Van’s Warped Tour 2009
Show: Van’s Warped Tour
Venue: Susquehanna Bank Center, Camden, NJ
Date: 7/17/2009
Reviewer: Lynn Malpass
Photograper: Lynn Malpass
Site: vanswarpedtour.com
With the all-day fun and experience of the 2008 Van’s Warped Tour long behind me, I looked forward to its successor, anticipating another great day of music and people, and everything that the Van’s Warped Tour has brought to fans for the past 15-plus years. And, after having survived it once, with all body parts and camera gear intact, I was ready. I was a pro at this. Most importantly, I knew where to go to check in! Silly as it may sound, I was a bit bewildered at the start of last year’s even, but this year, this year I was definitely seasoned and ready, and anxious for the show to get started!
After my check in and taking a few moments to cool off in the press room – which is a nice treat at this venue, I have to admit – I grabbed a copy of the day’s schedule and started my work for the day. Planning. Since the schedule is not available until arrival time, all set-catching needs to be worked out after the fact. I have now found, too, that I add into my schedule about twice as many bands as I can feasibly get to (which is a disappointment, not having the ability to split myself in two), but this time, as with the last time, no matter how many I’ve seen or not seen it’s a busy, fun-filled day that’s left me sore and exhausted – in the very best of ways – both times. Sunburned and muscle-strained, I slept most of the next day, but I’m already looking forward to 2010, yet another day at Warped and another day filled with music and the chance to see bands I’ve loved as well as bands that I’m sure I will love now that I know of them.
Main goal of the day was to see The Blackout perform, as I have heard much about them lately, with a new record and a new record contract, recently signed by Epitaph. Also, there was a lot of hoopla leading up about 3OH!3, so I intended to catch them to see what it was all about, though they were last to play, making for a very long day.
I managed to stick it out to catch 3OH!3, however I’m not really sure it was worth it. It downpoured rain in the evening and their outdoor performance on the Main Stage was rescheduled (for safety reasons, since there was a lot of lightening) until after the closer on the Hurley.com stage, which was indoors; what had been a hot, and now very soggy day was prolonged even more, and probably needless to say that those who had been standing in the heat all day at the barrier outside were less than thrilled of this change. And , which made the day longer yet, Sure, the tunes are catchy and sure they have a lot of fans, but to me the performance by 3OH!3 was a letdown. Two guys jumping around the stage in jogging shorts and t-shirts and… that’s it. It isn’t that I don’t find their songs at least entertaining, either. But if it’s true that some bands/acts are better only heard and not seen, I would classify 3OH!3 in that group. Or, at the least, they should just stick to making videos. I should have just gone home when it started raining.
So the end of my day was a bit of a wash (no pun intended), but thankfully the rest of it was not. Beginning with a very energetic set by Chiodos opening the Main Stage, everything was off to a huge start as they drew an amazing crowd, and very quickly. Lead singer Craig Owens is nothing, if he’s not a showman, and whatever I may not have liked about this band’s music was made up for by his interaction with the fans, and how well they performed as a whole. It didn’t take long for the first mosh pit to break out, either, nor for the first crowd-surfers of the day to get boosted up and begin their waves across the top of the crown and over the barriers in front. The band played a full set getting the crowd singing with some of the songs and screaming with others, all led by Owen’s great stage presence and charisma while he seemed to just eat up their reactions. By the time they left the stage some of the crowd already looked as though they’d been there for hours moshing, having put so much into their enjoyment during Chiodos’ set, and if that’s not the way to start off a great day, well I don’t know what is!
Next, I head inside to the Hurley.com stage to check out a band called I Set My Friends On Fire, curious by the couple of songs on their MySpace as to what they were all about. Well, they’re all about three guys who make a whole lot of… sound, and though the band is in its infancy, it seems to have quite a number of followers already. I can’t say I loved them. People who’ve read my reviews know I have a hard time dealing with screaming unless it’s accompanied by enough to actually blend it somehow, but I can’t say they were bad, either. Actually, they weren’t bad at all. Just too much for me, personally. After having a chance to listen to them again at home, without the added distraction of other kids screaming along and technical difficulties, I’ll say this. Good basis, capable players; I’m interested to see what else ISMFOF comes up with in the future as the band matures some.
After ISMFOF, and while waiting for Black Tide to take the same stage, rather than go outside and try to rush to catch another set and potentially miss some of Black Tide, I instead stuck around to watch the band taking the SmartPunk Stage (which, at the Camden venue is simply the second half of the huge regular stage, run in alternating timeslots with the Hurley.com Stage), The Goodnight Anthem. They should have been called The Goodnight Lullaby. While the quality of their playing and their sound is good – almost too good – I didn’t find anything at all interesting about this band, yet another in a sea of high-singing male-fronted, pop-punk (and I use the term punk lightly) bands. The songs were nice. They were catchy, even. The band’s performance continued to give me ideas of bar room cover bands and frat parties ala Cartel (who I just don’t understand how they have the following that they do), however. It was a good effort on their part, but the audience seemed only partially entertained as well. Just my thoughts, but Warped Tour gets me expecting exciting bands and lots of activity onstage rather than a band that might do better on a Top 40 station. Kudos to The Goodnight Anthem and may they have all the luck in the world, but after an opener like Chiodos, they were a real snoozer. I put my lens cap on after the first of The Goodnight Anthem’s songs and went to get a good spot for Black Tide.
Black Tide, I’ve seen them twice before and every time I do they just get better and better. Last year they played the outdoor stages during the early sets on the Rockstar Mayhem festival, so I was a little surprised to see them on Warped this year. The great thing about their music, however, is that they seem to be attracting fans from both sides of the pop/emo/screamo-slash-metal fence. If you add that up, that’s twice the listenership, and I for one, feel they deserve it. Well seasoned to the touring life at this point, the band took the stage and simply commanded the watching crowd with their 5- or 6-song set, getting even the security guards at the barrier into their tunes. They’ve got enough of an old, ‘classic’ sound that it’s more than just teens who can enjoy them, something that I have always loved about them. One of my picks of the day for sure, and I recommend that anyone who hasn’t heard them or seen them live do so, for a real rock show.
Now that my blood was once more pumping, it was time to head outside and catch The Blackout, aka, The Set that Almost Didn’t Happen. With this being the band’s first lengthy summer tour in the US, the heat had been really affecting the members of the Welsh band, to the point of lead singer Sean Smith becoming sick during the tour, actually passing out onstage during a particularly hot set out west not a few days ago. I was disappointed arriving at their set to learn that Sean was, once more, feeling pretty terrible and they were considering not playing to save his voice and his health, but of course I understood. It happens. Hadn’t expected the singer and his co-lead, Gavin Butler, to cave in to the disappointed pouts of a young fan and decide in a minute that yes, the show would go on, however! And go on it did, with Smith, Butler and the rest of the band prepping and taking the stage at their specified time to play a blazing show. Other than the fact that Sean’s voice was not as strong as it usually is, they were simply outstanding, and everything that I had heard about them and was expecting. They had almost no crowd at the start of their set, probably due to their relative newness in the ‘scene’ and probably unheard of by many, but by the end of the set their twenty or so listeners had turned into a crowd that was as big as that for any of the other bands. Just walking past people’s interest was piqued as Smith and Butler dueled onstage, one screaming, the other singing, easily getting into the music and offering a great response at the end of the set. Definitely a highlight of my day, I was glad to see that their decision to play was met with as much enthusiasm as they gave, enthusiasm that seemed to follow them right over to their merch booth for the next hours. The Blackout may have been the longshot of 2009 if you will, but they definitely came out as Warped winners.
Continuing on, I then caught Madina Lake and Escape the Fate, two bands that I knew some about, but had never seen before. The bad news was that Aiden was playing at the same time, so, having seen the Seattle band before I was forced to skip this time. Madina Lake did not disappoint however, with their energized set complete with bassist Matthew Leone’s wall-walking antics while twin brother Nathan sang vocals. Their crowd, as well, was perhaps the craziest of the day, too. Maybe not the largest, but definitely the nuttiest! It was nearly impossible to get any decent photos, even from inside the barrier, with the excitement the band created with merely their presence, let alone the music, which was well-played, entertaining, and got me thinking I should probably take a closer listen to them when I had the time. Enjoyable all around, a definite band to see the next you have the chance to.
I feel like Escape the Fate was a very similar set in general to Madina Lake’s, what with their similar fanbase and occasionally similar sound, though there was a lot standout to it as well. Escape The Fate carry with them a rough-and-ready vibe, a rebel tone of ‘get with us or get out’ in their music and their stage presence, something that will always get a crowd going. I’ve seen Craig Mabbit when he was still fronting Blessthefall and thought he was decent, but Escape the Fate definitely suits him better in not only his vocal tone but in the natural comfort he seems to have with this band and its music. And while Madina Lake gets the “crazy crowd of the day” award, I have to give the “crowd most into the band” award of the day to Escape The Fate. As for the band themselves, very into their playing, very interactive with the crowd, and I don’t know… something about drummer Robert Ortiz makes me think of what would happen if Slash played drums for Motley Crue, which to me just adds to the show they put on. Fun set, for sure. Can’t wait to see what they come up with next as already the work they’ve done in collaboration with Mabbitt seems lots better than the bands prior work.
Then, from post-harcore I relocated all the way across to the opposite side of the venue to the Main Stage once more, where one of the bands that made this tour what it is today took the stage, the one and only, legendary, Bad Religion. By this time the crowds were packing in tight and I for one, was glad to see so many young people getting really into Bad Religion’s set since so many of the bands they’d seen and still would see have been influenced by them. I find it amazing, too, and a testament to their devotion to their music, that after all these years the band members, a couple of whom are in their 50′s at this point, are still willing to take their greatness on the road with Warped, something that I’ve heard is not like any other tour for bands to travel with. They went through a set that didn’t even begin to touch the depth of their catalog of music, but in playing the favorites and the more well-known songs, seemed to please everyone. A massive circle pit got going through their set, to be expected at any Bad Religion show, and the addition of crowd surfers once more, it seemed like old school punk rock heaven, and a perfect contrast to the post-hardcore bands on the tour this year.
After Bad Religion I ended up, quite accidentally at that, checking out a band I’d never heard, never heard of, and knew absolutely nothing about other than another photographer telling me “Been told the lead singer looks like a girl and has this amazing voice, so I wanted to check them out!” In heading indoors to get a break from the blazing heat I went ahead and checked out A Skylit Drive, not knowing what to expect in the least. When lead singer Michael ‘Jag’ Jagmin took the stage, honestly, I thought he had to be a girl… especially when he opened his mouth and sang. But after an initial moment to accustom to just how different this band sounded to a lot of the other alt bands that were out these days, putting them more into the experimental genre I would guess, I fell in love. My inner RUSH heart came out with Jagmin’s tones and by the time the set was over I was a fan. Everything about this band was just different enough to make them completely stand out from the whole rest of the tour, from the soprano of their femme-looking singer to the flash and style of drummer Cory LaQuay’s stick work and everything in between. I ended up looking them up at home a few days later and have been a fan ever since. Best mistake I made all day.
Unfortunately, the worst one was not leaving after A Skylit Drive, but I’m always willing to at least give something new a chance. In that case, sometimes you win and sometimes you lose, but that’s the beauty of Warped – checking out favorites, soon to be favorites, and definite non-favorites so we can fill our musical appetites for the rest of the coming year until it’s time for Warped yet again!








