Crud World Domination Enterprises give you
ARCH
ENEMY
THROWDOWN
STRAPPING YOUNG LAD
Coal Exchange, Cardiff,
Reviewed by Katy Rees
Having missed last year’s ‘Swedish
Apocalypse’ I for one was delighted to
find that Arch Enemy were finally able to
play a gig in Wales. The
excitement had been growing even before
people were being let in to the Coal
Exchange and slowly but steadily reached
fever pitch. But before the Swedes
could blow us away (almost literally!)
with their performance, we were
treated to support by Throwdown and then
Strapping Young Lad. I had never
heard either of these two bands before but
they were both very impressive.
Throwdown pleased the crowd with their
cover of Pantera’s ‘A New Level’ and
SYL’s Devin Townsend was amazing, growling
one minute, then screeching, then
even wailing melodically throughout his
set. It almost made up for his
constantly insulting the crowd and singing
his own praises, and I still
don’t know whether or not he meant any of
it?
The mood seemed to change pending Arch
Enemy’s arrival onstage, with
everyone becoming somewhat restless and
eager for something to happen. The
room was bathed in bright blue spotlights
accompanied by some beautiful,
melodic gothic music. This I felt didn’t
fit in with the atmosphere because
we were waiting to see an aggressive band
and push each other roughly around
in the mosh pit. But nevertheless it was a
perfect entrance.
The band kicked off with ‘Nemesis’, one of
their new songs, and from the
word go there was a massive surge of
sweaty bodies, people being pushed
forward one minute before being hurled
halfway across the relatively small
room. And Arch Enemy were simply
brilliant. Twin guitar assaults from
Michael Amott and new guitarist Gus G,
along with Sharlee D’Angelo’s
pounding bass and Daniel Erlandsson’s
vicious attack on the drum skins were
all almost completely drowned out at times
by frontwoman Angela Gossow’s
truly savage growls and piercing guttural
screams. When I have seen
female-fronted bands play live before, I
have always found myself surrounded
by narrow-minded men screaming ‘Get your
tits out, love!’ But tonight, at
least to my knowledge, there was none of
that and that was good. Guys like
that should be concentrating more on the
women’s vocal or musical
attributes, not on seeing a bit of flesh.
The next song that followed was the
classic ‘Dead Eyes See No Future’ which
had everyone screaming along with the
words and throwing devil horns, a
pattern which would be repeated constantly
throughout their set. They put
together a good mix of old and new songs,
new stuff like ‘Taking Back My
Soul’ and ‘Out For Blood’ blending well
with older songs like ‘We Will
Rise’, ‘Ravenous’ and my personal
favourite ‘Burning Angel’. They even
performed a number of songs from before
Angela joined the band, back when
they were fronted by male vocalist Johan
Liiva. I have only heard a couple
of songs performed by him and I didn’t
really like them much, so I wasn’t
sure whether Angela would be able to
breathe new life into such songs as
‘Diva Satanica’ (kindly dedicated to us
girls!). But yes, she could, and the
change to these songs was simply
astounding.
After an amazing performance of ‘Ravenous’
the set came to an end, but
thankfully we were treated to an encore of
several songs. The one complaint
I would make about their choice of songs
is that they were concentrating a
lot on songs that not many people either
knew or liked, time which might
have been better taken up with songs like ‘Silent
Wars’ and the classic
‘Leader Of The Rats’. That’s just my
personal taste, but there are a few
really great songs that unfortunately
never got a look in.
Final set closer ‘We Will Rise’ brought an
end to over an hour of amazing
action onstage. By this point most people
were hurting too much to walk or
even speak, but for a band like this it
was well worth it. And the one thing
I was happy about was that Angela didn’t
use a voice effects machine for
every song as I had been half expecting ‘
while it sounds good on record it
would have spoilt her performance onstage
as she has a really good growling
voice. A lot of people thought that in a
band playing this kind of music,
replacing a male vocalist with a woman was
going to be a terrible mistake.
But anyone who thought that will
definitely have been proved wrong by now.
8/10
Reviewed
by Katy Rees
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