by
Keavin Wiggins
The end of summer was near, but there was
one final major fiesta on the agenda for Southern California concert goers.
On Labor Day weekend the Ozzfest hit Glen Helen Blockbuster Pavilion for
the final show in the metal tour which roared across North America all
summer. It is said
that this will be the final Ozzfest so this show may have indeed been the
last of the line for the annual festival that spent the later part of the
90's as the MUST SEE event of the summer. On the other hand one of this
years Ozzfest headliners Pantera may just take over the lead from Ozzy
and put together their own Ozzfest or should we say Panterafest! This according
to what Rex
Brown told antiMUSIC in an interview earlier this summer.
The massive Blockbuster Pavilion was the
perfect venue for the show. By noon thousands of metal fans were packing
the venue in anticipation of the mayhem about to occur on stage. The Deadlights
kicked things off on the
main stage. With their potent brand of modern metal they got the crowd
moving and set the expectations high for all the bands to follow. Lead
vocalist Duke held firm command of the audience with his primal screams.
Guitarist Billy Roan and the rhythmic assault of Jerry Montano's Bass plus
Jim Falcone hard hitting drums provided the music that left the crowd screaming
for more after the band raged through a half hour of pure metal power!
After the Deadlights wrapped up their powerhouse
set we headed over to the second stage to catch Reveille perform. The second
stage was set up in a grassy area where fans sat in groups in front of
the stage. Having seen Reveille play at the Whiskey last year I knew what
to expect, but clearly many in the audience had no idea what was in store
for them as the sat lazily on the grass under the mild California sun.
Living up to their name, Reveille took the stage with a sonic assault that
brought the audience to their feet. Their potent variety of political rap
core set the crowd off as a mosh pit was formed before the band reached
their first chorus. The remarkable thing about Reveille is you don't
even have to be into the whole "rapcore" scene to get caught up in their
high energy performance. The energy level on the stage is so intense that
the adrenaline level of the audience goes through the roof and you find
yourself captivated by their performance, involuntarily pounding your fist
in the air and for some mixing it up in the pit. At the end of the performance
the guy standing next to me turned and said, " You know I hate this rap
metal s***, but these guys went off!" You only have to witness their performance
to become a quick convert.
Back on the main stage we were treated
to a surprise performance from Zakk Wylde and his Black Label Society.
A long time veteran of arena size crowds, Zakk knows how to play up to
the audience. With his southern metal style music he rocked through a solid
set taking a break between songs to espouse the virtues of Beer and to
take pop shots at bands like Blink-182. Needless to say the Ozzfest crowd
ate it all up and Zakk proved that he could rock an audience just as hard
now in the duel role of vocalist and lead guitarist as his did back in
his days with Ozzy.
The second stage had a lot to offer and
the area was packed with wall to wall people as soon as the gates opened.
Bands like Kittie and their ferocious feline metal attack and rap core
new comers Shuvel kept the audience rockin' all day long. They set the
stage for Soulfly's headlining performance. Max Cavalera proved there was
life after Sepultura and by playing a mix of material off of his bands
debut solo album and his new release he gave the fans what they came to
see.. a kick ass rock show!
A twelve hour festival can be a lot to
bear for even
the most ardent concert goer, especially with as potent a lineup as this
years Ozzfest. All of the bands on the mainstage (ok maybe not methods
of mayhem) had earned their slot on the stage. Static-X played the hell
out of their nu-metal songs. Incubus lived up to their critical praise
with a stylistic performance that didn't disappoint. Tommy Lee's new creation
Method's of Mayhem was interesting. Seems Tommy has traded in his
lipstick and spandex for Marilyn Manson's leftovers. Sadly the performance
seemed to be more about making a fashion statement then playing music.
Too each their own, but I would rather see Tommy back with Motley Crue
then trying to pass himself off as the next Trent Reznor or Marilyn Manson.
As the sun began to go down, Ozzfest veterans
Godsmack took the stage and got the crowd to their feet with a letter-perfect
rendition of Whatever. Bassist Robbie Merril danced around like a mad man
as vocalist Sully Erna and the rest of the band put together a great set
of material off of their debut album. A few fans dared to sit down
half way through the set and Sully had a few words for them, "You arent
sitting at home with a remote watching MTV. This is a f***ing Rock show!
Get up or get the f*** out!" He then encouraged the fans in the lawn section
to turn the area in to one huge mosh pit. What can you say about Godsmack,
they pack a powerful punch and a rightly considered one of the best of
the new breed of metal bands out right now.
By the time Godsmack left the stage the
sun had fully set and the crowd was pumped up with anticipation for what
was to come next. The house lights faded and the pavilion was filled with
the sound of ZZ Top's "Tush". A drum roll followed
and Pantera made themselves known, fans were screamin "Pan-f***in-tera"
at the top of their lungs as Phil, Rex, Dimebag and Vinnie turned this
metal fest into a once in a life time event. With the overwhelming double
bass drum leading the way Phil screamed his heart out as Dimebag Darrel
provided his patented guitar crunch. By the time Pantera played "This Love",
it was absolute mayhem in the audience with people jumping over seats to
get closer to the action on stage. It doesn't get better than this. Standing
amidst thousands of fans banging their heads and pounding their fist in
the air in unison. Only a band like Pantera can take utter pandemonium
to this level. One word can describe the experience of seeing Pantera live
- Unbelievable!
The show could have stopped right there
and the fans would have gotten more than their money's worth. Yet the Godfather
of metal and the namesake for the festival had to bring the show to a close
in his own special way.
The Ozzfest has come to be known as much
for Ozzy's funny video intro as the performances. This years film topped
them all with Ozzy finding himself stuck in Britney Spears and N Sync videos,
recreating the classic apple pie scene from American Pie, fashioning himself
as an Austin Powers twin and playing the little boy that sees dead people
in the Sixth Sense. The man is nuts and that's why we love him.
The stage lights were dim as Ozzy appeared
in a revolving throne sitting high above the drum riser. He sat like a
king upon his throne and the fans screamed their hearts out for their rock
n roll rebel. Once the throne stopped revolving Ozzy descended onto the
stage, walked up to the mic and got the band going with a mesmerizing
performance of "I Don't Know" followed by the Black Sabbath classic "War
Pigs".
Ozzy is a mad man on stage, pacing quickly
back in forth and taking every opportunity to drench the people in the
first few rows with water. For the Blizzard of Ozz this time around Ozzy
put together a stellar collection of musicians including Robert Trujillo
on bass, John Sinclair on Keyboards and a six string wiz kid by the name
of Joe Holmes (he was once a protégé of Randy Rhodes).
Holmes came abroad the Blizzard of Oz for
the Osmosis tour and had big shoes to fill with the departure of Zakk Wylde,
not to mention attempting to live up to the legendary Randy Rhodes and
the stylistic Jake E Lee. This he accomplished and more. Of all the
former Ozzy axemen, Joe comes closest to Zakk in style but he also has
the classical underpinning of Randy Rhodes and the flashy hammer on flash
of Jake E Lee which he demonstrated during an extended guitar solo to Suicide
Solution.
How do you follow up an amazing guitar
solo? Ozzy took his love for dousing the audience with water to the extreme.
During the climax of Suicide Solution, a large water cannon descended from
the lighting rig. The cannon had a seat for Ozzy to strap into which he
did and it was up, up and away as Ozzy drenched the first 25 to 30 rows
with water for about 10 minutes. Once he came down the band finished up
the set with "I Don't Want to Change the World", "Crazy Train", and the
encore "Paranoid". Although it turned out to be a short set missing such
Ozzy classics as "Over the Mountain" and "Bark at the Moon", Ozzy rocked
the crowd hard for 60 water soaked minutes.
Due
to the wet nature of Ozzy's show no photo access was available. |
So there you have it. If you missed the
Ozzfest this year we here at antiMUSIC feel for you, because you missed
one hell of a show! We hope this isn't really the end. But if it is, should
we now prepare for Panterafest 2001?
Find
out more about Ozzfest!
Photos! If you missed the
links above here is your second chance. Check out the exclusive Ozzfest
photo galleries for The Dead Lights, Godsmack,
Incubus,
Methods of Mayhem, Pantera
and Reveille!
Credits:
All Photos taken by Debbie
Seagle. Copyright 2000 Groovequest
Productions. all Rights Reserved.
Keavin Wiggins is the Managing
Editor and founder of the iconoFAN Network
which includes antiMUSIC.com, Rocknworld.com, antiTainment.com, Rocksearch.com,
thrashPIT.com and more!
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