The Capital Times MUSIC Monday, October 5,1998 jj I Koßn, family give Philadelphia new concept of values „ . „ . breath, Ice Cube, accompanied with a half Staff Writer dozen grim reapers, pumped up the crowd. He didn’t miss a bass-thumping beat. People When I say family values, what do you were more than satisfied with his perfor think? Church on Sundays, respect your el- mance. Just when you thought it was over.. ders, Thanksgiving at grandma’s? Well, not .it wasn’t. Believe it or not he covered tracks any more! When I say family values, I’m talk- from his old crew, NWA, by rocking the mike ing about Orgy, Rammstein, Ice Cube, Limp with “Straight Outa Compton” and “F* *k the Bizkit and Koßn. On Sept. 26 at the First Police.” I was surprised to see the building Union Spectrum in Philadelphia, 15,000-plus still standing when it was all done, gathered to witness, in my opinion, the best Shortly after, Germany’s Rammstein was tour ever put together. up. I’ll tell you this much, you don’t need to Promptly at be a fan to be 7:00 p.m., knocked off Orgy took the your feet by stage. Their these guys, hard-core About two sound defi nitely gave the crowd a good warming up. Ten minutes after that, Limp Bizkit took over. The cur- tains opened to Photo by Jesse Gutierrez strea ms of reveal a flying Ra main’sfead singer brings new meaning to the term sparks sprayed saucer that had enfuego. from his boots, apparently crash landed on the set. But have while lasers shot from the stage soared above no fear, no one was hurt. When the hatch the crowd. opened the band made their way on to the That leaves one more band . . . room for stage. These aliens did no anal probing. No five more dudes. Jonathan Davis, Fieldy sir, they fed the crowd with what they wanted. Snuts, Munky, Head and David .. . better “Counterfeit”, “Nobody Loves Me”, “Stuck” known as Koßn. I don’t have the words, and of course their version of “Faith” were These guys were so amped, so intense. There cranked. Along with songs from Three Pol- was no turning back. Opening with “It’s On!”, lar Bill. YallS. Fred Durst and his crew cov- they never stopped. They covered all their ered an old Ministry track, “Thieves.” bases. Along with “Got the Life”, “Dead Bod- Before the crowd had time to catch their ies Everywhere”, “BBK” and “Justin.” Ice THE CHAMELEON CLUB presents... "with. Solution AD featuring 70's and 80's on Tue Oct. 27 Dance Music with DJ Freeze 7*Qn nm at 10 p.m on Fri., Oct. 30. at 7.du pm Under 21, $5; 21+ $3 All ages welcome, Come in costume and win cost is $lO prizes!!! MAKE YOUR OWN HOURS Sell Kodak Spring Break ‘99 Trips HIGHEST COMMISSION - LOWEST PRICES NO COST TO YOU Travel FREE including food, drink & non-stop parties!!! WORLD CLASS VACATIONS 1998 STUDENT TRAVEL PLANNERS “TOP PRODUCER” 1-800-222-4432 Cube joined them on stage as well to per form “Children of the Koßn.” Fans of clas sic Koßn were not deprived either as the band ripped up the stage with “Twist”, “Blind”, “Ball Tongue”, “Faget” and “Shoots and Ladders” (Yes, Jonathan was on the bagpipes) The end of the show was, without a doubt, something every individual should wit- , Field Tour is still on the road, ness before they go to the,r „ h , heirm w„h more dates to be an boring grave. After exiting, nounced. Fuel show hits home crowd minutes into the first song, the man on the microphone burst into flames. As if Fuel has one of those names that seems to However, when guitarist Carl Bell an have been developed by recording company nounced with the kinetic fretting of his gui- A&R people to facilitate use of the cliche in tar, the familiar radio-play tunes such as concert reviews. For example, “Fuel was on “Bittersweet”, “Shimmer”, and, especially fire” or “Fuel ignited the crowd” or “Fuel “Mary Pretends”, this sonic youth crowd burned down the house.” Well not me. No moved as one mass, giving themselves over siree, you won’t find this reviewer falling to the group and allowing the rhythm to per prey to the easy literary out. Rather, let me meate their souls. Yes, these are the sonic say the Fuel/Badlees con- that wasn’t enough, cert Sept. 16 at the York Fair, was a spirited exhi bition of youth dynamism accentuated by Shellyian (Percy) lyrics and lofty chorale movements and an appreciating, if not ebullient, audience of 2,500 obviously loyal afi cionados. Take that you A&R guys. Fuel, which calls Harris burg it’s home, made a re turn to this area after a successful concert tour, and just days after their hit album, Sunburn, was cer tified gold for sales over 500,000 units. And what a show this was. Whereas many acts who perform in the outdoor environs of the York Fairgrounds are usually operating on an uninspired autopilot (most geriatric-rock acts are notorious for this), Fuel’s performance was anything but paint-by-the-numbers. And from my vantage at ground zero in the mosh-pit, this event was a longtime coming for the concert-disadvan taged Yorkians. To be sure, they played their hits, but it was the performance of their less known B-side works that carried the night. In works such as “Walk the Sky”, “Sunburn”, and “Jesus or Gun”, Fuel exhibited their unique brand of balladeer-punk stylistics. Until you’ve seen and heard singer/guitarist Brett Scallions in concert, it is truly hard to believe anyone could ever vocally control the punk-scream for pop-culture ears yet he does it with remarkable skill. And what Scallions lacks in charisma, he makes up for in a refreshing By Victor Viser For The Cap Times Fuel guitarist and vocalist, Brett Scallions, puts on a show for the York Fair concert crowd. the stage went into motion. It slowly spun around. To reveal what? To reveal both Koßn and Limp Bizkit all of them, on one stage at the same time! Together, they Photo by Jesse Gutierrez sincerity, almost bordering on politeness, which directly connects with his no-frills just-give-me-the-music audience. from the great concert guitarists of the '6os and 70s Page, Townsend, Trower and especially, I would venture to say, Lifeson of Rush. Along with the sub stantial and precise bot tom rhythm provided by bassist Jeff Abercrombie and drummer Kevin Miller, Scallions and Bell moved through a repertoire of Fuel club hits, including “Ozone”, “Song for You”, and “Hideaway”, as well as a couple of untitled tunes, all leading to their encore a frenetic, double-time ren dition of the Beatles’, “Revolution”. But this was not the first Beatles’ tune of the night. For the opening act, the Badlees (too bad about their record company fiasco), Photo by Victor Viser after their own inspired performance of hits and works, played the Beatles’, “When the Rain Comes”, as their own encore. I must say, while Fuel’s Beatles was great to see, the Badlees’ Beatles was even better to hear. Imagine. Two Beatles tunes by two popu lar bands in the same concert. Are we post modern, or what? More about the socio-ritu alistic masculine mosh-pit culture in another installment. Victor Viser is a Humanities- Communications professor at PSH. closed the show with “All in the Family”, a back and fourth rage session be- tween Fred Durst and Jonathan Davis. The Koßn Family Values youth in a very real sense. And Fuel re sponded filling each and every work with atten- tion to detail that was at once immediately en gaging and fluidly dy namic. There is no doubt, Bell draws influence