic to finish.  My goal is to write Part 7 of "Fresh Ink" by next Friday and the 8th and final installment by the end of the summer.  Then maybe I'll pull a Rowling and add a cheesy epilogue.  XD

Also coming soon:  NaruSasu tickle porn.  Get excited.  Actually, I've got a bunch of half-done NaruSasuNaru stuff lying around.  When Jen comes back maybe I'll get re-inspired.  ;)
 
 
Current Mood: enthralled
Current Music: LostAlone: "Standin On the Ruin of a Beautiful Empire"
 
 
Joy
18 June 2007 @ 02:55 pm
Gah! The memes! Get them off me!  
There are so many memes attacking me at once!  Wheee!  Do enjoy.


1. SONG MEME (from [info]heythatsmybike  and everyone)

List seven songs you are into right now, no matter what the genre, whether they have words, or even if they're not any good, but they must be songs you're really enjoying now. Post these instructions in your LiveJournal along with your seven songs. Then tag seven other people to see what they're listening to.

1. "Picture of Success" - Rilo Kiley. I listened to this song a lot right around graduation and I'm still into it. The lyrics meant a lot to me because to me, they were about being unsure what you wanted to do, where you wanted to be. It even has California in it. It definitely goes on my list of personal theme songs, it there's a meme like that anywhere.

2. "Australia" - The Shins. This song makes me really happy. I love how bright and shiny it sounds. This band has a real talent for melody. The entire album, with the wonderfully awkward title "Wincing the Night Away," is just fantastic.

3. "Blues Run the Game" - Simon and Garfunkel. I'm learning how to play acoustic guitar right now, and I play this a lot. The lyrics are sad, but somehow I find it to be kind of a fun song to play and sing anyway.

4. "Roseability" - Idlewild. This song is made of nonsense. But it's so. Damn. CATCHY!! It will never get out of my head.

5. "It's Not A Fashion Statement, It's A Deathwish" - My Chemical Romance. I will not stop shamelessly supporting this band. This song is really motivational for me, and on several recent occasions listening to it has stopped me from doing stupid things. It's so triumphant at the end: "This hole you put me in wasn't deep enough and I'm coming out right now" ..."I lost my fear of falling"... it's kind of a we-shall-overcome song.

6. "As God And Everest" - Pop Unknown. I'm a sucker for songs that go from quiet to loud, especially those that make me feel like I'm soaring. I'm pretty sure this song is a metaphor saying that climbing Mount Everest is like finding God...it's possible to attain them, but few do, and most of the people who seek to do so are insane? I don't know how I feel about that, but I know I love the way this song sounds and feels. ^_^

7. "Classic Cars" - Bright Eyes. This is one of the more country-ish songs off the new "Cassadaga" album, and I'm not a big country fan, but I adore this. The harmonies make me really happy. Conor Oberst writes the best lyrics. Once again, sad story, but charming -- he paints her front door before he leaves her. So cute!

I tag anyone who hasn't done this yet. :)



2. FANDOM MEME (from everyone)







3. FRIEND MEME (from [info]yuki_no_hime )

Tags: ,
 
 
Current Mood: okay
 
 
Joy
09 May 2007 @ 11:24 pm
My Chemical Showmance!  
So my concert was NOT canceled! Well, half of it was -- Muse didn't end up opening, and we still don't really know why. We were really upset when we first found out, but once My Chemical Romance came on, all was forgiven.  They were AMAZING live, and totally worth it. (I'm convinced that everyone who hates on MCR hasn't listened to them properly, and therefore just doesn't get it. Despite first impressions, this band is not your typical "emo" band. In fact, their latest record is really a mid '70s rock opera, more Queen than Hawthorne Heights. That takes some balls. And it is both life-affirming and incredibly fun. If you like dark fun.)

But I also love Muse, and someone was out to make sure I didn't get to see them last night. Planning for a spur-of the moment concert in the middle of finals week was not easy, and there were several times when I wasn't sure we'd get to go at all. Top it all off with the horrible suspense of food poisoning incident, and the fates seemed against us. So when the three of us hopped in the PT Cruiser (a good-for-nothing car if ever there was), proceeded to miss our exit on the Mass Pike of Doom, got ripped off on parking ,and stuffed down some takeout deep dish with crust like quiche (disconcerting), we arrived, thinking we had defeated all obstacles! And there was a little sign on the door: "Muse will not be performing tonight. Circa Survive will open instead."  We were crushed, furious, then saddened, and finally resigned. Apparently I would've known last night if I'd friended them on MySpace, which I never use. Luckily we had a rather long line to wait in while the disappointment stopped stinging. We were still really excited to see MCR, but Muse was half the reason we were there. I wouldn't have gone so far out of my way, at such a bad time of the year, to see either of the bands on their own, as much as I love them.

But I'm glad I did. Because MCR was 100% worth it.
Full-length concert review if you actually care. )

It was an awesome show, one of the best I've seen.  I knew I loved MCR, but I didn't expect them to be quite this great live. Sometimes punkish songs can get muddied in mediocre venues, and something like The Black Parade, with its generous portions of pomp and circumstance, seemed like a polished studio creation. But in fact, the night revealed, this is what the album was made for. The theatrics and effects were not there to mask sloppy musicianship in the least: these guys are drama queens, but they can play. And darling Gerard, looking not the least bit menacing in his ghoulish getup, was a rock star in the fullest sense of the word. The world needs more of those.

Also, I'm two days and 15 pages away from summer.  ^_^  Time to catch up on FANFIC!!
 
 
Current Mood: thankful
 
 
Joy
28 April 2007 @ 02:08 am
So long and goodnight...  
*cough*

I now have tickets to see Muse open for My Chemical Romance in Worcester, Mass on May 8.

3-2-1 make some noise!!  :D

I'm actually even more excited for Muse than MCR, though I love both of them shamelessly.  Muse takes me to a higher realm.  MCR will be awesome for the theatrics, though.  Wheeeeee!  My term paper is due the 9th.  Guess I'll have to get it in early?  Heeheehee.

Got a decent deal too.  Score and DOUBLE score!  *dances*

EDIT:  And ONE OF MY MOST FAVORITEST FRIENDS can come with me!!!!  Amaaaaaaaazing.
 
 
Current Mood: awake (and unafraid)
 
 
 
 

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