Saturday, November 14, 2009

Bruce Springsteen 11/13/09





The Dogg was awash with anticipation for this show. Nothing makes the Dogg howl like a good old fashioned "Rock-n-Roll Extravaganza". For those of you that have never been wittness to a Bruce show, he and the ever capable E-Street Band will never disappoint. You can count on a 3 hour show, without an intermission. No pyro, no lasers, no special effects. Just the tightest band on the planet. With most of the band at 60+ years old, you must put them on your "bucket list" before they fade away.

The Dogg, BLT and 16 of our friends had a "penthouse suite" for the night. Way up high with excellent sightlines. This is the way to go! 8-10 different food selections, 4-5 types of beer, Jack Daniels and Jaegger Bombs for all. Figure $100.00per couple for food/drink + $ 95.00 per person ticket makes for a $280.00 evening for two. Not too bad in this inflated economy.

A perfect autumn night weather wise, for a concert. 60 degrees and cloudless when we pulled into the parking lot around 6:30. Almost nice enough to be at Pine Knob. This sets the stage for what was to be an epic evening!

Michigan is one of the bands favorite stops every tour. Bruce has played here at least once every year since 2002. Imagine, then, Bruce coming onstage and greeting the crowd with a salute to Ohio! And then sticking Ohio in to the lyrics of "Wrecking Ball" — of course, a Michigan audience tends not to object too much to lines such as, "tonight Ohio is going down in flames." Finally, Bruce put Ohio into the rap for "Working on a Dream." This last actually managed to get a few boos, and prompted Stevie to inform Bruce that they were, in fact, in Michigan. Bruce took it well, and periodically shouted out, "Where am I?" throughout the evening after that to get a rousing Detroit answer. At that point, Bruce through as many "Detroit's" as possible into his banter.

Fortunately, while Bruce was forgetting where he was, he wasn't forgetting how to put on a magnificent show. By the conclusion of Nils's indendiary twirling solo at the end of the evening's second song, "Prove It All Night," it was already clear that Bruce and the band were intent on taking no prisoners.

Several notable things have changed on this latest tour, as compared to prior tours: Bruce using a rear riser and crowd surfing during "Hungry Heart"; the set including a full album, usually "Born to Run," early in the setlist; audience members bringing signs, with some signs being accepted as song requests; the de-emphasizing of the current album. All of these changes had the effect, tonight, of drawing the audience more in to the show. The use of the rear riser and the crowd surfing literally puts Bruce face to face — or closer — with several hundred fans. To see Bruce crowd surf at 60+ years of age, is a testiment to his passion for performing.

Not that all of the changes are necessarily for the better. I'd have preferred to hear more content from Working on a Dream than just the title song, for example. That said, the crowd responded well to the show, and was as loud as any crowd I have ever heard at The Palace.

The performance of the "Born to Run" album was spot on. The songs were crisp, impassioned, and uniformly attacked, hard — even "Meeting Across the River," which was enhanced by trumpeter Curt Ramm's playing.

The accepted requests had a distinctive Michigan flavor, first with Bob Seger's "Ramblin' Gamblin' Man" (played one time previously on tour, also at the Palace, back on August 18, 1992), and then with the "Detroit Medley" of Mitch Ryder's biggest hits. Bruce started "Ramblin' Gamblin' Man" by playing the distinctive opening keyboard riff on guitar, and with that started a three-pack dance party right in the middle of the set, with Bruce playing guitar slinger throughout. By the end of his blistering solo in "Because the Night" — during which Bruce proved he could blow a snot rocket and play a guitar solo at the same time — my voice was gone, my hearing was shot, and my legs were jell-o. He's a freaking force of nature, is all I can say... and that band is pretty damn good these days.

Show highlights including a roaring version of "Johnny 99" early on (perhaps a bit of a reference to the state of the auto industry), and also a thundering performance of "Born in the U.S.A." During "Rosalita," Bruce handed the mic to Steve at the beginning of the second verse and Steve survived it, as Bruce went to check something side stage (maybe the woman who stole the spotlight during "Dancing in the Dark" by jumping on stage from the pit and dancing much too wildly). Finally, the closer, "Higher and Higher," which finally allowed Cindy Mizelle to get a bit of the spotlight, closed the show on a high.


Setlist:
Wrecking Ball (with Curt Ramm)
Prove It All Night
Johnny 99
Hungry Heart
Working on a Dream
Thunder Road
Tenth Avenue Freeze-out (with Curt Ramm)
Night
Backstreets
Born to Run
She's the One
Meeting Across the River (with Curt Ramm)
Jungleland
Working on the Highway
Raise Your Hand
Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
Detroit Medley
Because the Night
Lonesome Day
The Rising
Badlands
Hard Times
Born in the U.S.A.
American Land (with Curt Ramm)
Dancing in the Dark
Rosalita (with Curt Ramm)
Higher and Higher (with Curt Ramm)

Atmosphere A++
Crowd A++
Sound A
Staging A
Effects D
Weather A++
Lighting A
Video A

Overall A+ and the best show of 2009!!

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Kiss and Buckcherry- Cobo Arena 9/25/09





The Dogg has never been a fan of KISS as recording artist's, but is a devoted fan of their "Live Performance". KISS practicly reinvented the stage show extravaganza. The blend of pyro, sound, lights, and stage show can be an awesome spectacle. Add in the extra bonus of seeing the last shows at Cobo (last show seen there was Triumph 1983) made for a highly anticipated night. BLT and I have never seen Buckcherry live, so that was an added bonus.

Our group consisted of Ralph, Christine, Karen and Bill, and of course your lovable Dogg's. The evening was bright and clear, people mover jammed with KISS fans and Red Wing fans. Spirits were high and voices were loud. It's going to be a helluva night in the D.

Arrived at Cobo and make quick moves to our seats (second row, tier C) with great sight lines and poor leg room. My hard partying ways of 1973-83 at Cobo had dulled my memories of the lack of creature comforts. Crowded concourses, small bathrooms, few concessions, but who cares, were here to party! Buckcherry is playing to a mostly enthusiastic crowd, but in our section, only 8-10 of us were standing and rocking. Quick note to the sit down crowd- STAY HOME!!! Nothing is ruder than asking a rockin fan to sit down. However this is becoming the norm lately as the classic rock crowd ages. Try to remember, Rock & Roll is an attitude, not just something to listen to! Well.... I digress, anyway, Buckcherry is throwing down with an awesome set, great stage presence, and overall a smoking hot performance. Of course Crazy Bitch even got the sitters up. Heaven forbid when the pungent smell of some mean green floated over our section. These same fans were appalled and seemed to be looking for security. I only wished they had passed it our way. It smelled awesome.

KISS takes the stage about 9:00 to their second home, Detroit Rock City. Many of the fans both young and old were wearing the KISS face paint with pride. I swear I saw the same KISS impersonators that I've seen at all the shows since the late 70's. They still look great and were willing to pose with anyone in the crowd.

Tonight the band they played KISS Alive in all its glory and in correct order for the most part. The only songs I missed were Rock bottom and Firehouse. Bassist, Gene Simmons performed his requisite fire breathing act to Hotter than Hell, rather than Firehouse. I don't think anyone noticed. Paul Stanley was vocally strong and performed with energy that belied his over 60 age. The pyro was there, the lighting strong, the sound superb, and the stage show well done! So why was I under enthused? Mym feelings is it was due to the show being the same as the last 10 KISS shows I've seen. Come on fellas, try to mix it up. Alice Cooper can show you a thing or two about changing shows around! Talk to him, it will make you better.

Within the context of what I just said, you must know the show was really quite excellent. The drum solo on 100,000 years was solid, but not like Kiss Alive. Guitarist Tommy Thayer layed down some mean chops, when allowed to operate outside of the 3 chord confines of KISS music. A 45 minute encore consisted of 6 songs, including, Lick it Up, Shout it out Loud, Detroit Rock City and a new song Modern Day Deliliah. All were received by ravenous fans. When Paul Stanley flew from the stage to the back of the arena to sing Love Gun, it was officially on, KISS loves Detrouit and Detroit loves KISS! Long may the love affair live!

Atmosphere A+
Crowd A+
Sound A
Lights A
Staging A
Pyro A+
Bands A+
Weather B

Overall a strong A performance and a really good time. Anyone that attended their first KISS show, would not have been disappointed.

In Memoriam: Dave Gilbert- Should've been a legend!




It’s 1979, nearly three years before the advent of MTV. Roy Orbison is hosting “The Midnight Special,” one of the few places a rock ’n’ roll band can get nationwide exposure. The group onstage behind Orbison is making its national TV debut. With tentative gestures and an outstretched arm, Orbison introduces the Rockets, Detroit’s best and hardest-working rock ’n’ roll band.
In a mess of tattered leather, mirror shades and unkempt hair, the six-piece band kicks in. They offer up an oil-stained rendition of their recent top-40 hit, “Oh Well.” the R&B-poor-boy-becomes-a-rock star anthem.
The band is honed. It has that groove, that thing that can’t be simulated or rehearsed; a togetherness that can only result when a band tours together, lives together, endures internal fights and sees endless all-night parties together. It’s the sound of a band that literally eats out of each other’s pockets. The Rockets are seasoned, having done major tours with Kiss, ZZ Top, Bob Seger and the Who, among others. By all accounts, the Rockets are ready. They are going to be huge. After all, they’ve done the work.
Johnny “Bee” Badanjek and guitarist Jimmy McCarty bring grizzled pedigree and credibility: their near-legendary lineage that started with Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels.
What’s more, girls love Dave Gilbert, the band’s singer. Gilbert is the complete rock ’n’ roll front man, and he’s desperately pretty. He’s got a Jagger-esque maw and a perfectly golden mane of shoulder-length locks. He’s lithesome, and moves like a cross between a young Robert Plant and a skinny-era Jim Morrison. He makes young boys yearn for rock stardom — and he provokes the carnal conflict that puts butterflies under the skirts of teenage girls.
Gilbert’s street-heavy baritone came of age singing for beer money in Detroit bars when he was far too young to be anywhere near them, a voice born, oddly, of parents who are both deaf and mute. It is the kind of voice that sounds like it is dying to get out, to be felt; equal parts hey-look-at-me desperation and rock ’n’ roll libido.
“The Midnight Special” reveals a band that has it in spades.
Wolfman Jack ushers the Rockets on for a second tune, a rousing rendition of “Desire,” the hooky pop-blues single off the band’s just-released third major-label album, No Ballads. The song is going lengths to further the band’s national rep and is getting great response on radio, receiving heavy spins at FM powerhouses in Texas, Arizona, Florida, California and, seemingly, every hour in the band’s hometown.
But potential is a catalyst for failure more often than success. The rock ’n’ roll heap is littered with never-wases, almost-wases, and coulda/shoulda beens. Validation is so fleeting. The Rockets, and in particular, the group’s enigmatic front man Dave Gilbert, reaffirm this lore.
Gilbert’s short life — burdened with alcoholism, marathon coke binges, two divorces, murder, suicide and, yes, stardom — had an arc as tragic as anything that could ever be scripted.
That life ended a year ago this week, on Aug. 1, 2001. Like the band he personified, he was gone before his time.

David Lee Gilbert was born a rock ’n’ roll star. He presented himself as if there were nothing else in life for him. And he was a rock ’n’ roll star until the Rockets called it quits in 1983.
How does someone like Gilbert survive when he isn’t a star anymore? Where does one find the immediate adulation that only doe-eyed fans bring? How does one deal with the coke-toting sycophants who hang around, seeking a piece of the magic, long after the fawning crowds wane?
By most accounts, Gilbert did his best to hang on.
Born in December 1951 to Annetta and Stanley Gilbert, he was raised in Union Lake, a sleepy blue-collar town north of Detroit. His diminutive mother was, according to those who remember, “tough as nails.” She once put a roof on the family home by herself. She was the lunch lady at Gilbert’s junior-high school.
“She never wanted him to be in music,” says Delores “Dee” Gilbert, the singer’s third wife and widow who knew Gilbert for 25 years. “But his mother did see David perform before she died. She came when he was fronting Ted Nugent’s band. There she was standing in the crowd near the front, this 5-foot deaf-mute woman with her little Instamatic camera. I know Dave grieved so much when his mother died. She never got to see him succeed.”
By seventh grade, Gilbert was already the schoolyard badass. He smoked weed, skipped school, sported the longest hair and fronted rock ’n’ roll bands. Girls adored him, boys wanted to be him and school administrators hated him.
“When we were 13, me and David and a few others were the only ones in junior high with long hair,” recalls Devon Stacy, a childhood pal of Gilbert’s who went on to be the Rockets drum tech. “Even then, David was a rock star. He was the rock star on campus. We always hung together because we were the hippies.”
One day, the assistant principal decided he’d had enough of Gilbert’s nonconformity and made an example of him. He went for the jugular: Gilbert’s hair, which touched his shoulders, impossibly long for the mid-’60s. The administrator convinced Gilbert’s mother that her pubescent Pied Piper had to lose his locks.
“He picked on Gilbert because kids looked up to him,” continues Stacy, “and this was like ’66, and back then, long hair was a no-no. Back then it was all jocks and greasers. We were the freaks. The stoners. At 13 we were smoking pot. So his mom took him to get all his hair cut off.”
Stacy pauses. His voice rises to a laugh. “That night he went out and bought a shoulder-length wig. He showed up at school the next day wearing this wig that looked exactly like his hair! I remember the assistant principal chasing David down the hallway and David yelling, ‘You can’t fucking touch me!’ I mean, he was even using that kind of language then.”
Gilbert was a kid careening straight ahead with a lust for life. In his early teens, he did all he could to soak in rock ’n’ roll. Sometimes he would sneak through the bathroom window at Walled Lake Casino to catch James Brown or Billy Lee and the Riveras (a band that included Mitch Ryder and Gilbert’s future bandmates, Jimmy McCarty and Johnny Badanjek).
“You got to remember that Detroit in the ’60s was different,” Stacy says. “We’d get kids — 40 kids — and caravan to another state just to see a rock ’n’ roll show. That’s how much the kids loved it. In ’66 and ’67 you could go right backstage and talk to the rock stars. They didn’t have guards or anything then. At a Doors show you could go right back and talk to Jim Morrison. You could go right back and talk to Janis Joplin.”
This was a time when rock ’n’ roll still had vast tracts of uncharted ground, a sound and look that was still taboo. To participate, it took both a subversive spirit and fierce determination. Gilbert, of course, had both characteristics in abundance.
Gilbert, who never bothered with voice lessons, cut his teeth fronting garage bands including the Shades of Light and the Free (before the British band of the same name), among others.
His rattletrap bands played all-age clubs and high schools. By 15, Gilbert had quit school and was playing bars using a fake ID. The first hint of achievement came after the Free changed its name to Midwest Tree Company and won a high-school state battle of the bands competition. First prize was studio time and a 45 record. But the band didn’t last.
The Detroit riots had created a milieu ripe for rock ’n’ roll purging. The MC5 and the Stooges had taken root, redefining the course of rock history.
“David did a lot of moving around then,” remembers Stacy. “He would disappear and go down to Detroit and stay at a place christened The House [a notorious mansion that was a revolving door for local musicians and touring bands]. He would stay gone for a couple of months.”
Terry Valdez met Gilbert when she was 16. Gilbert was 17. They were married three years later and had a girl, Layla. Valdez first saw Gilbert play with the Free.
“I met David at Cass Beach,” Valdez recalls. “David was magical. Magical is the word. People were drawn to him. He invited me to see his band that night.”
The Free was playing at Mercy High, an all-girl Catholic school.
“When we got there he was already on stage,” she remembers. “He was signing — doing sign language while he sang and it was so emotional because his parents are deaf. It was the most beautiful thing. When he came off stage he had tears in his eyes.”
Gilbert later joined an Ann Arbor outfit called Shaky Jake, which he once described as being “country-rock, a Poco-type thing with a lot of harmony stuff.” Gilbert and Valdez lived with his Shaky Jake peers in an Ann Arbor dwelling dubbed the Hill House, which was a place of debauchery.
Enter Ted Nugent.
“Ted Nugent came over the house and we were jammin’ and he asked me to join his group,” Gilbert once told an interviewer. “That’s when I started with Nugent, 1971.”
Almost overnight, Gilbert went from a guy in a local band to a guy in a national act. Gilbert spent more than a year doing club shows and tours — sometimes opening for not-yet-huge Alice Cooper and Bob Seger — before parting with Nugent.
The budding rock star was by then a confirmed toxic-enthusiast. The match of Gilbert and the staunchly anti-drink, anti-narcotic Nuge had run its course.
“I know for a fact he was doing psychedelics then,” says Stacy. “I don’t know how that worked with Nugent at all.”
Valdez, who accompanied Nugent’s band on a U.S. tour, says Gilbert quit the band to play with his kid brother, Marc. They formed a band called Shadow that reportedly got a development deal with Atlantic records and recorded songs for an album. The band had various lineups, but was done by 1973.
Valdez says the brothers Gilbert were close. “They loved each other. He had a love/hate relationship with his brother. Sometimes they would physically fight.”
Gilbert’s mother died. A distraught Gilbert fled to LA, stayed drunk and high for weeks and was arrested repeatedly.
LA in the ’70s was all about blow. Gilbert, again, dived in.
“I was gonna quit [music]. I was getting too much of a buzz on after that,” he said later. “I was doin’ all kinds of different shit and everything. It was a long time I was fucking up … two years.”
Valdez says the marriage failed because of his drug problem. “Sometimes he would just be incoherent,” she says. “When Layla was born he didn’t make it to the hospital. So I moved in with my mother.”
Gilbert hooked up with guitarist Ron Asheton in LA and joined his post-Stooges band, the New Order, which also featured Dennis Thompson from the MC5. He moved into the band’s Hollywood house, which had once belonged to Jean Harlow. The year was 1975. The New Order preceded punk rock by almost a year, playing the same sort of gnarly rock ’n’ roll.
But LA wanted nothing to do with the New Order and Gilbert quit the band after reportedly racking up debts to drug dealers. He returned to Detroit.

Guitarist Jimmy McCarty and drummer Johnny “Bee” Badanjek were still in their teens in 1966 when they rose from the ashes of the celebrated Detroit Wheels, Mitch Ryder’s backing band. Later, McCarty did time with the Buddy Miles Express and recorded with Jimi Hendrix before joining the scarcely regarded hard-rock band, Cactus. Badanjek drummed himself a living doing studio sessions, including appearing on the platinum Alice Cooper classic Welcome to My Nightmare and Edgar Winter’s They Only Come Out at Night.
Badanjek and McCarty formed the Rockets in 1972. They were certain they should pursue the same visceral Detroit-style rock ’n’ roll as defined by Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels.
The Red Carpet Lounge on Detroit’s east side provided a base for the Rockets while they refined their sound, mixing standards with their own tunes. With no front man, Badanjak managed lead vocals from the drum kit. A fluctuating roster gave way to permanence once slide and rhythm guitarist Dennis Robbins joined the fold, which also included bassist John Fraga.
McCarty’s and Badanjek’s collective rep earned the band a buzz. The crowds were often strong and dotted with the occasional rock star. It wasn’t uncommon to spot someone like Bob Seger or David Bowie in the audience.
The Rockets had a deal with Detroit producer Don Davis’ label, Tortoise. Davis was an established producer with credits that stretched from the Dramatics and Bobby Womack to Johnnie Taylor and Johnny Cash. Davis and the band understood that a proper rock ’n’ roll group needed a front man.
“Bee’s [Badanjek] got a really strong voice but it’s not what you call a strong rock ’n’ roll voice,” says McCarty
Over the phone from his estate near Nashville, Robbins — who went on to write top-10 hits for Garth Brooks, Travis Tritt and many others — recalls how the band found David Gilbert. Robbins says he went to a club in Ann Arbor where Gilbert was fronting a bar band. “I’d been hearing about this singer, and I went in there and I said, ‘God almighty, there is the singer,’” Robbins says.
McCarty, described by many as the overtly pragmatic Rocket, wasn’t as impressed. “Dave came out to a club in Detroit and sat in with us on a song,” he says. “Even then it was obvious to me the guy was a space cadet. But don’t get me wrong, I love the guy. Still, it caused a lot of problems. We took the gamble and things started clicking for us. He had the energy and he looked good. He got us to the next level.
“Before Dave burned himself out, the guy had a tremendous voice.”
Gilbert was given lyric sheets and nothing else days before going into the studio to cut vocal tracks. Everyone agrees that what Gilbert did in the studio was remarkable.
Robbins: “So we brought him into the studio and he sang ‘Love Transfusion’ and, God almighty, we cut the track and Don Davis just sat back, and he looked around, and he said, ‘There you are, no doubt.’
“I thought, ‘Now we’ve got a band. We have got a rock ’n’ roll band.’ And of course, they never really believed that. McCarty I think never really believed that.”
“He [Gilbert] came in and knocked the songs off,” says McCarty.
Gilbert’s encore to his studio exploits? He disappeared.
“He showed up two or three months later,” McCarty says. “I said to John [Badanjek], ‘This guy is gonna be a lot of trouble.’”





Although they were a staple on Detroit rock radio, and sold out Cobo Hall and Pine Knob (now DTE) four times, history has shown the Rockets to be sadly unheralded, even in the band’s hometown.
What the band did was define a period of Detroit rock ’n’ roll that bridged from the Stooges/MC5 to the Romantics (who in 1983 had one of the biggest songs of the year in “Talking in Your Sleep”).
Aside from a lone German import, the Rockets’ titles aren’t even available on CD.
By all accounts, the Rockets should have gone over the top. The members of the group should have been set for the rest of their lives.
When the first record, Love Transfusion, came out, the Rockets received favorable reviews in then-important selling tools such as Rolling Stone and People, but national radio ignored it. The consensus in the Rockets' camp was that the record was too polished and failed to capture the gritty essence of the band. Still, the Rockets hit the road and went from playing long nights at an east-side lounge to giant venues with the biggest rock ’n’ roll acts in the world.
“Talk about trial by fire,” says Jim Hamblin, a gentle sort whose disarming demeanor belies the fact that he was, for three years, the Rockets' hard-nosed road manager, lighting director and driver.
Hamblin knew Gilbert in his younger days, when Hamblin had his own trucking company and hauled gear for local bands, including Shadow.
“I was there when we went from the Red Carpet Lounge to arenas. Right off we got a bunch of dates on the Kiss tour,” Hamblin says.
This is the pre-AIDS, pre-hepatitis C, pre-laptop-recording world of easy backstage blow jobs, free cocaine and flowing booze. Things were wide open, a seamless excuse for excess. Particularly for a careening David Gilbert, a kid from Union Lake fronting a great rock band that was opening for some of the biggest bands in the world.
“Usually I was the guy who would have to go get Dave,” chuckles Hamblin. “Once on the Kiss tour Dave was nowhere to be found. We were somewhere on the East Coast. But we had to go on. Turns out Dave got arrested for something, drunk and disorderly … something. When I got to the police station, there he was, singing songs to the cops with an acoustic guitar, playing Beatles songs.”
Stacy recalls: “When you’re doing tour dates with Aerosmith back then, you got a guy walking around with two ounces of coke at all times. David could stay up all night and still sing. His voice was huge. He ate, drank, breathed rock ’n’ roll. He was that way all his life. He did every show like it was the last show on earth — except for the ones he missed, of course.”
McCarty says, “Once we were supposed to open for Bob Seger and Dave didn’t show up. He had been out all the night before, doing whatever, and he didn’t show. That was just Dave. He had no responsibility. He didn’t have control of himself.”
Bill Blackwell was part of the Rockets' management team. He says much time was spent attempting to reel Gilbert in and soothe turmoil.
“A lot of times I would have to mediate between Dave and Jim. And you can’t lose your lead singer,” he explains. “As long as we were the Rockets, we needed Dave Gilbert. He was just such a charming individual and there wasn’t that spite where you might walk away from another guy and say, ‘Boy, he’s mean, he’s evil …’ That was never the case with Dave. You felt it was like your 5-year-old child getting caught with his hand in the cookie jar. That’s how it was with Dave. You know, he’d show up after he’d been out all night and, ‘Dave, what are you doing? We have a big show.’”
In the midst of this classic ’70s rock star over-the-top revelry, Gilbert is remembered as a guy who, despite the toxins he consumed, wasn’t arrogant. He hung with the road crew as much as he did other rock stars.
“Sometimes on the road he’d ride with the crew rather than the band,” continues Stacy. “Granted, sometimes he did so out of necessity, but the guy had no ego. I remember once the crew was leaving Charlotte, N.C., and Dave was busy trashing the hotel room. I remember walking by the room and he saw me. He just stopped right in the middle of what he was doing and said, ‘Hey, you guys leaving? Well, take care and be safe.’ Then he went right back and started trashing the hotel room.”
Hamblin: “I definitely remember him trashing hotel rooms. He’d get in an argument and starting breaking chairs. We’d walk out having to pay $800 or something stupid like that to cover damages.”
When the Rockets recorded the group’s second album, the band had reconfigured into a six-piece with the addition of Detroit keyboardist Donnie Backus (now a college professor). The band sacked original bassist John Fraga and got most of the bass parts from session man David Hood (from the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section). The band’s manager at the time, Gary Lazar, begrudgingly joined forces with Punch Andrews’ (who now manages Kid Rock) management team, which was having tremendous success with Bob Seger and the Sliver Bullet Band. Andrews’ office helped seal the Rockets’ deal with RSO records. On tap to produce was Johnny Sandlin, who did the same job for the Allman Brothers.
The recording sessions, which were rife with internecine arguments and drug festivities, gave up The Rockets, which is regarded by many as the band’s zenith. While recording, Sandlin recognized that the band was still short of enough worthy material to complete an album of songs that would have a chance in the charts. The band recorded a song Seger had written for them called “Long Time Gone.” Sandlin suggested the old Fleetwood Mac song “Oh Well.” It was a brilliant choice. The song hit radio and introduced the band to the heartland of America. The tune spent eight weeks on the Billboard pop singles chart and peaked at No. 30. The second single, “Can’t Sleep,” peaked at a respectable No. 51.
This was at a time when New Wave was beginning to hit — the Cars, Blondie, Devo, etc. And timing is, of course, everything.
Endless touring for the Rockets ensued. The band did “The Midnight Special,” got great reviews, even showed its Detroit colors with a Stars Cars page in Creem magazine, which saw the band on Belle Isle in front of a Stroh’s beer truck.
The second RSO album, No Ballads — again produced by Sandlin — yielded the minor hit “Desire,” a tune written by Robbins, with lyrics by Badanjek, that reached No. 70 on the pop charts.
Gilbert’s road shenanigans were becoming rote. Tensions rose. Gilbert and Robbins developed an alliance opposite the main songwriters, Badanjek and McCarty. Badanjek, who did not respond to interview requests, had been christened “The General” for his inflexible, business-first attitude and the fact that he rarely, if ever, partook in the drug/drink road rituals. The day before a major coliseum show a fracas erupted.
“We had just done a show in Portland, staying at the same hotel as Van Halen,” remembers Hamblin. “Dave had been out all night partying, hadn’t slept at all. He came back the next morning and said he wanted to stay. Bee and Dave got into it ... Bee pushed Dave over the TV set. At that point we just walked out. We had a show at the Fourth of July Rock ’n’ Roll Circus at the Oakland Coliseum the next day. We left him there at the hotel.”
In the Bay Area, “some shady guy showed up with Dave,” continues Hamblin. “He wanted money owed him for drugs and a plane ticket home. I had to pay the guy and get him out of there. Dave apparently had been up all night again. The show was at 11 a.m., so Dave had been up all night for two nights straight. I was up all that night worried. Everybody was pissed, oh, man. The funny thing is, Dave, who hadn’t seen sleep in days, pulled off the show. He was great in front of thousands.”
At the precise moment some of his touring mates would want to kill him, Gilbert would often reveal another side. “Once at St. Louis Keel Auditorium we were opening for Seger,” continues Hamblin. “Seger and Dave and Bee and the Silver Bullet Band stayed in the hotel all night and sang gospel songs. It was unbelievable.”
McCarty rejects the idea that tumult — that inevitable gust of testosterone tension — helps make rock ’n’ roll great in the truest, break-shit-up sense. Look to the Who, Stones, Aerosmith or anyone for that weary maxim.
“I’m not buying into any of that shit,” McCarty says. “Dave was a good guy and had a good heart. He just didn’t know when to put the brakes on. He eventually went off the cliff.”
Although the shows were going well and the fan base continued to swell, things in Rocketland were heading south. Road security had to be hired to make sure drug dealers didn’t get to Gilbert, who also got married again.
His second wife, Lynn Anne “Lynnae” Gilbert, fancied herself a Bianca Jagger to Gilbert’s Mick. The couple had a baby girl named Jade.
To add to the building antipathy, she would often come out on the road with the band. The couple would engage in knock-down, drag-out, smash-hotel-room fights.
“They loved to argue,” says Stacy. “We bought ’em pillows with handles so they could fight each other. And Gilbert and Dennis Robbins would fight like brothers too.”
The consensus at this point was the band needed the song to put them over the top.
Robbins says the Rockets, main writer, Badanjek, made a few ill-informed decisions. And he recalls an episode when Bruce Springsteen offered the band a song.
“I found out, the whole band found out actually… Springsteen had sent us a song. And Bee listened to the song and turned it down. This was, I don’t remember what year, but the song was ‘Fire’ (the Pointer Sisters took the song and immediately soared to No. 2 on the pop charts with it). Bee said, ‘Nah, it’s not a song for the Rockets.’ And, man, we had a major blowout when we found that out, like two weeks later, just a blowout. And it’s shit like that, on and on.
“I mean they sabotaged everything, you know, anything that could make them successful, they sabotaged it …”
Worse, the Rockets’ label, RSO, went belly-up after No Ballads, which, like its predecessor, sold in the 400,000 range.
The band signed with Elektra records. When No Ballads failed to match the band’s potential, radio hitmaker Jack Douglas was hired. Douglas had produced the biggest Aerosmith and Cheap Trick albums to date. He was producing John Lennon’s Double Fantasy when the ex-Beatle was murdered. So it was a grieving producer who walked into the fractious Rockets project.
The Rockets relocated to LA and made Back Talk with Douglas. The record, for myriad reasons, took the band in the wrong direction. Again, timing is everything.
McCarty sums up the sessions and resulting record: “Back Talk was our Hollywood record. That was us trying to find a hit record. That record went right down the toilet. Douglas was a mess after the Lennon thing. There was so much Jack Daniel’s and drugs in the studio. It was crazy. When the record came out, we alienated all the old fans and didn’t make any new ones.”
Back Talk stiffed. It even fared poorly on the radio in hometown Detroit, where the band was huge.
On the Back Talk tour in 1982, tension between Badanjek and Robbins came to a head. Robbins claims he was sacked by Badanjek. McCarty says Robbins left.
“Dennis Robbins just split from the band on the road,” McCarty says. “It was during a tour of Texas. He and Bee got into it.”
“I was fired from the band, that’s what happened,” Robbins asserts.
The band had four days off and was departing for a gig in Iowa. Robbins wanted to fly home to see his 2-year-old son and meet the band in Iowa. He says Badanjek wanted him out.
“We had a meeting and … Lazar went around the room, and everybody said, ‘No, we don’t want him to leave,” Robbins says. “‘Well,’ I said, ‘I’ve heard from everybody but Bee.’ And he [Lazar] said, ‘That’s ’cause he still wants you out of the band. And I said, ‘Well, that’s all I needed to know.’ The next morning I got up, got my gear, and flew back to Detroit. That was it for me.”
Gilbert’s father died. His drug use continued unabated.
Now a five-piece, the band hobbled. Then a new medium called MTV brought hope.
In 1982, the band went to work on its fifth studio album. Rocket Roll was recorded in Ann Arbor under dubious circumstances. The album yielded the Badanjek-penned single “Rollin’ by the Record Machine.” Elektra gave the green light for a video and MTV put the song in rotation. Still, it wasn’t the decisive boost the band needed.
“As I’m looking back — that was some 21 years ago, and it really is hard to believe (that the band never hit big),” says Bill Blackwell. “They were out there night after night playing their hearts out, trying to do it and not making a lot of money. The A&R departments at RSO, at Elektra were saying, ‘Don’t worry, this is it, this is it. …”
“The Flock of Seagulls sticks in my mind because all of a sudden this whole English synth-pop thing was happening. The Rockets were truly Detroit rock ’n’ roll and I think for the rest of the country suddenly it was a little dated, not fresh with the whole R&B influence, which is what the Black Crowes were all about some years later.”
A final Rockets record was recorded and released on Capitol records, a live album cut New Year’s Eve 1982 at a sold-out Royal Oak Theatre. Gilbert was strung out on coke. The record is spotty. The band was basically done.
“When we went into Back Talk, we were trying,” says McCarty. “By Rocket Roll the thing was over. I wanted Dave out. With him the band wasn’t going to get to the next level. The sad thing is we never had the hit record, the ‘Talking in Your Sleep.’ You can only go around [the country] so many times … The first album on RSO was the best time for the band. But the show must go on. I knew Dave was going down. But you can’t save somebody …”
The Rockets did a sellout three-night farewell stand at Pine Knob.
“You know,” says Blackwell, “sometimes you’ll work certain projects and listen to an album that you worked with and figure ‘You know, this really wasn’t a good album.’ But you look back at the Rockets album and it was a classic.”
Not long after the Rockets broke up, Gilbert’s second wife took their 2-year-old daughter Jade and went into the garage of the Shelby Township house she shared with her father. She closed the garage door, climbed into the car and turned on the motor. Mother and daughter died.

Gilbert was conflicted, a man torn and suffering. With some Union Lake-area pals, he formed a bar band called Roadhouse, a bluesy outfit that mixed covers with tunes Gilbert had been writing. Gilbert was broke and living in the house he inherited from his parents.
Guitarist/singer Val Ventro was 14 when he met Gilbert on the video shoot for “Rollin’ by the Record Machine.” Ventro, a Rockets fan, wound up playing with Gilbert after Roadhouse collapsed in a haze of coke and booze.
Ventro and Gilbert formed a band, and Ventro gave Gilbert a job building docks. He says Gilbert would open a beer first thing in the morning. “But he never missed a day of work. He cracked everybody up all day.
“Gilbert at that point was full-blown into his addiction,” Ventro says. “And we were playing pretty steady as Dave Gilbert and Val Ventro. But I could see he didn’t have the spark. David hid shit like the coke. He didn’t want anybody to know.”
Ventro began doing cocaine too. He and Gilbert spiraled until Ventro himself lost everything. He remembers when Gilbert went from looking like the rock star he was to looking like a grandfather. “He changed overnight. Basically he was an old man with no teeth … jaundiced, his skin looked bad.”
Ventro eventually got off coke and helped Gilbert do the same.

David Lee Gilbert’s widow, Delores “Dee” Gilbert, sits at a table in her basement bedroom of the townhouse she shares with her sister and niece. Her blond bangs spring up from her lashes when she laughs about stories of Gilbert. Other times her eyes swell with tears and she breaks down. Gilbert is everywhere — his concho belt, his acoustic guitar and photos from his life. She’s smoking Marlboro reds, one after the other.
It’s been a year since Gilbert died of liver cancer — brought on by irreversible cirrhosis — and Dee’s been reliving his life. For the past few weeks she’s been bringing herself to listen to the little spoken-word tapes he made before his death. The tapes contain prayers, personal stories and little love notes to Dee. She’s been watching videos, the Rockets at Pine Knob for one. She laughs at the one where Gilbert is onstage in front of thousands sporting a black eye. She explains that he’d been punched in the face by a cop after he’d passed out in his car along a freeway.
She talks about Lynn Anne, Gilbert’s second wife. Lynn Anne’s “mother had died a couple of months prior to her suicide. She did a lot of drugs. She died in the car with Jade, had put the baby’s dolls in the car, everything. Jade was 2. She had received divorce papers from Dave the same day. Dave barely survived that. He was in so much pain.”
Dee and Gilbert had been friends for years when Lynn Anne and Jade died, though they were not yet a couple. Dee and Gilbert met at a bar in 1978 when she was 18. They had gone out a few times before Gilbert went back on the road with the Rockets. Dee would often take care of his father. They stayed good friends until falling in love for good in the mid-’80s.
Dee left Gilbert three times in the 15 years they were together. She tells how he had to get dentures because drugs had rotted his teeth. Once his free-basing got so severe that she left because she didn’t want to see him die.
“At one point David weighed like 80 pounds,” she says in a shaky rasp. “He barricaded himself in the bedroom and wouldn’t come out. There were hangers-on from the Rockets days that would bring coke over to be Dave’s friend. I fucking couldn’t take it and left. A month later he called me from rehab and said he wanted to live.” She pauses, chokes back tears and says, “I just fell to my knees.”
The lead singer of the Rockets went from playing stadiums and arenas to the hollow horrors of addiction and destitution.
“We were homeless more than once,” Dee says. She adds, in total understatement, “We overcame a lot of obstacles except the last one …
“After the Rockets broke up Dave had a lot of pain. Horrible things that were said about him always got back to him. But he never bad-mouthed anyone. He just moved on.”
In the post-Rockets years, Gilbert made many attempts to get clean, with some success. He got a regular job and worked his way up from $7 an hour to $20 an hour as a wall plasterer. He and Dee married in 1995 when things were going well.
During the sober stretches Dee became confident that they had a chance. “We were gonna buy a house, we bought the truck,” she continues. “His boss was gonna give him another chance. Dave wasn’t the arrogant rock star. He went out and worked a regular job and he loved it. After 20 years he started making child-support payments [to Valdez]. The people he worked with loved him ’cause he had that charisma, that charm. We had such beautiful times together. The times were best, just so good, when he was sober.”
But the relapses came in fits and starts. Came on fierce as a tornado, slow as a setting sun. Dee kept the faith.
“He kept all the pain to himself, all the stuff that went down with his wives, the band. But it would come out like you wouldn’t believe when he was drunk.”
Devon Stacy remembers visiting Gilbert when he lived in a trailer.
“He saw me and didn’t recognize me at first,” Stacy says. “Then he gave me a big hug. You know, he was just existing. But he was happy to see friends. He couldn’t believe I traced him down. At that point he was purposely avoiding people.”
Around 1998, Gilbert started waking up sick in the morning. He was drinking beer. He’d drink a lot of beer.
“One day he came home from work and I knew he was going to die,” remembers Dee. “Then he got sick and he couldn’t work anymore. He started turning colors. That’s when he was diagnosed with cirrhosis.”
Dee had seen the inside of emergency rooms more times than she’d care to remember. Gilbert went through rehab six times during the latter half of the ’90s.
“His DTs were so bad sometimes that he would be screaming in tongues. It scared the shit out of me. There was no family there. No friends. No fans. But that was OK. He wanted to live. He really wanted to give.
“When he was really sick Bee and McCarty were gonna come and see him. Dave just said he didn’t want to see them. He didn’t want to. He was proud and he didn’t want them to see him like that.”
In October 1999, fans and friends gathered at a benefit to raise money for Gilbert’s medical costs. All of the surviving Rockets (bassist Bobby Harrelson had died in a drug deal gone awry) showed up and played.
It was Ventro who got Gilbert clean. In January 2001, Gilbert entered the St. Jude retreat house in Hagaman, N.Y. He received financial help from Music Cares, a service designed to help musicians with no health insurance. Gilbert stayed sober six months until he died. He and Dee made a final trip to Nashville to stay with his old friend Dennis Robbins.
“He loved to watch movies,”
remembers Robbins. “And you wouldn’t think anything was wrong with him. He’d laugh and smile but, of course, he was weak. I tried to push him to sing a bunch, but we messed around a little bit, played around a little bit in my studio. It was just a time that I cherished. It was sacred to me.”
Dee recalls with hesitation Gilbert’s final moments in the emergency room: “I went in the bathroom because he was screaming in pain and I didn’t want him to see me crying. I came out and I apologized to him for crying. He said, ‘It’s OK. You’re a good woman. You honor me with your tears.’ That was the last thing he said to me before he died.”
Visit the Dave Gilbert tribute Web site at www.davidleegilbert.com.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Dennis DeYoung & Symphony Orchestra 8/28/09





An unseasonable, cold, damp August night acted like a wet blanket over the crowd at Pine Knob on Friday night Just like last nights show, a much larger crowd would have attended had the weather been more cooperative. No one wants to sit on the hill in the rain and 55 degrees! With this in mind, the crowd may have hit 3,500 tops. Only 3 people seen sitting on the hill after intermission.

As many of you have seen on PBS this month, Dennis DeYoung with a symphony is quite a magical listening experience. With this in mind, we asked momma Dogg & Poppa Dogg, Jamin Jamie Lee, the Amazing Scott, Volupsoous Virgie and Jammin Jamie Sr., to attend the show with us. Great seats in row ten eliminated the rain and coolness from the equation.

Dennis DeYoung proved himself to be a comsumate entertainer and showman! At 7:45 the band took the stage to Rockin in Paradise. At times the sympony seemed to be overwhellmed by the electric band, but overall they added to the experience. In quick succession they played Light Up, Desert Moon, and Grand Illusion. These were played and performed flawlessly. Throughout, Dennis traded quips and banter with the audience and band. After a meddley of a few more new songs, the first intermission closed with Castle Walls. The Dogg has never heard this most excellent song played by Styx or Dennis DeYoung before. It has long been a favorite of the Dogg & Jammin Jamie Sr., who unfortunately was on a beer run when it played.

The second intermission started where the first left off. Great singing, great arrangements, and an excellent band made for a super show. Suite Madam Blue, Babe, Fooling Yourself, , Show me the Way, Mr. Roboto, Best of Times, with a show stopping Come Sail Away completing the show.

Despite the weather, the crowd was enthusiastic and into the show from start to finish. We all rated this an excellent performance and a must see for any Styx fans.

Weather D-
Crowd B small but strong
Atmosphere C
Staging C
Sound A
Band A
Lighting C+

Overall a strong A_ show!

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Creed- 8/24/09 Pine Knob




When Creed first burst on the scene almost a decade ago, Scott Staph’s distinctive vocal sty lings and the bands powerful chops, led to mulit-platinum sales of their first 3 CD’s. In the early 2000’s, you could not listen to WRIF or WCSX for more than an hour, without hearing a Creed song. With this in mind, BLT and the Dogg were really looking forward to this show.

We were welcomed to a perfect weather night and a ¾ full house upon our arrival. Start the night with dinner and drinks with friends Paul & Jane in the Starlight. Note to Tom Wilson: please change the food on the buffet menu every couple of weeks. Either the men in the Chef’s hats are posers or there is a lack of imagination in menu planning. I don’t think the menu has changed in 5 years! For $20.00 we deserve some new and refreshing choices. Hire a Chef from one of the casinos and he’ll show you how to do a buffet. Dinner was fine and the drinks even better. Kudos’ to our server, Kelli. She was a perfect hostess for the night.

The 2 warm acts were no names and of no consequence. Listened to them both from the VIP lounge. Very weak and not a good way to set the tone for a great concert. Made to our seats about 8:50 and Creed came on around 9:00. You would think a band that has a new CD coming out Tuesday would likely play most of the new material. Creed did this and managed to fit in all the hits. In a fast paced hour and fifty minute show, we found the band to be tight and in good sound. We only wish we could say the same for Staph’s vocal prowess. Perhaps he was a bit under the weather, or maybe his recorded voice doesn’t translate as well live. In any event, the vocals were the weak link tonight. Overall the show was a sing along and the crowd in high spirits. A whole lot of fun for all. A great night, good show and good crowd makes the Dogg a happy, howlin Dogg.

Weather A
Atmosphere B
Crowd B
Staging B
Sound A-
Lighting B
Bands C
Set List B-

Overall strong B

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Peter Frampton 8/23/09


Due to the Dogg selling our tickets to Blink 182, Fall Out Boy, and Panic at the Disco, the Townesman was left to rot on the couch watching the Lions & Tigers lose. I was bummed all night thinking about what I was missing.

The lovely BLT, with best bud "Dancin" Debbie in tow, took forth to the Peter Frampton show at Meadowbrook, for a well deserved ladies night out. Despite an unseasonably cool August night, the ladies were surprized to see a near sell out crowd when they took their 2oth row , center seats. As usual, Frampton did not disappoint his fans. A set crammed with all his hits like Show Me the Way, Baby I love Your Way, I give you Money, Lines on my Face, and of course, Do you Feel Like we Do was played flawlessly, with great crowd response. A special treat was an accoustical set during the middle of the show. A cove of "Black Hole Sun" brought the house down! Throw in a couple of new songs, one of wich both gals described as a "yawner" about Winston Churchill.

At the end of the show, BLT & Deb both agreed they saw a very enjoyable night of classic rock. Both wished for the Frampton of 1976, with the long flowing locks of hair. But agreed he looks damn good for a 62 year old dude.

Weather C
Crowd B+
Atmosphere B+
Staging C
Lighting C+
Sound A
Bands B

Overall a strong B performance.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Ticket sales practices

The Dogg has grown fed up with the method of ticket sales to events over the past 5 years. Local fans are getting shut out of a legitimate chance for great seats, due to massive phone banks and computer banks buying tickets in bulk out of town, for resale by ticket brokers. The bands, promoters, and sponsers do not make any money off the resale of these tickets, so why do they stand by and do nothing? Are they too busy chasing the college student that freeloads of Limewire? This crap needs to stop! Here is what I propose.

1. Limit phone or computer ticket sales to zip codes within 100 miles of the venue for the first 24 hours of ticket sales.

2. Permit out-state and interstate sale after 24 hours of local sales.

3. Require all brokers pay 50% royalty of upcharges to the bands, management, and sponsers.

Perhaps these type of possible solutions might work. We local fans deserve to see our bands without resorting to third party piracy.

Today I was logged into both Ticketmaster and Live Nation with everything input (and am a memeber of both) at 9:59 AM for Bruce tickets at the Palace. Imagine, at 10:00 and 21 seconds I made contact and best available were near the back of the arena! Absolute bullshit I say!

What do you think can be done or should be done? Please add comments by clicking on the comment button below the post.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Crue Fest 8/15/09



Well as a long time fan of the Cru, I had high expectations for Crue Fest 2. There was plenty of good, some bad, and some just OK. Lets start off with the weather, IT WAS FUCKING INCDREDIBLY HOT & HUMID!!!! Sure its no ones fault, but 95 degrees and 80 percent humidity for an 8 hour festival was tough on this Dogg.

The show started on a bad note upon our arrival at the VIP entrance. 2/3 of our party had hill tickets and they were not permitting blankets or lawn chairs. Then we find out no cameras and heaven forbid if a woman was wearing a necklace with a large pendant. Believe it or not, they made numerous ladies take their jewelry back to the cars (you know many people are killed by necklaces these days). Of course security blames it on the Crue and turns out they were right. Security was real tight with pat downs on all entering the venue. They even opened my cigarette pack and smelled inside for any pre-rolled!

The main stage featured Drowning Pool, Theory of a Deadman, Godsmack, and the Crue. A second smaller stage was in the parking lot with Shram, Cavo, Rev Theory and a couple of others. Here are some of the second stage highlights:

When Shram was playing "Vinnie D" from Sponge joined them onstage and played Molly for an enthusiastic crowd of about 1,000. Rev Theory played a great rendition of NIN, Head like a Hole. Cavo rocked the house and was a true awakening for me. At one point the drummer had on an Obama mask while playing. He had to have been hot as hell. Thats it for the second stage highlights.

Main stage:Charm City Devils (did not see), Drowning Pool played an awesome set with plenty of energy. The lead singer even hopped into the pavillion during "Bodies". They may have been the best act I saw this night. Theory of a Deadman rocked it out. One of mine and BLT favorite new bands did not disappoint us. At one point Mick Mars brought Tyler Connolly a bottled water while he was singing. We did hear many complaints of poor sound on the hill, but from our 26th row dogghouse it sounded just fine. TOD was a great show. I've never liked Godsmack too much and they did nothing to improve their standing with the Dogg. Talented yes, artistic, well.... sometimes, showmanship, not much. Overamplified Bass.... hell yes and too much of it. This old Dogg had to retreat to the hill in order to keep my heart in my chest. They played all their best known stuff, like: Awake, Voodoo, Whatever, Keep Away. An excellent drum solo saved the day! You heard echoes of Tom Sawyer, Back in Black and War Pigs interwoven into the riffs.

Then onto Motley Crue. They fuckin sucked big time! Never heard or saw them play worse. Missed notes by Vince Niel, forgotten or incorrect lirics on a couple of obscure tracks from Dr. Feelgood (an over rated album if there ever was one). No Tommy Lee on drums? Seems he burned his left hand a couple of weeks ago playing with sparkelers. What a douche!!!! At least he came out and passed a couple of bottles of Jaegger around the pavillion. The Crue played the entire Dr. Feelgod album in its entirety. Made for a long set and many songs just did not work live in this Dogg's opinion. When they finished Dr. Feelgood album, the band broke for a long set change that had the crowd streaming for the exits. During my post show discussions, we did not hear one complimentary thing about tonights show! After about 25 minutes, the band returned to play Wild Side, Saints of LA, Shout at the Devil. The highlight of the set was Home sweet Home and Girls, Girls, Girls as the 2 encores.

As far as the Crue goes, they may be well past their prime and disappointed many in the crowd. Mick Mars looked like a corpse, Nikki Sixx looked like he was back on the needle, Vince Neil, well he just can't sing well anymore. The fill in drummer did his best, but the rythem section seemed off all night.

Weather D
Crowd B
Bands B
Staging B
Lighting B
Sound B
Atmosphere A

Overall C+ or B-. I think my review says it all.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Jimmy Buffet 8/13/09





Through the years many of the Dogg's friends have tried to get us to a Buffet show. The one thing that kept me from going is "I hate Jimmy Buffet's music"! Well.... since we have season tickets and the lovely BLT has always wanted to see him, maybe I should check it out. Virtually everyone that has told me about the shows, raved about the pre-party. Take it from this Dogg, Parrotheads know how to throw a party. We got there 4 hours before showtime to find the parking lot absolutely full of tents, canopys, campers and party buses. Elaborate set ups and props were the days order. Drinking in the open was not going on, but encouraged by Pine Knob Red shirts. I must admit, these were the nicest damn people we've ever partied with! Next year we are there by noon, and we will be better prepared. Oh yeah, there wwas a concert too.

The staging was a carryover from the parking lot, Key West North. Hell the weather fit too, 90 degrees and humid. Huge vidio screens on either side of the stage and an even larger one behind, depict various scenes from paradise known as Key West, as well as the band. The set list was predictable, but after a dozen Land Shark lagers, I found it more than tolerable. A super high energy crowd, that truly love all things Buffet made this a true sing along concert. After a short intermission, the band wrapped up with 6 more songs and an encore. No surprises in the set. Well played, well staged, and well received.

Weather B
Atmosphere A++
Pre party AAAA++++
Staging A
Sound A
Lighting C+
Band B
Set List B

Overall B for the concert and totally off the charts for the pre-party. Even if you can't get a ticket to the show, go and pre-party. You won't be disappointed.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Nickelback, Hinder & Papa Roach 8/12/09





Here was a show all in the Dogg pound were wating to see. Wednesday turned out to be the perfect weather day for a 4 band festival. Clear skies and about 82 at show time. Our partt consisted of the Dogg, BLT, Jamin Jamie, Amazing Scott, the Hawg and Rockin Marissa. Due to partying in the VIP, we missed Saving Abel, not too much of a loss, since we saw them warm up Nickelback this winter.

At about 6:45, Papa Roach threw down a furious set, full of energy and four letter expletives. Frontman Jacoby Shaddix had it going on and had some serious interplay with the crowd. I was amazed that throughout their set, the entire pavillion and hill were on their feet. After a fast paced 45 minute set, it was back to the VIP for more cocktails.

At just past 8:00, Hinder took the stage and just throughly kicked ass. Strong sound, great guitar work, a steady rythem section, and the perfect rock vocals of Austin Winkler, kept things pumping all set. Excellent staging and lighting for a warm up act. The crowd embraced all the songs and rocked out for 1 hour. A truly must see band!

At 9:15 Nickelback took the stage and the crowd was in a frenzy! Pine Knob was rockin like only a sold out, outdoor venue can. After 3 crashing blasts of pyro, the show is on! Chad Kroeger may have talked a little too much, but the 17 song set kept the pacing moving on. All the hits, a few rather obscure tracks, and a cover of Highway to Hell (sang by Hinders Austin Winkler and Papa Roach's Jacoby Shaddix flawlessly) was the highlight for the Dogg. The lighting was incredible, the pyro, fantastic, and the energy of the band was high octane all set. The sound was spot on. One funny scene was when the t-shirt slingshot team misfired and shot the holder right in the ass. By 11:00, we were a crowd that was drained and ready for more still. The final song concluded at 11:10. A perfect night with a perfect show. It gets no better than this! Next up Jimmy Buffet tomorrow.

Crowd A+
Atmosphere A+
Bands A+
Sound A
Lighting A+
Effects A
Staging A+
Weather A+

Overall an A+ concert experience. If you've never seen Nickelback live, you must put them on your short list.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Moody Blues 8/9/09


When I last saw the Moody Blues perform it was probably in the mid 90's, and those guys were "old" then. Circa 2009, these fine musicians are like a wine that has matured to its fullest flavor and aged near perfect. With 3 of 4 original members + an excellent female flutist, acoustic guitar, harmonica, and keyboard player, along with 2-3 extra keyboardist/percussionists. Put 8 excellent musicians on one stage with today's technological innovations in sound/lighting/mixing, and you have near recorded quality sound. If only we had shut our eyes so we didn't know they were pushing 70 years old. This was confirmed when John Lodge told the crowd that he first played with his mates 50 years ago Sunday!

After a few drinks in the VIP and a light dinner, the Dogg & BLT proceeded to our seats to watch the show. Sunday was a very hot, muggy Michigan day, with temps around 94 at show time. As expected, the crowd was primarily 40-70 years old, the pavilion was full and the hill 2/3rds full. I loved watching all the fine dressed ladies of Oakland County attend their first show in years, only to find out their cheap ass husbands bought $5.00 dollar lawn tickets. These babes just spent money on getting their hair done, make up painted on, and were dressed accordingly. Well...right after we took our seats, the skies erupted with all of God's power! Rain fell so hard that the hill had rivers flowing within 15 minutes. The wind blew so hard, we got wet 20 rows into the pavilion! What a hoot! All these finer older ladies soaking wet, make up running down their cheeks, and the high heels sinking with every step! The Dogg loved every minute of it. Who needs a warm up act when you have this side show to watch. Hell of an impromptu "wet- T- shirt" contest.

Oh yeah, there was a concert too. It was overall an enjoyable 2 hour show. The music was excellent sounding, the lights OK, but something was lacking. I know what it was, it was the ability to move around and connect with the crowd. It is the lack of current relevance that was missing. It was spontaneity of action. What I'm saying is, the band seemed to just go through the motions. No excitement (other than the weather), no interplay with the crowd, nothing new to report musically. They played all the hits, Nights in White Satin, Tuesday Afternoon, I'm Just a Singer in a Rock & Roll Band, etc. Played them well, but once again, something was missing!

Crowd B
Atmosphere B-
Sound A
Lighting B
Staging C
Weather E (but fun to watch)
Bands B

Overall performance C+

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

The Dogg's top ten concerts so far this year!


I was sitting back this weekend having a cold adult beverage with some of my favorite young people. The Amazing Scott, Jammin Jamie, rappers Cam & Chris, and the ever present, Kristin and I were discussing the Detroit area music scene, now and from 20 years ago. This discussion covered various venues, both open and closed, national artists and local bands. In inevitably, the question came up: "What were the best shows you've seen this year"? A few came right to mind, but a little thought and searching the somewhat fuzzy memory banks. Here are the Detroit Rock Dogg's top ten picks through August1, 2009.

1. J Geils Band at the Fillmore. Never thought I'd see them play live again. Never thought they could come close to the energy they used to play with. I was wrong! Not only did they play 2 sold out nights in their adopted home town, but the sound and energy were equal to the heyday of Geils.

2. Coldplay at Pine Knob. As stated in one of my postings, I've never been a fan of Coldplay. The lovely BLT has been after me for years to go to "her kind of shows too". Well.... after the Dogg saw Coldplay in person, my opinion has totally changed. A truly awesome show.

3. Nickelback at Joe Louis. We got last minute floor seats to the Saturday show and were very excited since we'd never seen Nickelback before. Rocked out 50' from the stage and saw a true great live show.

4. Elton John & Billy Joel at the Palace. BLT and I traded 2 seats in our suite for Aerosmith to our friends Lou and Carla for 2 great seats to this sold out show. Both performers were in rare form and no concert goer left without hearing what they wanted. Another truly great show!

5. Styx, REO, .38 Special at Pine Knob. If only Styx had won the coin flip to headline, this would have been a top 4 show. As it was (and as written in my Blog), this was as fine a triple header as one could want. Throw in perfect weather and it sure doesn't get much better!

6. Led Zeppelin Symphony at Pine Knob. In a huge surprise to me, I can find no fault in this show. Part of the ranking was the group of people we were with (16), another part the weather (perfect), and lastly (and for those who have never seen this show) the band, show and lighting are absolutely great. If you love Zeppelin then you'll love this show!!!

7. Kid Rock & Lynrd Skynrd at Comerica Park. The weather was not good, the sound was spotty, the sight lines sucked, yet this show makes the top ten? Yessir, the thing about stadium shows is the spectacle. This one did not disappoint. Where we sat, the sound was acceptable and the pyro awesome! The set list was varied and great.

8. Dave Matthews Band at Pine Knob. Another great crowd, the weather turned out to be pretty decent, the band rocked and the staging was excellent. Another great show to see.

9. Bad Company & Doobie Bros. at Pine Knob. How can you go wrong when 2 of the biggest and best selling acts of the 70's and 80's team up. Bad Company reunites for a 14 show tour (first in over 10 years) and absolutely rocks the house. Doobies were their usual splendid musician and vocal masters. We left totally fulfilled.

10. Incubus at Pine Knob. This show left us gasping for air. Great sound, super high energy crowd, great weather and most of all a band that plays as if they love it still. Could have been a top 5 show had they had a better light show and staging.

There you have it, the top ten shows we've seen so far in 09. I may have missed one or two, but this mind isn't what it used to be.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Dave Matthews Band

The concert season is getting bigger and better with each passing day. Another night at the Knob for the Dogg & BLT. Another assholes to elbows sellout. The weather looks frightful to start the night (its a Dave Matthews tradition to get soaked at the Knob), but the temp is good and the crowd is partying hard in the parking lot. From car to car, all one hears is the sound of Matthews CD's blaring, young people playing frisbee or hacki-sack, and overall high spirits. This is some great atmosphere!

The warm up act, "Old Crow Medicine Show" is very talented, but better suited for Nashville, not Detroit. 2 Banjo players, a stand up bass, a fiddle, and a piano is all there is to this act. Made me feel like an extra from Deliverance! Not bad, but who wants to squeal like a pig? They play before a sparse crowd of maybe 4,000. Other than 3-4 couples dancing in the pavilion, no one seemed to care. After all we are here to see DAVE!!!

At approx 8:30, Dave Matthews takes the stage and the power and crowd are amped up exponentially. The stage contains vertical, 30' tall LCD screens on either side of the band, with approx. 800 pot lights overhead and behind the band. A visual extravaganza only matched by near perfect sound. After the bands plays a couple of tracks from the latest album, its on to old favorites like Satellite, Stay, Crush, So Much to Say, Crash Into Me, Too, much, etc. The highlight for me was when they ripped into the Talking Heads "Burning Down the House"! They PLAYED IT AS WELL OR BETTER THAN THE ORIGINAL!!!! The band plays on to nearly 11:00 PM. The end to a perfect night comes at the Starlight, dancing with 150 fans while waiting for traffic to clear.

Atmosphere A
Staging A
Weather C+
Crowd A+
Bands C+
Lighting B
Staging B

Overall B+. An excellent show that left us all pretty darn happy.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Incubus & Duke Spirit 7/26/09




Another night at Pine Knob full of drinks and music. After another rainy day and a night that looked threatening, the rock gods smiled on Pine Knob again. A crisp, clear night for those on the hill to enjoy.

First up was a band we've never heard of, "Duke Spirit". Fronted by a sassy, barefoot blonde, the band was tight and played theirs hearts out. The sound is kinda unique, but seems to my ear to be a blend of Blondie, The Committments, and Garbage. The band played a 40 minute set of songs no one has heard, but the crowd was responsive to them and seemed to enjoy the energy. We are here to see Incubus, so it would take a strong warm up band to steal their thunder. While they were not an awesome band by any stretch, they were entertaining and the 40 minutes went by fast.

By the time Incubus went onstage at 8:50, Pine Knob was packed to overflowing. It was a very young crowd, averaging perhaps 22-23 years old. The Dogg and BLT felt as if we were the oldest people in the venue. No matter, we can rock it out with the pups any day, any time!

Incubus played a long, loud and tight set. The stage was a stripper! Virtually no effects, limited lighting, and for the most part, a blank backdrop. True rock greatness, stripped of the visual trappings makes us focus on the music and crowd. Both of which were superb. From the first note until the final encore, everyone was on their feet, jammin to the sounds of one of the best touring bands around. Every song we wanted was played to perfection and even the most jaded fan can't complain about a 2 1/2 hour set with no breaks. This band has taken the top "hard rock" concert of the year from NIN/Janes Addiction. This was simply an awesome show. If you missed it, make sure to put Incubus on your must see list.

Weather B
Crowd A+
Staging C
Lights C
Sound A
Atmosphere A
Bands B-

Overall, a thoroughly entertaining night and a great performance by Incubus.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

The Fray & Jacks Mannequin Pine Knob

Let me start out by proclaiming "I hate The Fray"!!!! If it wasn't for the lovely BLT wanting to go (she has both CD's in regular rotation in her car) I'd have stayed home and rearranged my sock drawer. Never heard of Jacks Mannequin either. When you know the show will suck before they even start, what do you do but drink! At least the weather is nice. About 80 degrees and sunny, not too shabby.

After numerous Jack and Cokes and more than a few Jaegger Bombs, the show starts with an excellent opening set by Jacks Mannequin. This band has a lot of Coldplay, a little Incubus, and a little Sublime in their sound. The piano player/lead singer rocks it out in a similar manner to Chris Martin of Coldplay. The set lasts an 1 and 20 minutes. They made a fan today.

When the Fray came on, they lived up to my expectations. They sucked big time. Every song sounds the same and after 4-5 songs, I wanted to end it all! Then the one and only highlight, "How to Save a Life" was played flawlessly, with the crowd sing along at full tilt. After that more boredom. So bad I started counting tiles in the ceiling, then the number of pot lights. Crowd was so "yuppy" that I almost bought stock in "Enron".

If this was the only concert you see live this year, you'd be better off staying home and watching re-runs of Leave it to Beaver!

Weather B
Crowd C
Staging C
Lights C
Atmosphere C
Band selection A for da Mannequin and E for Fray

Coldplay Pine Knob

The Dogg must confess that he is not much of a Coldplay fan. I've always seen them as a "chick" band and one whose songs all sound pretty much the same. Since they were included in our season ticket package, I went with no expectations whatsoever. It was a nice late spring night and the VIP was in full swing an hour before showtime. After holding court in the Starlight, the Townespeople headed to our seats. As we were seated, we noticed a small 8x 8 platform at the end of our row. Looked like a stand for a spotlight. Once seated, we noticed 2 other platforms. One was at the far right of the Pavilion and the other in the middle of the hill. At once the Dogg knew the band would be leaving the stage at least three times.

They lead off with a huge curtain back lit in a soft yellow with an ever increasing crescendo of sound emanating from behind the curtain. Then back lit silhouettes about 20 feet tall assumed their positions and instruments. Then huge yellow balloons approx 4' in diameter started falling from the rafters and from behind the hill. One really cool trick was the band was superimposed upon the balloons with lasers and the faces were animated. As soon as you went to catch the balloon, the light went off and the band whipped into "Yellow". The Dogg was yelping and barking like a wolf in heat. These guys know how to jam!

The set was in full speed: Clocks, the Scientist, LaVida Loca, and numerous more instantly recognizable songs. Fantastic lighting, lasers, smoke, and insane piano playing by Chris Martin. I am sold! This band is bl;owing me away. Just when I think it can get no better, the band takes position 8 seats from us and plays 2 acoustic songs. Their is a young lad, Brian, age 16 that is at his first show and what a show to see first. The Dogg quickly takes him under wing and tells him to follow me when I get up. The band returns to the stage for a couple of songs, then its off to the far right platform to get up close again. The band plays "I'm a believer" by the Monkee's and we all sing the chorus. After 2 quick songs, The Dogg with the young pup in tow, book it up the hill for another 2 songs up close. Me and the pup rocked it out big time!

Another hour of jams and 2 encores leaves the Dogg & BLT a little spent, but ready for more. All that's left is some dancing in the Starlight so traffic can clear. The crowd is unanimous: we just witnessed a perfect rock show! The Dogg is now a fan for life!

Weather B+
Crowd A+
Staging A++
Lights A
Sound A+
Atmosphere A+

The Dogg and BLT say this was the show of the year and one of the overall top 5 shows we've seen. If you have not seen Coldplay live, then make it a priority. If you are not a fan now, you will be when you leave.