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Aztec Theatre

Wings of thrash soar throughout Aztec with Overkill & Exhorder

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Wings of thrash soar throughout Aztec with Overkill & Exhorder

Flagbearers of East Coast thrash metal that they are, Overkill has set itself apart for 35 years from virtually every band of any metal genre in one respect: hiatuses. More appropriately, lack thereof.  

While many artists who’ve been servicing metalheads over that span have taken multi-year breaks consisting of at least five years between albums, Overkill has set the unthinkable standard of releasing records every 1-3 years. In doing so, the brethren from New Jersey have managed to maintain original members in vocalist Bobby “Blitz” Ellsworth and bassist D.D. Verni, helping to explain recent album titles such as The Grinding Wheel and Ironbound (which Blitz spoke of exclusively with ATM aboard the 70000 Tons of Metal cruises in 2017 and 2012) as a testament to their fortitude and longevity. 

As if releasing 19 original studio albums (plus a covers effort and a few live offerings) between 1985-2019 isn’t enough, Overkill has done so while resisting temptation of dropping a greatest-hits record. Then again, maybe that’s because Overkill defines the true measure of the underground scene even in their 50s and 60s given that arguably their biggest “hit” is a profanity-laced cover by The Subhumans (not to be confused with The Subhumans coming to the Rock Box on April 18) or that their second biggest – “Hello From the Gutter” – gained notoriety only because Beavis & Butt-head made fun of it (heh heh, heh heh!).

Overkill, like many artists, spent the majority of its career without the benefit of radio or MTV mainstream airplay. But they’ve survived and persevered thanks to the undying dedication of Ellsworth and Verni plus longtime veteran lead guitarist Dave Linsk and rhythm guitarist Derek “Skull” Tailer. Add former Shadows Fall drummer Jason Bittner to the mix, and you have the unified team that brought its act, along with New Orleans’ Exhorder and Hydraform, to the Aztec Theatre last Wednesday night in support of 19th album The Wings of War. 

As evidenced by ATM’s footage below, plus Facebook Live clips of “Bring Me the Night,” new track “Distortion” and “Necroshine” here, Overkill was on fire once again. Playing, almost appropriately, to a lower-bowl filled/balcony-closed Aztec of approximately 600 fans (per a venue staffer), Overkill represented 10 of those 19 albums with thrash-pounding fury for those lucky enough to witness them, which included the band’s longtime drum tech Eddy Garcia of El Paso’s Pissing Razors. 

To their credit, Overkill switched things up a bit from recent tours in which their habit was to open with the first song off their newest album before diving head first into “Rotten to the Core” off 1985 debut Feel the Fire. This time, after upholding the first part of that tradition with punishing new opener “Last Man Standing,” Ellsworth and Co. blitzed into “Electric Rattlesnake” off 2012’s The Electric Age, saving “Rotten to the Core” for one of the encores (watch below). Likewise, “Elimination”, normally relegated toward the end, was the fourth song of the night before vastly underrated “Bring Me the Night” unleashed Overkill’s power surge. 

But speaking of one of Overkill’s best songs, off one of the genre’s most classic albums in 1987’s Taking Over, the group inexplicably left all tunes from that record off the menu. It would’ve been a blast to hear “Powersurge” or “Electro-Violence,” and at the very least “Wrecking Crew,” which has served as Overkill’s mantra for so long, it continued to brand one of the T-shirts at the merch booth (see 43-photo slideshow below). It also would’ve been great to hear something from 1988 follow-up Under the Influence besides “Hello From the Gutter” such as “Shred,” “Never Say Never” or “Drunken Wisdom.”

Bittner’s prowess on the drums rarely let up both with his arms and feet that pounded the double-bass unit. Somewhat ironically, one of his other former Shadows Fall mates – guitarist Jon Donais – has plied his trade for several years in the other most well-known East Coast thrash outfit — Anthrax. 

Exhorder, meanwhile, delivered the goods as the middle band on the bill. Hailing from New Orleans, vocalist Kyle Thomas was joined by former Superjoint Ritual and Phil Anselmo solo-band guitarist Marzi Montazeri plus bassist Jason VieBrooks and drummer Sasha Horn. Watch ATM’s Facebook Live footage of “Slaughter in The Vatican” and “Cadence of the Dirge” below, which was dedicated in part to drummer Reed Mullin of Corrosion Of Conformity, who died Jan. 27.

The pedigree of Exhorder’s members is just as credible and fierce as their music, serving notice they’re a force to be reckoned with. Thomas and Montazeri, for starters, comprise half of the Houston-based outfit Heavy As Texas, while Horn was part of Forbidden’s final lineup that parted ways in 2012. Not to be outdone, Montazeri was in Superjoint with Anselmo as well as Phil Anselmo & The Illegals, and his own solo record featured the vocals of Tim “Ripper” Owens, all of which Montazeri discussed in 2017 with yours truly (listen here).

The debate often rages: if there was a Big 5, which band would join Metallica, Slayer, Megadeth and Anthrax — Overkill, Exodus, Testament or Death Angel? Such a conversation is virtually pointless, other than to have fun arguing with your friends, given that each of those bands is deserving and there isn’t a Big 5, period. And there’s no denying they each perform gigs as if their lives depend on it. Because their way of making a living actually does. Three of those so-called secondary thrash bands hail from the West Coast. The mighty Overkill represents the Garden State. And for one night in the Alamo City, that became the Lone Star State because Blitz said so (watch below). And he’s been doing so for 35 years.

That’s a big (5) enough cause to rally around.

SETLIST: Last Man Standing, Electric Rattlesnake, Hello From the Gutter, Elimination, Bring Me the Night, Distortion, Necroshine, Under One, Bastard Nation, Mean Green Killing Machine, Feel the Fire, Ironbound. Encores: Coma, Rotten to the Core, Fuck You, Welcome to the Garden State/Fuck You ending

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Youth of yester decades goes wild with original Skid Row frontman

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Youth of yester decades goes wild with original Skid Row frontman

The majority of approximately 400 fans comprising the lower levels of the Aztec Theatre last Wednesday night were either in the midst of, or fresh out of, their high school years in 1989. As for what Sebastian Bach was doing back then?

The original voice of Skid Row unleashed a breakthrough self-titled debut album with his band discovered and taken out on the road by Bon Jovi. One of those first shows, a gig at the Rosemont Horizon in suburban Chicago, yielded a rebellious Bach telling the crowd “critics claim my mouth is corrupting the youth of America.”

Now a svelte 51 years old, Bach demonstrated he hasn’t changed much while celebrating the entirety of that album with his solo band, which has featured San Antonio’s Bobby Jarzombek on drums ever since Bach’s first solo album Angel Down dropped in 2007 (see 36-photo slideshow below):

  • Bach referred to fans who got in a fight as “assholes” and made sure security showed them the door (though he missed a gold opportunity to perform “Get the Fuck Out”)

  • He repeatedly engaged the portion of the crowd that wasn’t taking “Youth Gone Wild” too literally

  • He coughed Nikki Sixx’s name while going on a brief rant about musicians who forget that “Rock N’ Roll is supposed to be fun,” unaware perhaps that moments later, a photo from his yesteryears showed Bach and the Motley Crue bassist side by side

  • He reminded fans that he played Jesus Christ Superstar at the Majestic Theatre as part of his stint on Broadway

  • He brought out a turntable after accepting an album cover from a fan of the debut record

  • He found time to wax poetic on the theme song to “WKRP in Cincinnati,” again appealing to the crowd’s adolescent period

  • He demonstrated his humor while turning the hometown spotlight over to Jarzombek, telling the crowd the San Antonian is the drummer for Judas Priest’s “Metal God, which means he’s the drummer for the greatest singer of all time . . . and Rob Halford”

  • More importantly, Bach showed he’s still got it as a vocalist. And he didn’t shy away from his pride, telling the audience that his vocal range was “not a problem”

So Wednesday’s retrospective concert, unlike most of that variety, was not meant to be a stroll down Memory Lane as much as it was a celebration of fun, hard-hitting songs that started it all for Bach. And though he now has spent much longer as a solo artist than making three albums with Skid Row, Bach gave the filled lower level and the ghosts of the historic venue’s closed-off balcony what they came to hear with “Big Guns,” “Piece of Me,” and even the song Bach often put down during the group’s heyday, “Can’t Stand the Heartache” — a tune Jarzombek needed to familiarize himself with from scratch at the tour’s start due to it not being one of Skid Row’s major hits.

But the hits kept coming with “I Remember You” (ATM Facebook Live footage here), “Midnight/Tornado” and bonus tracks from the heavier sophomore effort with “Slave to the Grind,” Psycho Love” and “In a Darkened Room.”

While Jarzombek was a stick-twirling dervish frequently bashing the cymbals behind his head, Brent Woods handled all the guitar duties. Kevin Chown, meanwhile, was recruited on bass for the tour while regular bassist Rob De Luca continues to tour with UFO, which played the same stage nine days earlier. Chown used to back former Nightwish vocalist Tarja Turunen.

Calgary, Alberta, natives Kobra And The Lotus had the distinct honor of being the only support act on the bill. Led by founder and lone remaining original member in singer Kobra Paige, who was barely an infant when Skid Row hit the scene, the group’s hard rock style on “Burn,” “Velvet Roses” and “Liar” kicked into gear on finale “Get the Fuck Out Of Here” (not to be confused with Skid Row’s aforementioned “anthem”).

Unlike many ‘80s bands whose second albums didn’t stray too far from the sound of their successful debuts, Skid Row turned it up several notches on the lengthier Slave to the Grind which featured Wednesday’s closer “Monkey Business,” preceded by Jarzombek introducing “Sebastian fucking Bach!” (watch here).

So if Bach and Jarzombek return to play that masterpiece all the way through in two years, the question won’t be whether Park Avenue will still lead to Skid Row. It’ll be, will Bach be just as intensely entertaining then as he was in 1989 — and 2019? Don’t bet against it.

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Amon Amarth, Arch Enemy spearhead Swedish invasion of Aztec

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Amon Amarth, Arch Enemy spearhead Swedish invasion of Aztec

Of all the sub-genres that seem to grow by the day, the one that seems the most fictitious and improbable of all would arguably be Viking metal. Because after all, what exactly is Viking metal?

Songs strictly about vikings? Imagery on stage of vikings? Sure, that might all accompany a mostly viking-themed performance. But what does Viking metal sound like? In that sense, a more apropos label, if those even matter in heavy metal, might be Swedish metal. At least for one particular tour that made its mark last Sunday night at the Aztec Theatre.

Playing drums aboard oversized viking horns, drinking alcohol (presumably) out of viking horns, performing at times amidst two sword-dueling vikings and backed by a creature with green eyes that, you guessed it, was viking-like in stature, Amon Amarth brought its Berserker tour and three bands from its native homeland as part of a Swedish invasion including Arch Enemy, At The Gates and Grand Magus (132-photo slideshow with setlists & videos below).

Led as always by vocalist Johan Hegg, Amon Amarth had no problems ensuring its Texas faithful indeed went berserk. They mixed three new tracks, including “Fafner’s Gold” and “Crack the Sky” (ATM Facebook Live footage here) with the anthemic “Shield Wall” and a slew of old favorites such as “Deceiver of the Gods,” and finale “Twilight of the Thunder God” in which the album cover’s dragon came to life (ATM Facebook Live footage here).

Headliners in their own right more often than not, Arch Enemy intensely shook the Aztec to its core behind the growling vocals of Alissa White-Gluz, band leaders in guitarist MIchael Amott and bassist Sharlee D’Angelo, Seattle native and former Nevermore and Sanctuary guitarist Jeff Loomis and drummer Daniel Erlandsson. Unfortunately, Arch Enemy was limited to approximately 45 minutes but made the most of it on “My Apocalypse,” “First Day in Hell” (ATM Facebook Live footage here) and “As the Pages Burn” and “Nemesis” (videos below).

Arch Enemy, whose members discussed with a small handful of reporters including ATM the world premiere of their LIve at Wacken DVD “As the Stages Burn” aboard the 70000 Tons of Metal cruise in 2017 (coverage here and here), even showcased their generosity in multiple ways. Not only did White-Gluz find time to literally reach out to a young female fan in the front row while in the midst of her searing vocals, but Erlandsson allowed At The Gates to utilize his drum kit for their set, which included “Cold” (ATM Facebook Live clip here).

The international flair and flavor of the four Swedish acts proved to be more than an entertaining night of hearing non-English, non-Espanol accents speak to an Aztec Theatre crowd for a rare occasion. It even resulted in more than a glimpse into viking lore. More importantly, it yielded an evening of metal that was brutal in both heaviness and bang for the buck. By viking, Swedish or any other moniker you choose to label it.

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UFO, Last In Line exhibit how rock should thrive & revive

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UFO, Last In Line exhibit how rock should thrive & revive

If this truly is the way Phil Mogg plans on going out as the original frontman of UFO celebrating five decades, he did so Thursday night at the Aztec Theatre with a bang. In various ways.

His style. His effervescent English humor that makes him arguably the funniest frontman in hard rock and metal. And of course that smooth, classic voice. Mogg, 71, and his original cohort, drummer Andy Parker, brought their timeless band to downtown San Antonio for what’s supposed to be one last time with the soon-to-be-retiring Mogg, if not for the final visit altogether. And UFO may have saved its best Alamo City performance for last (36-photo slideshow with setlist & videos below).

Along with Last In Line, comprised of half of the original members of Dio in guitarist Vivian Campbell and drummer Vinny Appice, the old-school vibes and energetic presentation flowed freely inside an appreciative Aztec. Considering UFO’s tour was in peril six months ago, it was definitely one for the memory banks.

Mogg, Parker and longtime guitarist Vinnie Moore and bassist Rob De Luca endured the death of veteran rhythm guitarist/keyboardist Paul Raymond to a heart attack in April. He was 73. His passing came just after the band had completed the first leg of its tour in the UK. They decided to carry on in the form of Neil Carter, a much more lively version of the reserved Raymond, with Carter — who played on four UFO albums from 1981-83 — patrolling his side of the stage while often encouraging interaction from the crowd.

Shockingly, nary a mention of, or tribute to Raymond, came. Perhaps UFO wanted to keep things lighthearted and not be Debbie Downers, and maybe band members felt it was addressed enough on their website where Parker wrote in April in part:

“I am still trying to come to terms with the fact that I will never again share a stage with him. I have known Paul for a good many years and it would be fair to say that over that time we have had our differences. But even if we didn’t see eye to eye, we still remained good friends. He was always one to make his opinions known and could be very stubborn at times, but that was only because he was so passionate about his craft. Even in recent years, while suffering from the ailments that come to us all with age, he never let them compromise his performance. . . . Rest in peace my friend, you have earned it.”

By contrast, Last In Line, of course, exists due to Campbell and Appice honoring the legacy of, and the music they made with, the late Ronnie James Dio. Campbell, also still in Def Leppard for many years, has caught a lot of flak since forming Last In Line in 2012 and been referred to as a “money grabber” given that Dio fired him in 1986. But along with bassist Jimmy Bain, Campbell and Appice carried on to commemorate the first three albums they made with Dio — 1983’s Holy Diver, 1984’s The Last in Line and 1985’s Sacred Heart. After Bain died aboard one of Def Leppard’s cruise excursions, Campbell and Appice recruited Phil Soussan, who made his mark on Ozzy Osbourne’s 1986 commercially successful The Ultimate Sin.

Armed with vocalist Andrew Freeman, the group shined at the Aztec playing a mix of Dio classics such as “Holy Diver,” “The Last in Line” and “Rainbow in the Dark” with Last In Line tunes “Devil in Me” and Soussan’s tribute to Bain with “Starmaker” (ATM footage below) from Heavy Crown and II. Freeman brings his own style and sound to Last In Line as the band looks to move into the future with a modern rock sound while never forgetting its past. Watch ATM Facebook Live footage of closer “We Rock.”

UFO also mixed in the tunes they’re known for with a dab here and there from their more recent albums such as “Run Boy Run” and “Burn Your House Down.” They never show a trace of tiring from playing mainstays such as “Only You Can Rock Me” (footage below), “Lights Out,” “Love to Love” and “Too Hot to Handle.”

Mogg’s uncanny ability to entertain between songs complements the music. In 2011 at the South Texas Rock Fest at Sunken Garden Theatre, he introduced “Rock Bottom” by saying UFO enjoyed the other bands on the bill “as I’m going to enjoy my ‘Hustler’ magazine later” (ATM footage here).

On Thursday, with Moore poised to continue the group’s long-standing tradition of an extended version of that song, Mogg presented this disclaimer: “If anyone needs to pee, Vinnie’s going to be doing a solo in a while. The solo’s so long, you could take a holiday or have a baby, meet the parents, do Christmas. It’s a long solo.” At least Moore can take solace in the fact some San Antonians also appreciated his guitar work 13 months earlier when he headlined an instrumental set at the Rock Box with former Osbourne guitarist Gus G. (coverage here). And even after the trifecta of “Rock Bottom,” “Fighting Man” and “Doctor Doctor,” UFO added another tradition to end the night that surprisingly wasn’t on the printed setlist: “Shoot Shoot” (watch below).

Although UFO hasn’t 100 percent committed to adding its name to the list of bands that have made their final visits within the past four years — Motley Crue, Slayer, KISS — Thursday did appear to be the swan song for Mogg in San Antonio even if there was no formal mention of “farewell” or “goodbye.” So, that door may remain slightly ajar, even if it would seem unfathomable to watch UFO on stage without the only vocalist it has had since 1969. Either way, the night’s performance of both bands aptly described their genre.

Classic, hard and rockin’.

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Zakk Wylde showcases wizardry of bloody Sabbath riffs

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Zakk Wylde showcases wizardry of bloody Sabbath riffs

From the precocious 19-year-old introduced to the world on a “Headbanger’s Ball” episode in 1988 as Ozzy Osbourne’s new guitarist, to a long-bearded, kilt-wearing, chest-pounding, six-string slinging maniac, Zakk Wylde has grown before our very eyes.

Wylde has played with The Ozzman Cometh for 20-plus years while fronting his own Black Label Society. Last Wednesday, however, he brought another faction to the Aztec Theatre — his tribute to Osbourne’s Black Sabbath days in the form of trio Zakk Sabbath.

Introduced by “That Metal Show” co-host Don Jamieson after part of the comedian’s opening monologue included the fact that Wylde once went 77 consecutive days without showering, the beast behind the axe took to the stage with his BLS bassist John “J.D.” DeServio and energetic drummer Joey C. In addition to the 2-hour plus performance of Sabbath tracks from the first four Osbourne-sung albums, Wylde gave fans a treat by including several rarities on the setlist while omitting entirely, or merely including a portion of riffs, of the likes of “Sabbath Bloody Sabbath,” “Black Sabbath,” “The Wizard,” “Symptom of the Universe” and “Sweet Leaf” — the latter revealed by Jamieson as his favorite Sabbath tune.

Opening with “Supernaut” (setlist in 30-photo slideshow below), Wylde often turned the Sabbath songs into his signature long but entertaining guitar jams and solos. Unlike with BLS, though, the more informal occasion of paying tribute to another band yielded the green kilt-wearing Wylde the freedom to play among the fans. And he liked it so much, he did it twice.

Wylde first went into the back of the general admission area during “Into the Void” and shredded away while fans encircled him while filming every note with their phones. As he walked back to the stage, Wylde played his axe behind his head the entire way. No professional media footage was allowed of the concert. But after rare track “Wicked World” and crowd favorite “Fairies Wear Boots” (ATM Facebook Live footage here), Wylde, who was often pegged as the favorite to replace the late “Dimebag” Darrell Abbott if Pantera had ever reunited, broke into a riff of “I’m Broken.” It was his only deviation from Sabbath material all night in a virtually non-stop exhibition of pure guitar madness.

DeServio, who was celebrating his birthday, became the recipient of a cake from Jamieson and crew members as he blew out the candles on stage. DeServio and Joey C., a wildman in his own right on the drums, were particularly impressive during finale “War Pigs.” That’s when Wylde left the stage again, this time using a security escort to visit the upper level of the Aztec, delighting fans up there. Wylde stood in the middle of the deck and riffed to his heart’s content before walking along the balcony railing and visiting those fans, security staff in hot pursuit. As Wylde eventually made his way out of the upper level, yours truly was the first to greet him in the hallway and received a sweaty fist-bump. Security continued to earn their keep as Wylde once again visited the center of the general-admission universe.

All told, the 15 to 20-minute solo had everyone fixated on Wylde to the point that some in attendance may not have realized DeServio and Joey C. never stopped playing throughout.

And with that, the Aztec Theatre was officially added to Zakk Sabbath’s San Antonio metal brotherhood chapter. And it was time for everyone to head home and hit the showers. Optional, however, for the man of the hour.

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Oft-maligned frontman leads charge as Muddfest brings back metal of 2000s

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Oft-maligned frontman leads charge as Muddfest brings back metal of 2000s

Perhaps more than any other act within the metal scene, it can be said that a Puddle Of Mudd concert can be intriguing as much for what could happen as for what actually does. That’s what comes with the track record of enigmatic singer, guitarist and band founder Wes Scantlin.

A frontman who has had more than his share of ups and downs, including bouts with the law and canceled shows, Scantlin has persevered through personal hard times and several lineup changes. He’s vowed that he has plenty more Rock N’ Roll to unleash, and the latest example will be the Friday the 13th release this month of Welcome to Galvania. But first, Puddle Of Mudd hosted its Muddfest last Tuesday night at the Aztec Theatre with Trapt, Saliva, Rehab and Tantric (see 45-photo slideshow below).

All eyes and ears were on Scantlin and his reputation for potentially being a ticking time bomb. For the most part, he passed with flying colors. Early on, Scantlin’s conversation with the venue that was more than two-thirds full on all levels seemed odd. At one point, he said San Antonio reminded him of Amsterdam and went on a brief diatribe while sticking out his blue tongue about how much he liked the latter city. That caused his bassist to give a look of bewilderment as he kept walking further back from his own mic until Scantlin was ready to begin the next song.

Other than that, Scantlin showed moments of gratitude and reflection. Oddly, during opening track and Puddle Of Mudd’s biggest hit “Control,” the band broke into Black Sabbath’s “War Pigs” just prior to “Control’s” signature “I love the way you smack my ass” part. The choice and timing — barely two minutes into the show — of Scantlin already deviating from his own song was cause to think, “Oh, boy, here he goes again.” But alas, it merely served as a detour from the rest of “Control’s” rock and angst that helped make it a No. 1 tune on MTV and the charts in 2001. Ironically, as Puddle Of Mudd’s set began with a trace of Black Sabbath, Zakk Wydle’s Zakk Sabbath ended their electric performance with a 15-plus-minute version of the same Sabbath track the following night on the same stage.

Scantlin and his bandmates broke out other signature hits such as “She Fuckin’ Hates Me,” “Stoned” and “Livin’ On Borrowed Time” (ATM Facebook Live footage of both here) and the trio of “Bring Me Down,” “Psycho” and “Spaceship” (watch all below; setlist in slideshow).

Scantlin has had a love/hate relationship with San Antonio over the years. He played a solid gig during the 2010 Fiesta Oyster Bake but canceled a headlining 2013 Siesta Fest performance the night before when his rebellious nature got the best of him in another city. Puddle Of Mudd was supposed to take part in this year’s Oyster Bake as well, but the band could not get out of snowy Iowa in time and never made it to San Antonio. That one was out of Scantlin’s “control.”

But they made it up to the Alamo City at Muddfest. Through it all, Scantlin endured needless heckling from rotten apples in the crowd, one of which along the barrier yelled “You’re a dick” while another in the middle of the Aztec called him a drunk. Whether Scantlin chose to ignore them or heard them at all is something only he knows for certain. But for the most part, Scantlin delivered the goods on additional tracks such as new single “Uh-Oh” (which was on the setlist third-to-last but was performed second overall after “Control), “Away From Me” and smash hit finale “Blurry.”

The bill as a whole consisted largely of bands that had their heyday in the 1990s and early 2000s, perhaps best exemplified by Trapt, Saliva and Tantric. Trapt vocalist Chris Taylor Brown attempted to make a dramatic entrance from an opening underground, but it didn’t have the desired effect on the performance or crowd reaction, and he merely launched into “Still Frame” just as he could’ve done walking onto the stage.

Although those bands mostly had one or two hits that made them famous, they deserve credit for continuing to put out new music. However, they do mostly live off their past live. Although Trapt has been around for 20-plus years, they still felt the need to do a cover in Audioslave’s “Like a Stone.”

Saliva, however, was arguably the best band on the program and without a doubt the most energetic. Vocalist Bobby Amaru was fired up throughout the set and took it upon himself to bring a young child on stage for their biggest hit “Click Click Boom.” The same child, incidentally, was also brought on stage earlier this year by Hatebreed at Vibes Event Center. Saliva could very well have headlined a five-band mini-fest, yet still only played six tracks this night, including “Always” and traditional opener “Ladies & Gentlemen.” Afterwards, drummer Paul Crosby was out and about meeting with city insiders about potentially returning later this year or next year at a new venue to be determined.

The funky rap/metal of Rehab preceded Savlia, while Tantric and lone remaining original member Hugo Ferreira kicked things off at 6:25 p.m. The bill was similar to the Make America Rock Again tour of 2016 at the Rock Box that included Trapt, Tantric, Alien Ant Farm, Saliva and Crazy Town.

But Muddfest was all about Scantlin. With cell phones at the ready among an audience set to pounce and film any erratic action, Scantlin more than got the last laugh. He even made the crowd feel as if it was coming along for the ride in his own special spaceship.

“A lot of these songs that we’re playing for you guys were (ones that) big record executives (thought) they were fucking shitty,” Scantlin says in ATM’s clip below. “Until they went No. 1 a bunch of times. Thanks to you guys.”

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Static-X & friends' homage behind masked Xer0 rates No. 1 with fans

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Static-X & friends' homage behind masked Xer0 rates No. 1 with fans

The decision for bands to carry on, hang it up or split into various factions after their singer has passed on to the afterlife is a fragile one unique to each artist. Whatever the verdict, it’s often met with scorn, hesitation and critics volunteering their opinions to the nth degree.

There are the bands whose frontmen were so iconic that carrying on would have been sacrilegious. Think Nirvana and Motorhead. There are those who took several years to mourn, decide and eventually return as respectfully as possible such as Alice In Chains. Others enlisted guests vocalists to honor and memorialize their fallen leader such as Dio Disciples singers Tim “Ripper” Owens and Oni Logan, occasionally aided by Mark Boals and Toby Jepson, ensuring that the music of Ronnie James Dio lives on.

The most famous gamble of all also became the most historic, as AC/DC’s replacement of Brian Johnson for the late Bon Scott carried the band into another stratosphere of success it already enjoyed with Scott.

Then there’s the unprecedented method employed by Static-X. Honoring the legacy that ended in 2014 with the death of singer/guitarist Wayne Static, original members Tony Campos (bass), Koichi Fukuda (guitars) and Ken Jay (drums) resurrected the band this year to honor Static and celebrate 20 years of first album Wisconsin Death Trip. The catch is that not only has the touring vocalist remained unidentified, he is wearing a mask of Static’s facial likeness and patented spiked hair.

Static-X’s choice of how to proceed beyond Static has been much-maligned within the metal industry. But not on Sunday, June 23, at the Aztec Theatre. A nearly sold-out theatre jumped, pumped and rocked to the album’s complete performance plus songs from second effort Machine in welcoming the new masked vocalist/guitarist with open arms and loud crowd participation (see 107-photo slideshow and ATM video footage below). As Campos introduced the band, he labeled masked wonder Xer0 as hailing “from parts unknown.” What’s mainly a mystery, however, is whether the persistent rumors that Xer0 is Dope singer Edsel Dope are accurate.

It would make sense. Taking care to cover his likely tattooed arms with full-length sleeves, Xer0 could very well be Edsel Dope for a pair of reasons: both singers have similar tall, lanky frames. And Dope is already one of the four support acts on the bill, carefully placed in the middle of the program perhaps to allow DevilDriver’s 50-minute set after Dope and prior to Static-X ample time for Dope’s namesake to rest between double duty each night. And if those two reasons aren’t convincing enough, Edsel Dope cited multiple tours his band went on with Static-X, and how he considered Wayne Static a close friend, as Dope’s band celebrated 20 years too.

So while Xer0 and the rest of the original Static-X lineup partied like it was 1999 and 2001 to the Aztec’s content, Devildriver also hit hard as only frontman Dez Fafara can. Defending Static-X’s decision, Fafara shared that Back in Black is his favorite album front to back of all-time and that it wouldn’t have been possible if AC/DC had quit after Scott’s death. Fafara, whose band also includes one-time Static-X bassist Diego Ibarra, delivered hard-hitting tracks “I Could Care Less,” “Ruthless,” “Cry for Me Sky,” “Sail” and “Before the Hangman’s Noose” (ATM footage of the latter two below). The frontman then broke out a pair of tracks from his Coal Chamber days with “Loco” and “Fiend” (videos below).

Opening acts Wednesday 13 and Raven Black brought the theatrics to the Aztec in their own way. Wednesday 13 in particular had a variety of costume changes during a 30-minute set that featured “What the Night Brings” and closer “Keep Watching the Skies” (footage below). Watch ATM’s 2017 interview with frontman Joseph Poole and his San Antonio bandmates Roman Surman and Troy Doebbler here.

Static-X announced prior to the tour they’d have a new album this year called Project Regeneration that features the final recordings of Wayne Static. Fans can pre-order the album and get their name in the liner notes here. What’s unclear is whether Xer0 will carry on the legacy, whether he was merely a memorial touring replacement, or whether Static-X will enlist a completely new singer — masked with hair spiked from here to the gone or to be his own persona — to evil disco the group into a new era.

Either way, the band’s decision is sure to create a wave of controversy, bringing its share of critics, supporters and rockers. Which is to say Campos, Fukuda and Jay likely wouldn’t have it any other way.

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Pranks galore hit to the core as tour ends for hometown boys Nothing More

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Pranks galore hit to the core as tour ends for hometown boys Nothing More

Dinosaur costumes. Guitarists wrapped in Saran wrap. How about a mariachi band introduced for the grand finale just for kicks?

It was all in the “Truth” tour conclusion’s sold-out night of work Saturday at the Aztec Theatre as hometown grown Nothing More culminated a six-week run of fun in humorous fashion with grindcore act Of Mice & Men and young rockers Badflower and Palisades.

For a band that graduated from Sam’s Burger Joint and Sunken Garden Theater to touring Europe with Five Finger Death Punch and playing California festivals such as Aftershock and Knotfest (ATM coverage of the latter here and interview here), Nothing More demonstrated several facets to its always lively and entertaining show:

  • It hasn’t forgotten where it came from

  • While many artists ending a tour talk about how they can’t wait to get home to their families and into their beds for the first time in a long time, Nothing More played and spoke as if it didn’t want this tour to end

  • It has a sense of humor on stage to go with its deep lyrical content

  • It has no love lost for a certain local rock radio station

Nothing More also graduated to selling out the Aztec for the first time, a step up from its 2015 visit (coverage here) as vocalist Jonny Hawkins, guitarist Mark Vollelunga, bassist Daniel Oliver and Arizona native and drummer Ben Anderson dominated its set with songs from 2017 and latest effort The Stories We Tell Ourselves. With band members silhouetted behind a curtain underneath the word “truth” spelled upside down, the barefoot and shirtless Hawkins climbed the group’s 14-foot-tall scorpion tail contraption as the cloth fell to the floor and the audience roared.

New tracks including opener “Let ‘em Burn,” “Funny Little Creatures,” “Go to War” and “Do You Really Want It” (ATM Facebook Live footage here) meshed with previous album offerings “Mr. MTV” and “Christ Copyright.”

After members of Nothing More and Of Mice & Men pranked support acts Badflower and Palisades by tightening up guitarists in Saran wrap during the former’s final song “Animal” (ATM footage below) and the latter by laying on stage in baby pools, the more no-nonsense tone of Of Mice & Men took to the stage. All levels of the Aztec took the positive reaction up a notch as the heaviness intensified, as evidenced by ATM’s footage of “O.G. Loko” below.

But even Of Mice & Men was not immune to the pranking, as two guys in dinosaur outfits pranced around the stage (see 70-photo slideshow below) before their jurassic asses were shot down by water guns. The band’s guitarists even mimicked their dead bodies while shredding away.

Ironically, a more serious re-enactment of a shooting scenario dotted the theme of Nothing More’s “Truth” tour as depicted on an autographed poster at the merch booth (see slideshow). Amidst the fun and humor, Nothing More’s Hawkins spoke of two organizations with whom the band teamed in its constant lyrical call to attention to suicides, mass shootings, depression and mental health issues in general (watch ATM footage of “Jenny” and “Tunnels” below). Every ticket sold also contributed $1 to those causes.

Although Nothing More has done away with its swiveling “Bassanator,” the unique setup that was a staple of its early years and allowed Hawkins, Vollelunga and Oliver to tap on the instrument simultaneously, the group still featured those three pounding on various drums scattered on the stage. And yet that wasn’t even the best part of the show’s finale.

Prior to traditional closer “Salem,” Nothing More’s pranks came back to bite them when Palisades, Badflower and Of Mice & Men hilariously brought out a mariachi band, giving Nothing More an extra taste of being back home. Hawkins conceded that the gesture won the prank of the night before he launched into genuine appreciation for virtually everyone except local rock station 99.5-FM KISS, for which he saved some scathing commentary (ATM footage below).

From gimmicks to raising awareness of serious issues to straight ahead Rock N’ Roll to shunning a source a band thought it could count on for local support, Nothing More and its opening acts proved something else: that the ending of their “Truth” tour was a story they could tell not only themselves, but also their kids and friends, for years to come.

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Queensryche's verdict: progressing into new era with Fates Warning unconditionally human

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Queensryche's verdict: progressing into new era with Fates Warning unconditionally human

For the 3 1/2 decades Queensryche and Fates Warning have been playing in the Alamo City, one thing has remained constant perhaps more than any other: San Antonians don’t care as much about personnel changes as they do having a rockin’ good time hearing classic favorites.

And while Queensryche delivered a fair share of those songs once again while headlining the Aztec Theatre on Friday night with Fates Warning and local openers Gandhi’s Gun, it delved deeper into its six-year run with vocalist Todd La Torre than it ever had live in the city in which it played its third show as a band in 1983. On the strength of The Verdict, which dropped March 1, Queensryche provided a healthy mix of new and old tunes, no longer relying mostly on Operation: Mindcrime and Empire favorites to carry its performance. And for a rare change, San Antonio reacted favorably to a change in what its ears were hearing (setlist in 48-photo slideshow below).

Not only did Queensryche show plenty of confidence in opening with new rocker “Blood of the Levant” and including The Verdict’s “Man the Machine,” “Light Years'“ and “Propaganda Fashion,” but it played the closing tracks from its 2013 self-titled debut with La Torre in “Open Road” (ATM Facebook Live footage here) and the title track to 2015 follow-up Condition Human (ATM footage below). Unlike the 30th anniversary show Sept. 20, 2011, at the Majestic Theatre in which Queensryche opened with a then-new track from the forgettable Dedicated to Chaos, then played 15 consecutive classics before a second new track yet still had a fan yell out his objection to hearing something fresh, the nearly sold-out throng at the Aztec took in this version of Queensryche’s foray into a new time with open-minded optimism.

With bassist Eddie Jackson and guitarist Michael Wilton, who spoke with ATM for AXS during the 2015 visit (watch here), as the lone remaining original members joined by guitarist Parker Lundgren and touring drummer Casey Grillo, the Seattle rockers now fronted by a Floridian who reportedly also played drums on The Verdict delivered the goods once again. Although second tune “I Am I’ from 1994’s Promised Land came off as a bit forced to quickly include an older song, Queensryche did a respectable job using the extra time allotted as a 90-minute headliner when compared to half that time frame opening for Scorpions last Sept. 7 at Freeman Coliseum (coverage here). La Torre banged on a miniature drum kit perfectly in sync with Grillo at times. His vocals were top notch and, though he nor anyone else probably wants to hear it, showed remarkable resemblance to original singer and predecessor Geoff Tate on occasion, particularly on “Screaming in Digital” (ATM footage below). And that’s not a bad thing, though La Torre certainly carries his own style more often than not.

If you had come into the evening taking the over on an over of 1 regarding the number of Operation: Mindcrime tunes Queensryche would play as a headliner, that would’ve been a sure bet on paper. Surprise! Queensryche only offered up “Eyes of a Stranger” and is to be commended for doing so even though that album will always be regarded as the group’s best by this and many other minds. The fact that “Queen of the Reich,” “Take Hold of the Flame” and the usual Empire favorites were included were apparently enough to make the fans not mind that, for the second consecutive visit, original drummer Scott Rockenfield was missing in action, reportedly on an indefinite hiatus.

Fates Warning had no such issues. The latest homecoming show for 12-year Fates drummer Bobby Jarzombek and native vocalist son Ray Alder, who currently lives in Spain, saw the progressive metal veterans in the same direct support chair Queensryche was in six months ago. As such, Fates Warning continues to tour on 2016 release Theories of Flight, a record the two San Antonians discussed with ATM for AXS just prior to its release (watch here). With original guitarist Jim Matheos, longtime bassist Joey Vera and guitarist Mike Abdow lending their talents to usual mainstays “A Pleasant Shade of Gray” and more recent tunes “The Light and Shade of Things” and “Seven Stars,” Alder and Co. delighted an always welcoming audience for a band that helped open the gates of progressive metal to the likes of Dream Theater in the early to mid ‘80s. Watch ATM footage of 2013’s “Firefly” below.

Along with Saxon, the two bands most San Antonians would see live if they were here 365 days a year arguably would be Queensryche and Fates Warning. Their influence on the local scene, in large part to the disc jockeying days of the late Joe Anthony, is virtually immeasurable. It was good to see fans’ former reluctance of their favorite bands’ changing of the guard both musically and personnel wise turn into acceptance. Such reaction reflects well on the scene and helps ensure these artists continue to progress with newer music.

In turn, that gives them extra incentive to keep returning. Perhaps till they can’t scream in digital anymore.

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