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Concert Review: Smashing Pumpkins and Queens of the Stone Age @ Bogarts, 4/12/99

At the time, this was a big deal.

The Smashing Pumpkins had been sans drummer Jimmy Chamberlain since 1997, and the original line up of Chamberlain, Billy Corgan, James Iha and D’Arcy Wretzky would only end up playing together for a short time, as Wretzky would leave the band in 2000.

Dubbed “The Arising” tour, this was the Pumpkins both returning to their roots and looking to the future. Gone where the electronic-indulgent tendencies of the Adore-era. The band opened with the lead-off Gish track ‘I Am One,’ and the packed Bogart’s crowd started pogo’ing in ecstatic unison.

The night was basically split between every rocker you wanted to hear from Siamese Dream and Mellon Collie, and new material that would end up on the two consecutive Machina releases. The band was, quite simply, on fire, bludgeoning the audience with waves of guitar, bass and drums set on eleven.

We didn’t realize it then, but the opening band would end up being fairly significant. Made up of several former Kyuss members, being former Kyuss members didn’t mean all that much at the time because the band was still relatively unknown to me. The short and unmemorable set didn’t help, and it wasn’t until the release the album Rated R the following year that any of us put 2+2 together about who the opening band was – Queens of the Stone Age.

If I were ranking shows I have been to, this is top five. Sad to think that just a year later, the band would put on one of the worst shows I’ve ever seen.

QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE SETLIST:
You Think I Aint’ Worth a Dollar, But I Feel Like A Millionaire
The Bronze
Mexicola
How to Handle a Rope
You Can’t Quit Me Baby
If Only
Avon

SMASHING PUMPKINS SETLIST:
I Am One
Zero
Pug
La Dolly Vita
Glass’ Theme
The Imploding Voice
Dross
Speed Kills
Blue Skies Bring Tears
Stand Inside Your Love
Glass and the Ghost Children
Wound
Cash Car Star
Ava Adore
Today
Encore:
Muzzle
Soma
Encore 2:Home
If There Is a God
With Every Light
Encore 3:
Geek U.S.A.

Concert Review: The Afghan Whigs and Howlin’ Maggie @ Bogarts, 9/25/99

This was it, the last Afghan Whigs show. For most people, that doesn’t mean much. The Whigs were an acquired taste, first with their midwestern bar band brand version of Husker Du meets The Replacements, and later with their refined soul rock that combined ’60s Motown and ’90s Seattle.

Like the legendary KISS, their records never did justice to the band the way their explosive live shows could. Lead singer/guitarist Greg Dulli, currently fronting the more sedate Twilight Singers, could be cool and seductive one moment, acerbic and nasty the next. At this particular show, Dulli was more reflective and unguarded than previous shows.

After a solid opening set by Whig contributor Happy Chichester and his reformed band Howlin’ Maggie, Happy joined the Whigs on stage for the set-opening cover of Thin Lizzy’s The Boys Are Back in Town, engaging in some triple guitar fun while Dulli adjusted the lyrics to “The Afghan Whigs are back in town.”

Drawing from their vast catalog of originals and covers, the band stuck mostly to the later era of the band, ignoring the earlier material, while sprinkling in their trademark covers of The Supremes, Steve Wonder and others. Still, this was not the Whigs at their best. Maybe it was the moment, knowing this would probably be the last time the band would ever take the stage together (unless someone, say, threw a bunch of money at them to unite at Cochella or some other destination show), that cast a somewhat somber note on the whole evening.

AFGHAN WHIGS SETLIST
The Boys Are Back In Town
Superstition/Going To Town/In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida
Uptown Again
Come See About Me
Be Sweet
Neglekted/Do You Feel Like We Do/Nasty
King Only
If I Were Going
Debonair
Bad Girl/66/Little Red Corvette
I’ll Be Around
Somethin’ Hot
Crazy
Bulletproof/Baby Love
People Get Ready/Faded
Fountain And Fairfax/Hot For Teacher
Omerta/The Vapire Lanois/All You Need Is Love
Into The Groove/Rebirth Of The Cool

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