Braving the spurts of flying snow,
driving up to The Machine Shop in Flint, MI, listening to Banana
101.5 FM, the radio station reporting live from the event, telling
listeners that tickets were still available for the show. The
evening starts with a quick trip to see COC, also known as Corrosion
of Conformity, a North Carolina band with a New Orleans frontman.
Reed Mullin greets me with a big smile.
We talk about his rotator cuff surgery. The doctor guessed he may
only get 70% of his range back, but he shocked himself and the
medical world with a whopping 98% full function after the procedure.
Pepper and I chatted about his
six-year-old and about my new book, a retrospective of my 15 years in
journalism called “Interview Rock Stars.” There is an entire
chapter of Pepperisms, and I told him I would bring him a copy in
January, when COC plays with Deicide - with any lucky, he might
actually write a blurb for me, instead of vice versa. Woody, Pepper
and I walked into the club together.
Mothership was already on the stage,
first on the bill. Mothership has that Texas guitar drawl, hard
hitting but tightly composed with melody. They fit in perfectly with
the rest of the bill, a great band to start off the evening; if
you're not familiar with them, they're worth a listen.
Saviours is second on the stage. It's
easy to get lost in the music. They have that more melodic style with
a nice groove line.
Like riding a wave on the West Coast,
as Saviours hails from California, their music you can hang ten to,
bounce around metal style. The air is thick with smoke outside,
left-handed cigarettes burning. You can't see where, but people keep
commenting that they can smell it in the air.
Third band is like an acid trip. They
have that slower feedback that builds into a crescendo. Fits the
stoner vibe perfectly, as it is easy to get carried away in a riff,
almost like a jam session.
Brant Bjork and the Low Desert Punk
Band reminds of that saying, “the riff compels you.” They close
their eyes tight, getting lost in the music. When their eyes open,
you can see that surprised amusement, like where did these people
come from, as if they had gotten lost in the jam and opened their
eyes from the wormhole of the music.
When COC took the stage, the crowd
seemed to thicken like a gravy. Wet, sweaty bodies, rubbing up
against each other, chanting, erupting like a volcano when the first
song started. In between songs, they chant, giving the love yet
demanding the next song.
Reed may have said that Stanton Moore
was a great drummer, but having the main four COC guys back together
beats any replacement. There's an organic groove, that spark of
originality that Stanton Moore sure as hell could not bring to the
table when he tried replace Reed on a tour. Reed brings a serious
playfulness, and his backing vocals are much stronger than Stanton's
was; sorry Stanton.
Pepper maintains strength, commanding
the audience with a take no shit and have a good time attitude. Woody
has the rock star poses with comical expressions that touch
individual audience members. Mike transcends, like he is playing on
the astral plane, then snaps back and sparks up a fire, exploding.
They save "Clean My Wounds"
for their very last song, dedicating it to their friends in Eagles of
Death Metal, the band that was playing during the attack in Paris.
Bubbles storm from the sky, and Pepper jokes, "those bubbles
have acid in them." It would have been cool if they did, for
they went into a long jam in the middle of the song, reminiscent of
"Stranglehold," but with an originality that would make any
hippie into jam proud.
Perhaps Stanton left some of his jam
influence with the band. Mike and Reed hold steady, while Pepper
leads a musical journey to the beyond and back, singing the return
with a new undertone to the song. It only proves my respect for the
band, way more versatile than the average metal band.
For more on COC, visit www.coc.com
or www.facebook.com/corrosionofconformity.
For more information on the opening bands, visit
http://www.brantbjork.com/,
https://www.facebook.com/LowDesertPunk,
www.mothershipusa.com,
www.facebook.com/mothershipusa,
http://killforsaviours.blogspot.com/,
and https://www.facebook.com/pages/Saviours/142771603462.
Marisa Williams earned her Master's in
Writing from the Johns Hopkins University and is the author of more
than 100 books. For more by Marisa, visit
www.twitter.com/booksnbling
and www.lulu.com/spotlight/thorisaz.
Her latest book, The Murder House is now available on
Amazon.com and Kindle; Carnival of Cannibals
will be released by the end of this year, and in early 2016,
Interview Rock Stars
will be published.
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