agnostic
front, wingnut, reno divorce, the downs
November 28, 2003 - The BlueBird Theater, Denver,
CO
-By Sarah Jaffe
I was thoroughly disgusted when I picked up the Westword
to check the time for the Agnostic Front show and
saw the comment, "geriatric form of hardcore."
Webster's defines geriatric as, "Of or relating
to the aged or the aging process." Continuing
to tour constantly and put out hardcore records is
for the aged now, I guess.
We arrived at the show in time for Reno Divorce,
the second opening band. They played their standard
Social Distortion-soundalike set, including a cover
of 7 Seconds' "Young 'til I Die," which
they dedicated to Agnostic Front. Next was Wingnut,
whose frontman looks like Glenn Danzig but is sadly
lacking in Danzig's vocal clarity.
I spoke to Roger Miret from AF before
they went onstage, and he told me how tired they were
after playing in Kansas City just the night before,
and having to leave right after the show. He hasn't
been home for Thanksgiving in 8 years. So I was a
little upset at the way the crowd just sat there.
Even the guy who'd tried to hit on me by telling me
how long he'd been in the scene and that you have
to love all the bands playing that night,
stayed out of the pit while they ripped through mainstays
like "Do or Die" and "No Fear".
For "geriatrics," Roger Miret can still
sing, scream, jump, and sweat, Vinnie Stigma still
plays a mean guitar, and Jimmy Colletti whales on
the drums. The slightly younger Mike Gallo's bass
was turned up a bit too loud, sometimes eclipsing
the guitar and vocals, but their set certainly didn't
suffer from lack of energy--unlike the audience.
The crowd woke up a bit during easy sing-along tunes
"Gotta Go" and "Police State",
but I apparently wasn't the only one who thought people
were boring. One guy jumped toward the stage, yelling,
"This crowd sucks!" Roger replied, "Nah,
I love it when people just stand there and stare at
me. Hard to blame them--good lookin' guy like me,"
and laughed sardonically.
Agnostic Front wrapped up their set with the constant
favorite "Crucified", and a few people jumped
onstage, but on the whole it was the most apathetic
crowd I've seen in years. Two kids, about 8 or 9,
dancing onstage and taking their first stage dives
seemed more interesting to the crowd than the band,
since people couldn't even be bothered to cheer for
an encore.
You've got to wonder who the geriatrics are when
guys nearly twice my age are still onstage rockin
as hard as anyone, and a crowd of teenagers and twenty-somethings
stand around with their arms crossed like dancing
would kill them. I hate listening to people bitch
about the state of music today, and then going to
see bands like Agnostic Front who have been doing
this for years without compromising their integrity
or changing their in-your-face stance, and being the
only person dancing. I don't blame them a bit for
playing a short set and no encore. They're about as
geriatric as a boot to the skull, but few people seemed
to care.