Roadtrips
Worcester's Locobazooka was catering to nü-metal tastes several years
before it was popular for MTV and "alternative" radio stations to do so, and
thus the festival has been ahead of the game in booking the genre's major
artists -- regular attendees of the annual day-long festival have been treated
to Kid Rock, Limp Bizkit, and Godsmack before they were famous. This year
Locobazooka's got another of metal's breakout acts in P.O.D., whose
major-label debut, The Fundamental Elements of Southtown (Atlantic),
taught everyone how to say "Christian Rage Against the Machine." Also on the
bill: returning scrunge heroes Days of the New, a complete set of
new-crop industro-metal bands (Apartment 26, Dope,
Ultraspank, Disturbed), Fred Durst signees Cold (who look
like Manson and sport a singer who really, really sounds like Gavin Rossdale),
Brit rap-metalers One Minute Silence, and a small army of New England
'burb-rock hopefuls. (Perennial 'bazooka local-stagers Gangsta Bitch Barbie,
however, won't be on the bill this year -- they're on the West Coast recording
their debut for the Beastie Boys' label, Grand Royal.) That's at Green Hill
Park (617-423-6398) in Worcester this Sunday. The Palladium hosts an after party
that night with Eastcide and Colepitz; it'll also have a
Saturday-night warm-up gig with corpse-painted newcomers Mudvayne,
Nothingface, Amen, Relative Ash, and Factory 81.
Consumer alert: don't be fooled by the club ads you've been seeing around town.
The band Me First who're showing up in New England this weekend are
not the Fat Wreck Chords punk-rock pick-up band Me First and the Gimme
Gimmes, who perform loud-fast-rules versions of songs by James Taylor, Paul
Simon, Elton John, Barry Manilow, Neil Diamond, and John Denver. Instead, it's
a different Me First (no Gimmes): these guys have been plying garage punk on
Sympathy for the Record Industry for the past five or six years. Which means
they might still be good -- but probably nowhere near as much fun as those
other Me Firsts -- when they play Lilli's (617-591-1661) in Somerville on Wednesday
and the Green Room (401-351-7665) in Providence next Thursday (the 21st). At
least the house band at Lilli's, a band called Rock Bottom, play Gimmes-style
sets of '70s hits. But the main gig of Rock Bottom's rhythm section is the
Upper Crust, the aristocratic trust-fund brats who do the minuet to
Ramones- and AC/DC-style hard rock. The Crust are out in force this month with
some regal rocking at Lilli's on Friday and the Green Room on Saturday.
Neo-country's top-billed superstar hubby-and-wife team, Tim McGraw and
Faith Hill, bring Nashville family values to a sold-out Worcester
Centrum (617-931-2000) on Sunday; Tina Turner (in what's been billed as her
final New England appearance) and Joe Cocker bring old-fashioned
gutbucket rock and soul to a sold-out FleetCenter (617-931-2000) on Wednesday; and
mmmboppin' teens Hanson, who've traded commercial success for a modicum
of critical respect, play a sold-out Orpheum Theatre (617-931-2000) next Thursday
(September 21).
-- Carly Carioli
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