Slightly less than three
years after our first family adventure to see Coop, he awesomely returned to
the Morristown MPAC center.
I used to say, “If I
have half as much energy as Alice Cooper when I’m his age I’ll consider it a
triumph.”
Now I’ve been reduced
to, “If I had half as much energy NOW as Alice Cooper currently does I’d consider it a triumph.”
Yes, I’m going to
overuse “awesome” again.
I made an embarrassing
error last time, possibly due to the total overload on my hearing. I thought I heard Alice announce that award winning drummer
Glen Sobel was from Morristown NJ but I think I was mistaken. (He is just as
awesome as I noted then, though.) This
time I specifically heard it was musical backbone providing rhythm guitarist
Tommy Henriksen.
Here’s hoping he stays
with Alice a long time to bring him back to a place we can see him so
easily. If anyone should do concerts in
fancy, theatrical settings, it’s the Godfather of Shock rock.
Hmmm… looking them both
up online, I don’t see anything about either being from Morristown. Maybe Alice was just messing with us.
The crowd may have been
older than typical for the genre, but the band pumped out enough energy to keep
us all on our feet and cheering the whole time.
Our mental faculties (if
not our hearing) held up equally well. With nearly fifty years of selections to
choose from, a vast majority of the crowd was able to identify each number by
the first few notes of the opening riff.
The fact that Alice has specific props and dances for some may have helped
as well. The man knows how to own the stage – and the entire theater come to
think of it. (Awesoooooome!)
However, with the amount of high definition digital media concert footage out there, the sheer number of people who insisted on ignoring the entire fantastically spooky spectacle in person to view it in a tiny hand held screen baffled me. To those of you with an uncontrollable videography addiction: In future, I’d appreciate it if you could turn your screen brightness down so it doesn’t blind the guy behind you (me) who is trying to revel in the moment as it happens.
Back to the show!
The Raise the Dead tour
we saw last time was tied to the recently released Welcome 2 My Nightmare and led into the creation of the Hollywood Vampires super group.
Without a specific new
solo album to focus on, the show became more a tour of classic songs. Over half
were from the “Alice Cooper is the name of the band” days. (56.5% for the other Spock level nerds out
there.) Some were standards, like “Eighteen,”
“No More Mr. Nice Guy,” “Under My Wheels,” and “Billion Dollar Babies.” However, the set included some lesser known
gems like “Public Animal #9,” “Long Way to Go” and “Halo of Flies.” The last one was a perfect example of how
Alice has not only always gone out of his way to bring his fans outstanding performers but also feature them prominently. “Halo” has long instrumental sections, which
the normally commanding front man donned tails and a baton to conduct his crew and aim
the focus at the musicians.
That is, except for Mr.
Sobel’s Killer (ha!) drum solo which
was allowed to be spotlighted and speak volumes for itself, as it should.
Ryan Roxie continued his
current association with the band for more amazing, cowboy hatted, lead
guitarness. Thanx to the infrequency of
my concert attendance, I missed the seven years he was away, laying additional
foundation to my Alice Cooper Head Cannon.
Someday I shall pull it all together into the “Grand Unified Theory of
Alice Cooper” explaining how there is really one constant story running through
all twenty-seven albums.
Chuck Garric remained a
bass monster. I tried to think of a
different phrase to refer to him this time, but it fits too well. The bone shaking notes appeared to emanate
from his person, not his instrument. Considering
his own band’s name is “Beasto Blanco” (with a few random umlauts in there) I
think it is fine that I don’t change my description.
“The Hurricane” NitaStrauss was the newest addition to the band as another lead guitar, because
Alice loves his fans and is awesome enough to give them two. I’m always impressed by those who take their
passion above and beyond apparent limits into a career. Here was a musician in her twenties who not
only shared the stage with an icon, but during the “Dead Drunk Friends”
graveyard reference part of the show, played a worthy tribute to Jimmy Hendrix,
egged on by screaming fans and the aforementioned icon.
Talk about living the
dream!
Her staggering solo came
logically following “Woman of Mass Distraction” to lead into “Poison.” Several of the concerts I’ve been to and own
on disc used “The Black Widow” as a mostly instrumental bridge into guitar or drum solos.
This is often after one of Alice’s frequent, yet entertaining in a dark side of
vaudeville way, demises.
Again, you don’t get
this type of entertainment at a Tony Bennett concert.
He opened the show with “Widow”
this time, and it would have been cool just to see him perform it in full. What gave it the extra touch of awesome was
the giant curtain featuring the Eyes of Alice Cooper (from the album of the same name) with spiders in the pupils
flashing colors as the Vincent Price intro narrative played, before the band
burst forth, and the man himself stood in a regal cloak as he simultaneously
serenaded and lorded over us.
In case I’ve been lax in
mentioning it, he and the show were awesome.
Speaking of the original
Welcome to My Nightmare: The creepy toy box was on stage as a prop
source. (Crutch, cane, swords, boa constrictor to give yet another interpretation to
“Is it My Body”…whatever) It also served
to connect two of the more famous live performances from that album.
When the doll from “Cold
Ethyl” (YAY!) was tossed into the box, it was able to return as a living windup
toy to perform the ballet for “Only Women Bleed.”
The “Alice Cooper” stage
persona has always been a villain by design.
An awesome villain we all enjoy encouraging to vill to the max, and one
who admits and pays for his villainy, but a villain none the less. He fully took credit for his villainously dispatching
of her back into the box by singing “Guilty.”
I think we fans have
come to expect a certain transition to get to the graveyard scene now. It’s like how the ten foot FrankenAlice will
insure “Feed My Frankenstein” stays in the set list.
A nurse (with ballet like movements that matched doll/Ethyl)
strait jacketed him for the “Ballad of Dwight Frye,” after which a bit of
instrumental from “Killer” had said nurse helping the “stage ninja skeletons” (awesome!)
get Alice beheaded in the guillotine. Following the macabre festivities, Chuck
Garric lead all of us Sick Things in attendance for an enthusiastic round of “I
Love the Dead.” All the while Nurse
Sheryl pranced about enjoying the carnage.
I’m pretty sure that was
actually his wife again. It’s incredibly
heartwarming to see two people who still share in that sweet, if somewhat blood
soaked, togetherness after all these years.
While the cemetery of
the “Hollywood Vampires” set up was the same as the last concert, the song
choices were different, as Alice put his, and his band’s, personal stamp on a
new batch of cover tunes.
This time the Keith Moon
based selection was “Pinball Wizard.” That’s a favorite of mine for both geekly gaming and hard rock/metalhead reasons. They nailed it. The “group windmills” were an excellent extra
touch. The Hendrix tribute I alluded to
before was (Let me stand next to your) “Fire” and handled with equal style,
class and rockin’ out. Finally, in what was a supremely sad and awesome moment,
they finished up with “Suffragette City” as a tribute to the recently late and
always great David Bowie.
“School’s Out” concluded
the main set. Normally, that’s the encore, since it’s their anthem.
Aside: For an intelligent
and hysterically funny explanation of the fact that - no matter how hard you
try - you only get one anthem, by the man himself, check out the extra features
on the original Welcome to My Nightmare DVD.
Once the band
introductions finished and the lights died down, the spooky Eyes of Alice Cooper were removed from
the back of the feather confetti and streamer covered stage and a demented
version of the American flag took their place.
Given the candidates
this time around, the cheers for Alice’s vote requests in “Elected” were far
louder than usual. One of the coolest parts of the finale, aside from the
overall awesomeness of the evening in general, was that Alice came out wearing
the tour shirt that my daughter picked as her first concert shirt.
She already had the Alice teddy bear from last time, and she was a little older helping her overcome the
“they’re all too scary” idea.
I did get one of the
shirts that was “too scary” designed to look like a horror comic, because the first time I
saw him live was also an election year, and I wanted more variety than a second
Alice Cooper for President shirt. Especially since I “needed” a bumper sticker
that said it –meaning my daughter scored an extra wristband as well.
Although the quality control Alice Cooper exerts over the show itself is unparalleled, he may want to look more into tightening the standards on his merchandise. I would expect "waterproof" would be a critical use requirement of a bumper sticker.
Although the quality control Alice Cooper exerts over the show itself is unparalleled, he may want to look more into tightening the standards on his merchandise. I would expect "waterproof" would be a critical use requirement of a bumper sticker.
The best part of the
whole night was being able to look back at my life around my original concert,
and compare it to now.
First of all, due to
poorly timed surgical needs (I know, no sense of priorities) my sister finally
was able to attend an Alice Cooper show with me after trying for sixteen
years.
She brought her two
daughters as well. They all joined our
family’s wondering at why everyone stands up when there are perfectly good
seats. The two of them spent most of the show standing on those perfectly good
seats, and rocking along with their mom. the older one was perfecting the art of headbanging while the younger one complained that there was “even more standing up than in
church.” Further proof that seeing Alice
Cooper is a soul enriching event.
More importantly though,
the first time I saw this master craftsman of rock theatrics live (with a
couple of the same band members) was several weeks before I started dating
someone who has been at my side at the last two performances along with our
wonderful daughter, and has happily also been at my side during the times in
between.
It’s a love story as
powerful as Alice and Sheryl…
With a little less
blood, strait jackets and beheadings…
Well- nobody’s perfect!
BONUS TRACKS!!!!
Here’s the full Set list
for those who share both my rabid Alice Cooper fandom, and anal retentive
attitude about list completion.
There were various hats
along the way as well.
Vincent
Price intro
(Flashing
spooky spider pupil eyes)
The
Black Widow
(Cloak)
Public
Animal #9
No
More Mr. Nice Guy
(Cane)
Under
My Wheels
Is
It My Body
(Boa
constrictor)
Billion
Dollar Babies
(Fencing
foil with money)
Long
Way to Go
Woman
of Mass Distraction
[Nita
guitar solo]
Poison
Halo
of Flies
(Tails
and conductor baton)
[Glen
drum solo]
Feed
My Frankenstein
(10’
FrankenAlice- WOO!)
Cold
Ethyl
(Doll)
Only
Women Bleed
(Living
“wind up” ballerina)
Guilty
Ballad
of Dwight Fry
(Strait
Jacket)
Killer
(Instrumental
to guillotine)
I
Love the Dead
(Chuck
leading us!)
Under
the Bed
(Narration
and instrumental
wheeled
into Hollywood Vampires cemetery on morgue cart)
Pinball
Wizard
(Keith
Moon- tombstone)
Fire
(Jimi
Hendrix tombstone)
Suffragette
City
(David
Bowie tombstone)
I'm
Eighteen
(Crutch)
School's
Out [mixed awesomely with “Another Brick in the Wall”]
(Band
credits, and “Tonight the part of Alice Cooper was played by…
ME! Awesome.
Balloons,
streamers, feather confetti, a katana- WOO!)
Encore:
Elected
(Uncle
Sam Hat and Jacket, "Elected" shirt etc.)
Battered
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton masked people
Alternately
smooch and beat the snot out of each other)
I FINALLY MADE IT..... AND IT WAS AWESOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the nightmare...
ReplyDeleteor in the words of Kermit (Since Alice was my favorite Muppet show guest, even as a kid)
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!!!