Seems the New Yorkers on here are doing quite a good impression of a sleeping NYC thoughBooslham wrote:WHAT'SSSSS UP NEW YORK????
The City that never sleeps..... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thanks for the pics and the review, davedecay!
Seems the New Yorkers on here are doing quite a good impression of a sleeping NYC thoughBooslham wrote:WHAT'SSSSS UP NEW YORK????
The City that never sleeps..... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I am in complete agreement with DaveDecay, as it goes. Great gig, loadsasmoke, shame the 2 a**holes behind us decided to have a bitchfight at the end.Booslham wrote:Hey....You EvilBastard! So you come on here... to tell everyone that it was nice seeing them last night?????? No reviews... No set list... not a word about the show??? The New York Attitude... Ladies and gentlemen, Boys and Girls!!! It goes perfectly with the smell...
I've read the reviews but could someone please post last night's setlist?Methedrome wrote:Do you have a setlist?
That's racist, innit! My shirt is as beige as my soul!EvilBastard wrote:Fabulous to see some of you last night - don't be strangers now, y'hear, specially that preppy Corpy
Well, it's always been a problem with goth events. They just don't wanna ruin their hair style. My little brother saw Christian Death Valor circa 97 : the show was okay but those damn' dark little things in the audience just wouldn't show one tiny bit of emotion. You gotta look all intense, you see ?spug17 wrote:One thing that always upsets me is the crowds at these types of shows (that feature a high goth contingent).
While the crowd last night provided ample cheering and applause, the enthusiasm during songs was sort of drab -- people were barely moving. Hell, there was one person next to me that barely bopped her head or moved a hair -- i never even saw her clap or crack a smile.
spug,spug17 wrote:Sir, you've summed up my thoughts even better - i wholeheartedly agree!
but damnit, i couldn't even find the merch table! which sucks, cuz i've wanted a Sisters shirt for the past 8 years now.
Someone mentioned in another thread that they would like to see the hipsters adopt The Sisters as they have Joy Division. It would be nice to have less of a goth contingient. Nothing against them. They are his bread and butter and, for the most part, very snappy dressers. I just think it would warm Andy's heart to look out and not see a sea of black. For my part, I wore blue jeans, white sneakers and a grey sweater over a bright red tee shirt which peeked out through the collar. To be fair, in my younger days I've been known to don the black and do the old punch/kick at The Bank, and I'll always remember those days fondly. I still love the classic goth and new wave bands, but the scene has gotten way too insular, and I usually try to do my best to look as ungoth as possible, especially at shows of bands who tend to draw a gothy crowd.bismarck wrote: The crowd went wild after the first song. I had my doubts about this crowd: it was about 1/4 fully goth, with makeup and crushed velvet and the works, about 1/4 long-haired rock and roll fans, and about 1/2 normal people like myself. But they were very tame during The Warlocks. Now they livened up a bit.
Is Crash and Burn the song that almost sounds a bit like KMFDM? If that is the one, I really did like it alot.The first "new" song, Crash and Burn. confused the crowd a bit but it's such a stormer that people started moving and dancing anyway. In my opinion it's the 2nd best of the new songs, and I was thrilled (if unsurprised) to hear it. Chris does the backing vocals and his voice is excellent - maybe te best backing vocal the band has yet had. But more about the new boys later.
Why does it seem to be the case that the Sisters seem to draw a few bad elements to every show? Every time I've seen them since 1997, while the crowd is generally good, there always seems to be a few unruly or violent types. At Roseland a few years back, this one bald guy in a black leather "Cenobite" type fetish skirt thought it was fun to slap women in the back of the head. He was told to cut the crap several times before eventually, it turned ugly and somebody hit back. The same guy drunkenly fell up the stairs leading out of the venue at the end of the show, taking several people down with him. I'd expect this kind of idiocy at a Motley Crue, Ozzfest or one of those bad Brooklyn metalcore shows, but I thought The Sisters would attract a slightly more refined crowd. I'm don't mean it should be lifeless, I just mean I'm surprised at the violence I've experienced and that I've read about here.Between the sets a small fight broke out in the very center of the front rail as a very large fellow pushed his way to the front. He angered some effete goths (and would've angered me, too, with that behavior), but he stayed there anyway and spent to two encores belting out the lyrics to all the songs and shouting, "We need a new Sisters' album!!" Andy passed his ubiquitous bottle of red liquid to this guy after the first encore, which he then proceeded to drink all of.
It actually sounded better to me than many of the shows I'd seen in the recent past. My first time seeing the Sisters was at Dark Harvest in 1997 and they sounded good at the Electric Factory. But then I saw them a few times at Roseland and the sound was aweful. So compared to that, it was better than I expected. I was in the back for most of the show and then moved to the side bar. It really sounded fine to me after what was, I will agree, a shaky start. Maybe I just got used to it though. Or maybe I'm just getting old, and the volume was just right for me?Unfortunately the sound problems were never remedied and the entire show seemed to me as if it was played on "5" when it ought to have been played at "10" (or "11"). This, to me, was a HUGE disappointment. I have been vacillating about going to see the band play Philly tomorrow, but I think I will go in the hopes that they can get the sound right this time. This is rock and roll: we want it f**king LOUD please! We want to hear our ears ring for days afterwards!