Commenter   Comment   Posted On   Date  
 Irvinedav51 Heavy Metal, Country Music, some Rap, some R&B, Most Jazz, and I love Big Band Music! May even like to see The Stray Cats, or Cherry Poppin Daddies! Mar 28, 2023
 Irvinedav51 I love my wife with all my heart and soul, she is my everything, my world! We will be together forver and always! Our love is so strong, that nothing in this life could tear us apart! Love you, my wonderful wife From your loving husband! Mar 28, 2023
 Irvinedav51 All bands are very good, just listening to them on a player is not the same as a live show! Mar 28, 2023
 Irvinedav51 Rock on metal heads and country lovers! We love each and everyone that love music! Mar 28, 2023
 Chris Kimpson Black label didn’t play. Black Label Society / Clutch / Children of Bodom Mar 28, 2023
 RickyRacer This will be Concert #97 for me. I first saw Cheap Trick on December 29th, 1984 in Lawton, Oklahoma while in the AMRY. Cheap Trick / Robin Taylor Zander Mar 28, 2023
 Acey68 Photos: The Winery Dogs and Tampa Bay's own Roxx Revolt & the Velvets play Jannus Live By Ray Roa The Winery Dogs—a supergroup featuring drummer Mike Portnoy, bassist Billy Sheehan and guitarist Richie Kotzen—brought its members' '80s pop and metal roots to Jannus Live in St. Petersburg last Friday. Roxx Revolt & the Velvets, a Bay-area based devotee of all those bands of yore (Poison, Mr. Big, Dreamtheater), brought its up updated and highly-potent take on glam-rock to St. Pete to open the show. The Winery Dogs / Roxx Revolt & The Velvets Mar 27, 2023
 Alison Campbell We were at their 13 anniversary concert at the Barrowlands. Which was brilliant. Some of the fans were heckling Captain Sensible but singing "happy talky, happy talky" and calling him a wa**er" The Damned Mar 27, 2023
 Alison Campbell Absolutely brilliant concert but then I am biased as I love this band The Damned Mar 27, 2023
 Alison Campbell My friend Andy had the same birthday as me and we were fans of the band but we couldn't get o same time off so I Sent to the concert myself. Brilliant concert The Smiths Mar 27, 2023
 Megan Stratton VIP Early Entry, fourth row Joshua Bassett / Lindsey Lomis Mar 27, 2023
 Alison Campbell I think it was this date Bad News / Def Leppard / Motörhead / Ozzy Osbourne / Scorpions / Warlock Mar 27, 2023
 Alison Campbell This festival was brilliant my favourite band at the time was Metallica Metallica / Bon Jovi / Anthrax / Cinderella / W.A.S.P. / Dio Mar 27, 2023
 Alison Campbell Had been a high fan of John Lyndon. But someone ruined the concert by throwing an empty bottle of vodka at him The Public Limited Image Mar 27, 2023
 Alison Campbell This festival was the best. It had some of my favourite bands at the time. Spear of Destiny was supposed to be on but they never turned up and The Fall came back on. Brilliant time Reading Festival 1987 Mar 27, 2023
 rbell777 Unbelievable! See how many Encores he performed! Neil Diamond Mar 27, 2023
 Andy J Ryan Alice Cooper - Enmore Theatre, 6 July 2007 An Alice Cooper show could comprise anything from music, murder and monsters, but who would've ever anticipated how utterly rocking it would be.† Cooper, clad in leather, studs and cold hard steel, is whippet thin and looms over a stage with a dark imposing presence. Tonight he surrounded himself with an intensely fierce young band, and the result had more leather-clad excitement and noise than a night at the Hellfire Club... er, I would imagine. Cooper is undeniably influential, leaving a mark on generations of musical trends and styles. But he also possesses such dynamic energy that the performance of his songs, some of which are almost three decades old, reduces most of today's pale imitators into a sooky pile of fringes and smeared eyeliner. While there is an ever-present sinister and sexual undertone to Cooper's songs, he also astutely observes and makes a mockery of modern life in tracks such as 'Woman of Mass Distraction' and 'Lost in America'. It was a performance in two halves. The first half was all about the music, a bludgeoning trawl through some of Cooper's searing '70s hits; the second more devoted to shock-rock, horror and theatrics. An epic 'Halo of Flies' ushered in the theatrical portion of the evening, featuring a lengthy, bombastic drum solo by ex-KISS drummer Eric Singer that would have made Neal Smith proud. 'Welcome to My Nightmare' saw a troop of masked, dancing goons invade the stage before Cooper serenaded a blonde dummy with the ridiculous ode to necrophilia that is 'Cold Ethel'. It seems not only women bleed - babies did too, after Alice had his way with them. But justice on the night was swift and Alice was confined to a straitjacket for the claustrophobic 'Ballad of Dwight Fry', then hung by his neck before our very eyes. But the show must go on, and 'School's Out!' and 'Billion Dollar Babies' lead into a deliriously received 'Poison'. And finally Cooper staked his political credentials with 'Elected', fronting his Wild Party as a troubled man for these troubled times. After 27 cracking songs in almost two hours, he won my vote. Alice Cooper Mar 27, 2023
 Andy J Ryan Rocket Science Annandale Hotel June 29 2007 Rocket Science relaunch for their first Sydney show in more than two years. While the supports Walrus and Front End Loader - who at one point downed tools in a Tequila demanding industrial action - were exceedingly solid and created a fair old ruckus, they were simply outgunned tonight. Within minutes Rocket Science reclaimed their mantle as on of the best live band’s in Australia. The band operate on the very fractious edge of music. The sound they create is almost organic in that it seethes, surges and pulses with an energised existence of its own. It is aural abduction, taking you to an otherworldly place not of this time. While their equipment and demeanour could best be tagged as ‘vintage’ they are no mere throwback sounding retro band. Rocket Science create the soundtrack to the looming frightful future, best shown by the disturbingly technical One Robot. The set is fuelled with a frantic urgency. The guitar rips and wails alongside the relentlessly throbbing bass and combustible drumming. The band providing a volatile stockpile of sound that is ignited by the searing bursts of organ and theremin and the manic howl of Roman Tucker up front. The whole effect is just all-encompassing, hypnotically drawing you in like a tractor-beam. The imposing Tucker is barely constrained by the edges of his instruments as he harnesses and conjures noises and transmissions from parts unknown while frothing forth and purging vivid bursts of vocals. The band’s recent return to the stage is accompanied by an imminent return to the recorded world. A swathe of new songs were sent swirling into the world including Alive, Sinful Cowboy, Weekly Dreams and Psychic Man before they delved back to the incendiary Burn in Hell from their nearly decade-old debut, which they would revisit for a devastating final coupling of 6 Foot 4 and Copycat. They left behind carnage. The guitarist was last seen as a pair of legs falling back over a stack of speakers and Rocket Science departed leaving a trail of instruments strewn across the stage. Nothing was left but the smoke, sweat and the ringing and an intact reputation as one of the finest live bands in the country. Set List Jet Set Run Like A Gun Alive One Robot Sinful cowboy Weekly Dreams Pop Lover Different Like people I Need your love Being followed Jet Lag Psychic Man Modern Life Burn in Hell -------------------- 6 Foot 4 Copy Cat Rocket Science / Front End Loader / Walrus Mar 27, 2023
 gratefulseedsaver Bobby, Wolf Brothers and the Wolfpack ‘shook the house’ with 4 hours of ‘musical/family’ BLISS! Don’t miss this tour…it’s a STELLAR collective of musical talent!!! Bob Weir & Wolf Bros Mar 27, 2023
 Chris Kimpson Who’s drum stick is that? Clutch / Sevendust / Stuck Mojo / 8 Degrees / Ultraspank Mar 26, 2023