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Frank Zappa Bday Bundle on iTunes

A GIFT TO FZ FANS IN HONOR OF HIS NATAL DAY

In honor of Frank Zappa’s birthday this week, a new digital download, available here. Entitled Anything Anytime Anywhere For No Reason At All, Again Also, the set details are as follows:

1. “Willie The Pimp” by Frank Zappa
Artists: DMC, Talib Kweli, MMM & Ahmet Zappa; Produced By Jared Lee Gosselin
For Monsterfoot Music; Recorded and Mixed By Jared Lee Gosselin, UMRK;
Vocals – DMC (Darryl McDaniels), Talib Kweli (Talib Kweli Greene courtesy of
Blacksmith Music) & Ahmet Zappa; Drums – Marshall Goodman; Guitar – Orbel
Babayan; Bass – Kurt Morgan; Scratches – Mix Master Mike

2. “Bobby Brown” by Frank Zappa
Artist: Ahmet Zappa; Produced, Recorded & Mixed By Jared Lee Gosselin, UMRK;
B.G. Vocals – Rama Duke; Guitar – Orbel Babayan; Keys – Fred Kron; Bass -
Kurt Morgan; Drums – Joe Travers

3. “Treacherous Cretins” by Frank Zappa
Artist: Frank Zappa; Pau, France, 16 March 1979; Produced & Recorded Live by
FZ; Guitar/vocals – FZ; Vocals – Ike Willis; Slide guitar/vocals – Denny
Walley; Guitar -; Warren Cuccurullo; Keyboards – Tommy Mars; Keyboards -
Peter Wolf; Percussion – Ed Mann; Bass – Arthur Barrow; Drums – Vinnie
Colaiuta; Mixed by FZ; Mastered by John Polito 2010

4. “The Deathless Horsie” by Frank Zappa
Artist: Dweezil Zappa (Live with ZPZ); Produced by Dweezil Zappa; Mixed by
Dweezil Zappa & TJ Helmerich; Mastered by Dweezil Zappa & TJ Helmerich; Live
Recording Engineer: Dave Tobias; 2011 GRAMMY NOMINEE – Best Rock
Instrumental Performance

5. “City Of Tiny Lites” by Frank Zappa
Artist: Frank Zappa at Hammersmith Odeon; London, England, 26 January 1978;
Produced & Recorded Live by FZ; Guitar, vocals – FZ; Drums – Terry Bozzio;
Guitar, vocals – Adrian Belew; Percussion – Ed Mann; Bass – Patrick O’Hearn;
Keyboards, vocals – Tommy Mars; Keyboards – Peter Wolf; Mixed by Craig
Parker Adams, December 2010; Mastered by John Polito 2010

6. “Your Mouth” by Frank Zappa
Artist: Macy Gray (Courtesy of Concord Music Group); Produced By Jared Lee
Gosselin For Monsterfoot Music; Recorded & Mixed By Jared Lee Gosselin,
UMRK; B.G. Vocals – Rama Duke; Lead Guitar – Dweezil Zappa; Horns – Scheila
Gonzalez; Keys – Fred Kron; Rhythm Guitar – Orbel Babayan; Bass – Kurt
Morgan; Drums – Joe Travers

7. “My Guitar Wants To Kill Your Mama” by Frank Zappa
Artist: Frank Zappa; Syracuse, NY, 21 March 1988; Produced & Recorded Live
by FZ; Lead guitar, computer-synth, vocal – FZ; Vocals – Ike Willis; Rhythm
guitar, synth, vocal – Mike Keneally; Keyboards, vocal – Bobby Martin;
Vibes, marimba, electronic percussion – Ed Mann; Trumpet, flugel horn, synth
- Walt Fowler; Trombone – Bruce Fowler; Alto sax, soprano sax, baritone sax
- Paul Carman; Tenor sax – Albert Wing; Baritone sax, bass sax, contrabass
clarinet – Kurt McGettrick; Electric bass, Minimoog – Scott Thunes; Drums,
electronic percussion – Chad Wackerman; Mixed by FZ with Bob Stone, UMRK
1989; Mastered by John Polito 2010

8. “Jumbo Go Away” by Frank Zappa
Artist: Frank Zappa at Hammersmith Odeon; London, England, February 1979;
Produced & Recorded Live by FZ; Guitar/vocals – FZ; Vocals – Ike Willis;
Slide guitar/vocals – Denny Walley; Guitar – Warren Cuccurullo; Keyboards -
Tommy Mars; Keyboards – Peter Wolf; Percussion – Ed Mann; Bass – Arthur
Barrow; Drums – Vinnie Colaiuta; Mixed by FZ with Bob Stone, UMRK circa
1981; Mastered by John Polito 2010

9. “Peaches En Regalia” by Frank Zappa
Artist: Dweezil Zappa, Zappa Plays Zappa with N.M. Brock & Steve Vai
Produced by Pierre & Francois Lamoureux
Mixed by Denis Normandeau & Dweezil Zappa with Francois Lamoureux
Mastered by Bryan Martin & Francois Lamoureux at Sonosphere, Montreal
2009 GRAMMY WINNER – Best Rock Instrumental Performance

10. “Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance” by Frank Zappa
Artist: Holland Greco; Ukulele / Vocals / Kazoo / Bells – Holland Greco;
Drums – Andy Sanesi; Tracking Produced by Joe Travers, UMRK; Engineered by
Richard Landers; Additional Recording, Engineering, and Synths by Starvon
Washington at S1V Music Studios; Mix by Jared Gosselin

11. “The Torture Never Stops” by Frank Zappa
Artists: Chloe & Robert Trujillo (on Bass); Guitar – Jamie Kime; Keys – Fred
Kron; Drums – Andy Sanesi; Tracking Produced by Joe Travers, UMRK;
Engineered by Richard Landers; Mix by Jared Lee Gosselin, UMRK

12. “Stairway To Heaven” by Jimmy Page & Robert Plant
Artist: Frank Zappa; Buffalo, NY, 9 March 1988; Produced & Recorded Live by
FZ; Lead guitar, computer-synth, vocal – FZ; Vocal – Ike Willis; Rhythm
guitar, synth, vocal – Mike Keneally; Keyboards, vocal – Bobby Martin;
Vibes, marimba, electronic percussion – Ed Mann; Trumpet, flugelhorn, synth
- Walt Fowler; Trombone – Bruce Fowler; Alto sax, soprano sax, baritone sax
- Paul Carman Tenor sax – Albert Wing; Baritone sax, bass sax, contrabass
clarinet – Kurt McGettrick; Electric bass, Minimoog – Scott Thunes; Drums,
electronic percussion – Chad Wackerman; Mix by FZ with Bob Stone, UMRK 1989;
Mastered by John Polito 2010


Frank Zappa: Hammersmith Odeon 3-CD Set

IN HONOR OF FRANK ZAPPA’S 70TH BIRTHDAY ON DECEMBER 21


Hammersmith Odeon

Early in 1978 Frank Zappa played London’s Hammersmith Odeon and these concerts provided the source
for the Basic Tracks for 1979′s Sheik YerBouti. Hammersmith Odeon, compiled &
produced by Gail Zappa and Joe Travers is now available in the Special Party Pack 3-CD set
designed to celebrate FZ’s
70th Birthday on December 21.

Mixed in NYC by Frank Filipetti, none of these tracks have been previously
released and the track listing mirrors and/or parallels the set lists of the concerts. Peter Wolf, former
band-member and current multi-faceted producer/arranger contributed Liner Notes.

The band is Frank Zappa, Lead Guitar & Vocals, Terry Bozzio, Drums & Vocals, Patrick
O’Hearn
, Bass & Vocals, Adrien Belew, Guitar & Vocals, Tommy Mars, Keys & Vocals,
Peter Wolf, Keys and Ed Mann, Percussion.

CD1:

1. Convocation/The Purple Lagoon
2. Dancin’ Fool

3. Peaches En Regalia
4. The Torture Never Stops
5. Tryin’ To Grow A Chin
6. City Of Tiny Lites
7. Baby Snakes
8. Pound For A Brown

CD2:
1. I Have Been In You
2. Flakes
3. Broken Hearts Are For Assholes
4. Punky’s Whips
5. Titties ‘n Beer
6. Audience Participation
7. The Black Page #2
8. Jones Crusher
9. The Little House I Used To Live In

CD3:
1. Dong Work For Yuda
2. Bobby Brown

3. Envelopes
4. Terry Firma

5. Disco Boy
6. King Kong

7. Watermelon In Easter Hay (Prequel)
8. Dinah-Moe Humm

9. Camarillo Brillo
10. Muffin Man
11. Black Napkins
12. San Ber’dino


Zappa’s Congressional Testimony Released on CD

25TH ANNIVERSARY OF CONGRESSIONAL TESTIMONY


Congress Shall Make No Law…

On September 19th, 2010, Zappa Records released Congress Shall Make No Law . . . It is a CD
containing Frank Zappa‘s 1985 remarks against the censorship of free expression by artists. The hearings,
influenced in no small part by the then newly-formed Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC) headed by
Susan Baker and Tipper Gore to promote a rating system for recorded music, in response to
such Bills as H.R. 2911 concerning the collection of a blank tape tax to benefit the recording industry, were recorded
on Capitol Hill and at Annapolis, MD.

Congress Shall Make No Law . . . features over 40 minutes of Frank Zappa’s uncut testimony.
Zappa’s attorney, Larry Stein, who accompanied Zappa to the Senate hearing in 1985, contributed liner
notes for the
CD; artist Bill Miller designed the stunning album cover.

According to Gail Zappa, Congress Shall Make No Law . . . is released as an educational
project, representing Zappa’s tireless commitment to the First Amendment which he felt his duty to protect by
providing (in his words) “stimulating digital audio entertainment” in the form of “material which a truly free society
would neither fear nor suppress.”


Zappa Bust to be Unveiled in Baltimore on 9/19

SEPTEMBER 19 WILL BE DECLARED “FRANK ZAPPA DAY” IN BALTIMORE

Details of events were announced today for the unveiling of a sculpture of Frank Zappa and celebration
honoring the composer for the legacy of his music and his commitment to the First Amendment.
September 19, 2010 marks the 25th anniversary of Zappa’s testimony on Capitol Hill and at Annapolis against the
censorship of free expression by artists. In commemoration of this event, Zappa Records is preparing to release
Congress Shall Make No Law, a CD containing Frank Zappa’s testimony. As part of the
celebrations, the Mayor’s office will issue a proclamation moving annual ‘Frank Zappa Day’ to September 19 in
Baltimore.

Frank Zappa’s son Dweezil Zappa will headline a special concert with his Grammy Award-winning band,
Zappa Plays Zappa. The
stretch of Eastern Avenue between Conkling and Eaton Streets in the heart of the Highlandtown Arts and
Entertainment District will be marked ‘Frank Zappa Way’ with a ceremonial street sign to be unveiled for the
dedication. The events, including the outdoor dedication and concerts, are open to the public at no charge.

Although the dedication ceremony and the concert are FREE to the public, special VIP passes for the concert are
available at www.missiontix.com (keyword Zappa),
providing access to a reserved viewing enclosure close to the concert stage, talent meet-and-greets, and other fan
incentives.


Super Bad Sunday: Frank Zappa

WAY TO GO BALTIMORE!

Tomorrow is the 3rd anniversary of Frank Zappa Day in Baltimore, Maryland. This is the kind of civic mindedness we can get behind! Frank was born in Baltimore and it’s great to see such an original, influential native son honored. We serve up our weekly triple shot as a little salute to the mustachioed man and to idea of Frank Zappa Days springing up in cities everywhere.


Summer Camp Adds: G. Love, Coop Zappa, Rebelution, Split Lip

INTERESTING ASSORTMENT JOINS MOE., UMPH, STS9, GOV’T MULE AND MORE

The final round of artist announcements for this year’s Summer Camp are:

Zappa Plays Zappa

G. Love & Special Sauce
Zappa Plays Zappa
Rebelution
Split Lip Rayfield
Jaik Willis
The Coop
The Twin Cats
Two Fresh
Sonic Sutra
Thinner Teed
Midnight Ultra
Midwest Hype
Land of Atlantis

Summer Camp 2010 Music Festival takes place May 28, 29 & 30, 2010 at Three Sisters Park in Chillicothe, IL. This will be the 10th Annual Summer Camp Music Festival and will feature over 55 bands on 5 stages over the course of 3 days. The festival also features a kid’s camp, an extensive representation of non-profit organizations, on-site camping, lots of unique arts & craft artisans, and a variety of food and beverages.


Frank Zappa: Greasy Love Songs Out 5/1

ZAPPA RECORDS TO RELEASE GREASY LOVE SONGS CD MAY 1
CELEBRATING 1968′s
CRUISING WITH RUBEN & THE JETS

Frank Zappa

Another Anniversary Frank Zappa Audio Documentary project/object celebrating Zappa’s Cruising With
Ruben & The Jets
. The Doo Wop and Pachuco references mark this as Zappa’s homage to the music and culture
of his teenage world in 1950′s Southern California. Contains Original 1968 Vinyl Stereo Mix, Interviews and Related
Rarities.

Greasy Love Songs is due out May 1 on Zappa Records. Yes. The digipak is made from Metalyzed Polyester
foil paper.

Among additional tracks included are alternate mono mixes, an unreleased cover of “Valerie” which enjoyed heavy
rotation in the Mothers’ concerts circa 1967 and a version of “Love of My Life” from Studio Z, bringing this CD from
40 minutes in the vinyl release to well over an hour of “the stuff of teen-age legend,” according to Gail
Zappa
‘s text. “The thrall, the threnodies, the three and four part harmonies, the keys to the kingdom of
sociological and panchromatic sexual edification.” The package, #3 in the FZ Audio Documentary Series,
also contains Cheech Marin‘s highly evocative liner notes recalling his 1968 audition for Zappa.

The Mothers of Invention per Frank Zappa’s original liner notes on Cruising With Ruben & The Jets:

Ray Collins: lead vocals
Frank Zappa: low grumbles, oo-wah & lead guitar
Roy Estrada: high weazlings, dwaedy-doop & electric bass

Jimmy Carl Black and/or Arthur Dyer Tripp III: lewd pulsating rhythm
Ian Underwood or Don Preston: redundant piano triplets
Motorhead Sherwood: baritone sax & tambourine
Bunk Gardner & Ian Underwood: tenor & alto saxes


Dweezil Zappa: Musical Bootcamp

Dweezil Zappa Musical Bootcamp Coming in June

Dweezil Zappa

Dweezilla is a four-day, five-night music bootcamp where musicians will be surrounded by Dweezil Zappa and members of his core band for a musical bootcamp designed to expand the harmonic horizons of both amateur and professional musicians.

This musical exploration and development camp will occur in the heart of the “Forever Wild” Catskill Forest Preserve in Big Indian, New York at the Full Moon Resort from Sunday, June 20 to Friday, June 25 2010.

The event will include gourmet meals provided by Full Moon Resort with master classes from Dweezil Zappa, Joe Travers, Pete Griffin, Scheila Gonzales, Jamie Klime and Billy Hulting. Private performances, intimate jam sessions, campfires, film screenings, and the study of Frank Zappa’s brilliant approach to music, his career, and legacy.

“I decided to create a diverse music boot camp for people of all skill levels hoping to increase their musical prowess,” explains Dweezil Zappa. “It would make me very happy if I could help a fellow musician take their skills to the next level.”

Accommodations, as well as campsites, are available at the Full Moon Resort and the nearby Alpine Inn. All Dweezilla activities will be held on-site at Full Moon Resort. Acres of fields, meadows, forests and streams provide a natural backdrop for a wonderful and memorable experience.

For more information go to dweezilzappaworld.com/pages/dweezilla.


New Zappa Live Disc: Philly ’76

VAULTERNATIVE RECORDS RELEASES FRANK ZAPPA’S DOUBLE CD CONCERT SET PHILLY ’76

Frank Zappa

On December 21, which would have been Frank Zappa‘s 69th birthday, Vaulternative Records released Philly ’76, a double CD concert recording. The new release continues the Zappa Family Trust’s mission to celebrate and protect the legacy of Frank Zappa.

Recorded October 29, 1976, at the Philadelphia Spectrum, the thrilling Philly ’76 is the only 16-track recording from this lineup, which features Zappa (guitar/vocals), Bianca Odin (keyboards/vocals), Ray White (guitar/vocals/cowbell), Eddie Jobson (keyboards/violin), Patrick O’Hearn (bass/vocals), and Terry Bozzio (drums/vocals).

The album includes liner notes from Gail Zappa and a first person account from Odin (who now goes by Lady Bianca) about her “apprenticeship with a genius.” She writes, “So many beautiful one-time-thing performances – I scarcely had time to actually think or look back on them. I am glad that he taped our shows.”

In commemoration of the bicentennial year in which the Philly ’76 concert was recorded, and the city where this country’s founding document was signed, the album liner notes also include a reproduction of the Declaration of Independence – with a twist. Many of the claims against the King of Great Britain made in the original document are highlighted here, showing how history is indeed apt to repeat itself.


LA Philharmonic Plays Zappa

SELECTIONS FROM FRANK ZAPPA’S YELLOW SHARK

TO BE PERFORMED BY LA PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA, CONDUCTED BY JOHN ADAMS

Frank Zappa

Selections from Frank Zappa‘s Yellow Shark album will be performed on December 1 by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, with John Adams conducting. The concert is presented as part of the West Coast, Left Coast Festival celebrating California composers.

The group will perform “Questi Cazzi Di Piccione,” “Ruth is Sleeping,” “G-Spot Tornado,” “The Girl in the Magnesium Dress,” and “The Dog Breath Variations/Uncle Meat aka Dog Meat” from Yellow Shark, works which All Music Guide called “essential… the gripping works of a mature composer.” Yellow Shark was the last Zappa recording released during his lifetime.

LA Philharmonic Orchestra and conductor John Adams Play Frank Zappa
Tuesday, December 1, 2009 at 8:00 p.m.
Walt Disney Concert Hall
111 South Grand Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90012
Tickets available here, or call (605) 475-4333

John Adams is a composer of distinctive stylistic elan. He won the Grawemeyer Award in 1995 for his Violin Concerto and was named Composer of the Year in 1997 by Musical America. Adams is also an active and esteemed conductor. He has won three Grammy awards for Best Contemporary Composition.


Prog Nation ’09 | 08.27 | San Jose

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images from: us.progressivenation2009.com

Progressive Nation 2009 Tour :: 08.27.09 :: San Jose Civic Auditorium :: San Jose, CA

Dream Theater :: Progressive Nation Tour 2009

Prog rock gets a pretty bad rap these days. Sure, in its bloated ’70s heyday it bankrolled ELP’s spinning pianos and air-lifted drum kits and allowed Rick Wakeman to perform a rock opera based on King Arthur surrounded by ice skaters, but there’s something cool about prog’s ambition and bombast. Our daily lives are rarely “epic” and prog injects some much needed drama and loft. That it’s never gone away – despite the best efforts of punk, new wave, grunge, etc. – speaks to its staying power and permanent place in rock’s sub-genres.

One also caught a glimpse of prog’s endurance from the huge age range gathered at the San Jose Civic for Dream Theater‘s annual Progressive Nation Tour, where black clad, acne riddled teens in band tees mingled with downtown businessmen revisiting their youthful passions and grandpas in ’09 Slipknot shirts. And thanks to the headliner and their way with Journey-esque balladry, the number of women actually hit as much as triple digits by Dream Theater’s set. This year’s bill was rounded out by Zappa Plays Zappa, Bigelf and Scale The Summit, which, taken together, offered up enough technical expertise, genuine melodrama, belly shaking high jinks and manly rawk to satiate even the broadest prog appetite.

If Explosions In The Sky got deep into Tales From Topographic Oceans and Cliff Burton era Metallica they might sound like Scale The Summit, a Texas four-piece so fresh faced I’d card them before buying them a drink. With only 20 minutes, they decided to run ‘n’ gun, slamming ahead with all their might for the just arriving crowd, who almost universally tucked in and paid serious attention to their jazzy instrumental hardness, which also suggests a less melodically inclined Umphrey’s McGee with similar twiddly guitars and heavy duty low end. Two large video screens bookended the stage, offering close-ups for the three openers and a Pandora’s Box of excellent film and animation footage during Dream Theater. Scale’s “The Great Plains” was a John Ford Western given a metal makeover, and “City In The Sky” was dedicated to the headliner and shared some of DT’s wide-angle romance and chop-fueled storytelling. In plugging their new album, Carving Desert Canyons, they made sure to note they also had tablature for the guitarists in the audience, rightly noting, “This is a Dream Theater show.”

Zappa Plays Zappa :: Prog Nation ’09

Close your eyes and you might mistake Bigelf for vintage Deep Purple, a thick slap of bruising, sexy guitar, swinging rhythms and old school Mellotron and organ swells. Open your eyes and you found top hat sportin’ lead singer Damon Fox madly pressing keys, mascara rimmed eyes wide as the screaming face from In The Court of the Crimson King on his t-shirt, as the rest of this Los Angeles quartet swam through acid test psych, struttin’ glam and what could be the best Hammer Horror soundtrack you’ve never heard. A throwback that doesn’t really seem like a throwback, Bigelf were awesome, the sort of dudes you can smell from a distance, a pungent bouquet of bong water and sweaty late night jam sessions. Opener “The Evils of Rock & Roll” and follow-up “Painkillers” were full of neat twists and effective stops, restoring some of the original danger and mystery of the original hard rockers. “Disappear” was a giant size slow burn – moving, dreamy and way cool – that bettered the studio version, as did much of this set, which culminated in a tune about money with lush keys and a heavy pop sensibility that compared well with The Zombies

There’s a delightfully grimy quality to Zappa Plays Zappa that instantly sets them apart from Frank’s more cerebral hound-doggin’. It’s not that dear old dad couldn’t shred mightily but Dweezil Zappa and his youngbloods willfully throw more grit into the workings, emphasizing the good time feel of many Frank compositions, an earthy aura to match the often ribald lyrics. Beginning with a tough little combo of two guitars, bass and drums, they banged away at “Apostrophe” with ballsy bravado. This band, which no longer contains any Frank veterans, is in no way cowed by this material. Even truly challenging songs like Sheik Yerbouti‘s “Broken Hearts Are For Assholes,” perhaps the set highlight, were tackled with aplomb, and it was fun to watch Dweezil stand back, not singing or playing for the first two minutes or so, as he observed whether his comrades would pull off the insane Greek chorus vocal sparring and hairpin shifts of “Broken Hearts,” or his obvious delight later as they mastered the delicate corridors of “Inca Roads” and built a steamy improv during “Filthy Habits.” Much of ZPZ’s interpretations are fairly orthodox but they’ve permitted a Motorhead-esque impoliteness to creep into some pieces, surfacing frequently in the molar rattling bass of Pete Griffin. Still, much of their mission is to keep the legacy and music of Frank alive and his presence loomed large, especially in the spot-on Frank phrasing of lead singer Ben Thomas and more quietly in the moustache and soul patch silhouettes on the bass drum. Boffo set by a band that is proving indefatigably enjoyable every time out.

Dream Theater :: Progressive Nation Tour 2009

Despite being around in some form for nearly 25 years, Dream Theater is a group that’s either worshipped fanatically or almost entirely unknown. Yet, they curate and headline this international celebration of prog rock – subtitled this year “One Nation, Under Prog…” – and mount a seriously impressive production jammed with nifty lighting, artful stage design, creative video inserts AND play at a nose bleed technical level most jazz and classical musicians would envy. Simple they ain’t (except when they go for your heartstrings), Dream Theater put on one of the more delightful, dense heavy rock displays I’ve witnessed in years. While familiar with their more recent albums, including this year’s excellent Black Clouds & Silver Linings (JamBase review here), it was enlightening to see/hear their older material like the fusion masterwork “The Dance of Eternity” unfurl with finger blurring skill. While predominantly metallic in tone, there’s oodles of complexity to their tunes, and even when they softened up for a song like “Hollow Years” it still felt pretty substantial. And the Journey reference in the intro fully extends to lead vocalist James LaBrie, hard rock’s answer to peak period Steve Perry, a belter of seemingly infinite power who can tone it down to a whisper just as effectively.

However, it was bassist John Myung who took home MVP honors from this gig. In a word, Myung is dazzling, a sophisticated, unrelenting maestro who I’d love to see in a head-to-head with Reed Mathis one day. Each band member is worshipped (and probably rightfully so) by their hardcore fanbase in much the same way as Yes, and watching them ply their trade I could understand why folks fixate on them. It’s baffling why guitarist John Petrucci isn’t mentioned in the same breath as Vai, Satriani or other guitar gods of the late 20th century, and keyboardist Jordan Rudess is so clever and enjoyable – a rocker on his instrument in the tradition of early Edgar Winter – that he overcomes the potential silliness of his wizard hat and animated wizard sidekick, and even partially redeems the much reviled keytar by having a custom model that looks like a Klingon batliff. Drummer Mike Portnoy handles the devil’s-got-me-by-the-balls grumble vocals as he works the biggest goddamn drum kit I’ve ever seen (three kick drums, a gong, countless toms and cymbals) with bestial intensity and a wicked grin. Taken together they make music that’s quite smart, slightly overblown and yet retains some of the garage echoes of the original Alice Cooper band, which surfaced mightily on “Rite of Passage,” one of the new album cuts that proved positively feral in concert.

Dream Theater celebrates prog’s excesses and honors the still lively tradition by championing new acts like Bigelf and Scale The Summit. Most of Theater’s material maintains a post-Metallica heft which is split open by jammy improvs, steel boot skull kicks and brainy fables. They conjured up a night of fabulous sensory overload and proved a real surprise to this relative neophyte.

Dream Theater Setlist
A Nightmare To Remember, A Rite Of Passage, Hollow Years, The Dance of Eternity, One Last Time, Solitary Shell, In The Name Of God, The Count Of Tuscany

The Prog Nation Europe tour begins September 23 in Finland; complete tour dates available here.

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