It was a chilly summer night in Berwick and the rain
was coming down in bucketloads, but that didn't stop a packed house at
Peppers Plex Arena from welcoming back FIREHOUSE (whose members hail
from Brazil, Virginia, the Carolinas, and Lock Haven Pennsylvania!) to
Pennsylvania for the first time in almost four years !
I didn't see much of openers KATSU due to the fact that my girlfriend
spilled her drink all over her pants two songs into the show and we had
to go out and dry them with the heater in the van (true story, I
swear!), but we did witness ROUGHHOUSE entertain us with material from
both their late 80's Columbia self titled release as well as favorites
from the old TEEZE days which some around here may remember. Titles such
as "Hellraiser", "Somewhere, Someway", and "Party Hardy" sounded just as
vibant today right alongside tunes like "Teeze me Pleeze Me" and "Love
or Lust", both CDs being set for re-release by the reunited band later
this year. The reunion includes all original members (Luis Rivera, Dave
Weakley, Greg Malack, and Mike Natalini) with the exception of Rex Eisen
who is currently a member of Static X and formerly of Dope. The show was
a veritable time warp back to the late 80s and the crowd enjoyed every
minute of it.
FIREHOUSE first burst onto the national
music scene in 1990 with their self-titled debut double platinum debut
CD, riding the tail end of the over-crowded 80s hair band wave. While
they certainly looked the part of the 80's hair-rock god at the time,
that's where the similarity ended.unlike many of their contemporaries of
the time, FIREHOUSE were a band of style and substance, clearly
surpassing their hair-band predecessors in musical and vocal precision
and certainly exceeding the lowering standards being set by the early
90's alterna-rock "grunge" movement. In fact, they emerged victorious
over all of them by garnering a 1991 American Music Award and to this
day maintain a successful career as an international hit-making touring
act in places such as Southeast Asia and Japan. America, however, wasn't
so kind and time was their greatest enemy. Had they hit it big a few
years earlier they may have become mega-stars like Bon Jovi and Def
Leppard, but changing trends (people no longer cared about hooks, melody
and perfectly layered vocal harmonies) forced the band underground and
into smaller clubs to play basically to whomever decided to show up.
But that didn't stop them from firing on
all cylinders this particular night in Berwick , Pennsylvania. About
11:30 the lights went down and the familiar "Rock on the Radio" intro
from the self titled FIREHOUSE CD rang through the PA signaling the
arrival of none other than FIREHOUSE. This is an admittedly biased
review because it is no secret that FIREHOUSE is my favorite band; not
only do they in my opinion have the greatest and most dynamic lead
vocalist ever in CJ Snare but they remain the tightest and most accurate
live unit I have ever witnessd, capable of reproducing every lick and
four part vocal harmony from their recordings with ease - and without
the benefit of samplers or tracked vocals. Along with the anticipated
favorites such as opener "Lovers' Lane", "Shake and Tumble", "All She
Wrote" , and "Don't Treat Me Bad", they wowed us with their
interpretation of "We' re An American Band" with Snare sharing vocal
duties in a trade off with guitarist Bill Leverty, who was sporting a
"Killer Dwarfs" T-shirt (talk about a blast from the past!).
Brazilian-born new bassist Dario Seixas proved he had what it takes to
succeed two other dynamite bassists before him by providing all the high
harmony vocal work, delving into some slap-bass funk work, and
displaying some flashy guitar strap strangling techniques a'la
Cinderella ! Drummer Michael Foster held down the fort and not only sang
his heart out, but treated us to a drum solo in tandem with Leverty and
Seixas following an extended blues jam at the conclusion of "Don 't Walk
Away" , giving Snare some breathing space to come out and nail what has
to be the longest high note ever recorded on the intro to the rocker
"Overnight Sensation". (and unlike some vocalists, he didn't shorten it
live!) Snare also demonstrated his ivory tickling abilities on ballads
"When I Look Into Your Eyes" and "Love of a Lifetime" as well as
providing an atmospheric texture on "Hold Your Fire", the title track
from their second album.
New material was present as well in "Take It Off", a sexy groove song
from 2000s "O2" sounding comfortable alongside the 1990 classic "Shake
and Tumble", providing the many scantily dressed "80s chicks" in
attendance the required sexual energy ! Instead of leaving the stage and
coming back for an encore, the band played right through and ended the
show with "Reach for The Sky" and the mandatory "Don't Treat me Bad"
before coming back ten minutes later, as promised, and hanging out with
everyone in attendance, signing items and posing for pictures in the
process, something more bands should try because obviously it's what
keeps people coming back time and time again.
Styles may have changed and trends may have come and gone, but
this is a band that has remained true to themselves and deserves to be
supported, if for no other reason than their dedication, precision, and
commitment to their fans. You could sense a genuine appreciation that
these guys have for the people who still stick with them through thick
and thin, and Snare commanded the mic with the assurance of a frontman
who knows where's he's been, where he comes from (he made no bones about
saying it loud and clear.Lock Haven, PA !) and hopefully where he's
going.and most importantly, he knows who the people are that put him on
that stage in the first place..the fans ! All four members clearly
understand this through their willingness to meet and greet "everyone in
the building until they kick us out!" whether they have a backstage pass
or not.
At a Firehouse show, EVERYONE has a backstage pass!
http://www.firehousemusic.com
Copyright 2003, BallBuster, The Official
Int'l Underground Hard Music Report