|
Getting to the Ogden this particular evening was quite
an endeavor. Unfortunately, the hippie kids going to
the String Cheese Incident show one block away took
up all the parking spots. But the real challenge lied
ahead of me as I made my way through the sold-out crowd
and into the front area of the stage. Thankfully, my
photo pass allowed access into a space where I could
breath and also witnesses a sea of happy faces that
flew into a frenzy as the guys made it on stage. Dashboard
Confessional, a.k.a. Chris Carrabba, turned his one-man
band into a four man tour via his buddies from the group
Seville, including Dan Bonebrake on bass and Mike Marsh
on drums. There was a fourth guy on guitar and keyboards,
but I'm not sure who he was - sorry.
This was the first time I'd seen him along with his
band mates in all their live glory. But I had seen a
quote from Chris on the Dashboard web site, "If
you come to one of my shows [you're] kind of expected
to sing along as loud as I do, and it's just really
like a team effort. It's almost organic how much the
kids are involved. They are part of the band."
Either these kids read what I did and take instructions
very well, or this was a whole new level of music fans
created by a whole new level of music. Of the hundreds
and hundreds of shows that I've been to in my lifetime,
I have not seen such a grandiose dose of audience participation
via a one-on-one connection from the artist to the fan.
 |
After whaling out the title track to his full-length
release, Places You Have Come To Fear the Most, Chris
asks his fans to step up. "There's a band where
we're from [in Florida] called Rocking Horse Winner,"
he said as the enthusiastic crowed erupted in knowing
expectation that the tune, Age Six Racer, was coming
next. "Generally their singer does some back up
for us on the record, but she doesn't ever go on tour
with us. Since she's not here, maybe you can fill in
for her on her parts," referring to Jolie Lindholm,
who also provided her angelic vocal talent for other
tracks on Places You Have Come To Fear The Most. As
he strummed his way through the song, the audience chimed
in on the harmonies so perfectly I visualized Chris
in a symphonic conductor's tuxedo and wand instead of
a guitar pick and tattoos.
 |
Hearing songs like "The Best Deceptions"
took on a whole new force, where the energy in the room
hit a level of raging emotion. Chris and everyone else
screamed in unison, "So kiss me hard 'cause this
will be the last time that I let you. You will be back
someday and this awkward kiss that tells of other people's
lips will be of service to keeping you away. AWAY! AWAY!
AWAY!"
This pattern of community induced entertainment continued
throughout the show. At any given point during a song,
Chris could literally walk away from the microphone
and the audience would carry the song's vocals from
the rafters to the floor. So he had to comment, "You
guys are incredibly loud when the song's going on, and
incredibly quite when it's not. If you think about how
that compares to other kinds of shows, its kind of weird.
But that's the way we like it."
Chris was also very humble and paid homage to his dedicated
fans, "We're very happy that you've come out to
see us and participate with us the way that you do.
It makes it much more than just a show. So thanks for
entertaining us." The gratitude was returned in
more ways than one that night. I for one am grateful
that there's hope for music in this realm - both for
the artists and the fans.
Without directly comparing Dashboard to the Beatles,
what made songwriters like Lennon and McCartney so legendary
was their talent for creating enduring, raw, and enticing
songs filled with harmonies and heartfelt lyrics people
can connect with and sing to.
Chris taps into this generation's human emotion and
the every day trials of life, but with a fierce energy
that defies sadness on songs like Brilliant Dance, "This
is incredible. Starving, insatiable, yes, this is love
for the first time. Well you'd like to think that you
were invincible. Yeah, well weren't we all once before
we felt loss for the first time? Well this is the last
time."
I will admit that I am one of those people you see
singing really loud by herself in the car (but not so
oblivious that I think people can't see me picking my
nose), but I also know I'm not alone in my singing endeavors.
This is why it's so fitting that Chris' choice to name
himself Dashboard Confessional versus using his own
name as a solo artist. Dashboard fans that have found
a musical outlet for channeling their loss of love,
thoughts of revenge, pain and happiness within his songs
- in their car where no one can hear, or in a club where
they're accompanied by their love torn comrades.
We need this lyrical connection not just in the emo
genre Dashboard has been pigeon holed into, but across
the board in hip-hop or punk rock. And it does exist
in different facets, but without naming names (at least
this time), most mainstream music we are inundated with
today via TV, radio, and other media channels put the
lyrical piece in the backseat, either by making the
words totally unintelligible or completely trite. This
country is filled with twelve-year-old girls who think
they can connect with Woops I Did It Again, and
twelve-year-old boys who dream of meeting a girl at
the Warp Tour, but I can't believe that this type of
music will endure over the next twenty or thirty years.
I mean really, how often do we hear Tiffany, Debbie
Gibson, or New Kids On The Block on the radio? I do
however; see Chris Carrabba on stage for many, many
years to come, growing older with this generation and
generations to come, crafting our life experiences into
his songs.
Dashboardconfessional.com
has tour information, a music section with song lyrics,
and even Chris' email address, chris@dashboards.com.
-Kim Owens, kim@kaffeinebuzz.com
See More Interviews at our
Reviews Archive
|