Band

  • I went out on a whim to the sold-out show, teetering on the bridge of “…or should I go” mere hours before. Not even two days back from Brooklyn, and there I was driving a long way down I-40 in my sticky-pollen-covered car to reach the third venue I ever photographed at in 2007, at the “edge of seventeen”. 

    A black and white image of a live concert with a vocalist performing energetically in front of a cheering crowd. The audience is engaged, with hands raised and a crowd surfer being supported by the fans.
    Napalm Death © Marissa Straw

    Although Cat’s Cradle has moved a few locations since its opening in 1969, it has barely changed in the almost 20 years since the first show I photographed there. The most memorable change is that the sound stage is centered and farther back from where it was in the early 2000s. Obviously, not much needs to change—Napalm Death, Melvins, and Weedeater regularly come back to the venue, each seems to get grittier and better every time. 

    This was my third time seeing Melvins, second time seeing Weedeater, and first time seeing Napalm Death. Sadly, I still have not seen Dark Sky Burial—Shane Embury was unwell (get well soon!)—bassist Mats filled in for him and has been covering a few shows.

    Napalm Death © Marissa Straw

    I feel fortunate that the shows I have attended in my thirties have been the best of my life. After each one, I walk away feeling inspired and thinking, “I am so glad I went.” This was the most energetic yet respectful punk-metal show I have ever attended—the perfect balance between chaos and care. Sure, there were some poorly executed crowd surfs among the many well-executed ones—one of which almost landed on me—but overall, the vibe was playful and full of banter. A bit surprising how everyone kept their cool on such a brutally humid night—more than half the pit was drenched in sweat from all the movement. That cool-headed energy was largely thanks to the polished mayhem delivered by the veteran bands.

    It was the kind of show where I wished I did videography, as I wanted to capture every single moment—especially what Mark ‘Barney’ Greenway had to say on stage about Trump, the economy, and overall sociopolitics. “Nazi Punks Fuck Off” cover truly is *the* theme. Barney’s repartee with the crowd deserves scholarly attention, as does the polite calmness to all the shouted song requests, “All I can say is that it’s coming.” Additional notables were that Dave “Dixie” Collins kept the crowd entertained with his trademark witty quips, two drummers (Dale Crover and Coady Willis) played the entire Melvins set, and Barney, Buzz Osborne, and Steven Shane McDonald seemed to run laps across the stage.

    Melvins © Marissa Straw

    A rare night where the majority of the bands (two out of three) have been around for longer than I have been alive. The crowd was filled with people of all ages and tastes—personal favorites of mine were Brainiac and Boris shirts, with a scattering of bands like Gojira, Eyehategod, Exhumed, and of course the bands playing. 

    Thank you to all the protective people—so many of whom were not men—you didn’t have to look out for me, but you did, and I salute you. A belated “you’re beautiful” to the one person who told me I’m pretty while I was in the photo pit—I was speechless. Extra thanks to the two photographers I befriended and chatted with; the mutual respect was real, and I love our shared energy. Extra extra thanks to the few security guards who listened and knew their stuff (you know who you are), and to the staff who gave me extra water and took the phone I found in the restroom. What a beautiful night. Sweaty, energetic movement cooled by the rain and a brisk walk back to the car, washing off all the stick—washing off all the stick.

    More images to come and will be posted on Instagram.

  • Blood Incantation & Midwife @ The Canal Club, Richmond – November 22nd 2024

    originally posted on Concert Addicts 2024 November 27.

    © Marissa Straw

    On this crisp November night, Blood Incantation and Midwife took the stage. They are more than halfway through their tour showcasing Blood Incantation’s newest and highly acclaimed album Absolute Elsewhere. Nicklas Malmqvist of Swedish progressive rock band Hällas accompanies Blood Incantation’s set on keyboards.

    © Marissa Straw

    Midwife, self-and-aptly described as “heaven metal,” is American multi-instrumentalist Madeline Johnston. With piercing eyes, quiet vocals, pedals, and guitar Midwife has a calm, haunting presence center stage amongst the dust-moted otherworldly lighting effects.

    © Marissa Straw

    Blood Incantation, accompanied by Malmqvist, started their set in the dark and went through waves of light throughout the night. Their set was beautifully and masterfully played, and included their fourth and newest album in full and ended with Inner Paths (to Outer Space), and then an encore with Obliquity of the Ecliptic after a gong intro played by drummer Isaac Faulk.

    An American death metal band with psychedlic, cosmic inclinations already, album Absolute Elsewhere solidifies this for Blood Incantation with even more drone and progressive sounds. On tour, Blood Incantation are selling a deluxe media album package that includes All Gates Open: In Search of Absolute Elsewhere, a 73-minute documentary set during the summer of 2023 at Hansa Studios where they recorded Absolute Elsewhere. Watch the trailer for All Gates Open here.

    Blood Incantation setlist

    The Stargate [Tablet I]
    The Stargate [Tablet II]
    The Stargate [Tablet III]
    The Message [Tablet I]
    The Message [Tablet II]
    The Message [Tablet III]
    Inner Paths (to Outer Space)
    Obliquity of the Ecliptic

    Midwife setlist

    Colorado
    Vanessa
    2018
    Killdozer
    No Depression in Heaven
    S.W.I.M.

  • IDLES & English Teacher @ Rabbit Rabbit, Asheville – September 14th 2024

    originally posted on Concert Addicts 2024 September 16.

    British punk rock band IDLES has just come off their fourth break in their year-long Love is the Fing World Tour ’24 tour with a sold-out show at Rabbit Rabbit in Asheville, North Carolina. IDLES has not let up on the energy and heartfelt interactions with the crowd.

    ©Marissa Straw; IDLES @ Rabbit Rabbit, NC, 2024 September 14

    A few memorable between-songs moments throughout the concert were “free Palestine” chants, Joe Talbot’s declared “Fuck the King” national anthem, and a snippet rendition of “All I Want for Christmas is You”.  And in typical IDLES fashion Talbot brought someone up on stage—a teenager who held up a written “PLS SIGN MY BIRTH-DAY DRESS” sign; the teen wore a pink dress with “DRAG IS NOT A CRIME” written on it, to which Talbot responded “…no, drag is not a crime” and gladly signed the dress and gave them a hug.

    Love is the thing
    (Is the thing, is the thing)
    (Is the thing, is the thing)
    (Is the thing, is the thing)
    (Is the thing, is the thing)
    (Is the thing, is the thing)
    (Is the thing, is the thing)
    Love

    English Teacher’s first night of the tour set a great tone for how the rest of the night and surely how the rest of the tour will go. Lily Fontaine stated the band would join the crowd for IDLES’ set and kept up great banter. Fontaine joked how she would like to say that she meant to wear her shirt adorned with two rabbits on it for their night at Rabbit Rabbit, but that she definitely did not do it on purpose. This year English Teacher won the Mercury Prize.

    ©Marissa Straw; English Teacher @ Rabbit Rabbit, NC, 2024 September 14

    IDLES’ world tour began December 1, 2023 in Hong Kong and ends December 7, 2024 in Manchester. Future show locations include a few more in the United States, along with concerts in Canada, Mexico, United Kingdom, and one in Ireland. Many dates have been sold out but some tickets are available on their website.

    IDLES’ Set List

    IDEA 01 (Tangk, track 1)
    Colossus (Joy as an Act of Resistance, track 1)
    Gift Horse (Tangk track 2)
    Mr. Motivator (Ultra Mono, track 3)
    Mother (Brutalism, track 3)
    Car Crash (Crawler, track 4)
    I’m Scum (Joy as an Act of Resistance, track 3)
    Jungle (Tangk, track 9)
    The Wheel (Crawler, track 2)
    1049 Gotho (Brutalism, track 6)
    When the Lights Come On (Crawler, track 3)
    War (Ultra Mono, track 1)
    Wizz (Crawler, track 12)
    Gratitude (Tangk, track 10)
    Benzocaine (Brutalism, track 11)
    POP POP POP (Tangk, track 3)
    Television (Joy as an Act of Resistance, track 8)
    The Beachland Ballroom (Crawler, track 7)
    Never Fight a Man with a Perm (Joy as an Act of Resistance, track 2)
    Dancer (Tangk, track 6)
    Danny Nedelko (Joy as an Act of Resistance, track 4)
    Well Done (Brutalism, track 2)
    Rottweiler (Joy as an Act of Resistance, track 12)

  • Omar Apollo & Malcolm Todd @ Red Hat Amphitheater, Raleigh – September 11th 2024

    originally posted on Concert Addicts September 13, 2024.

    Omar Apollo brought his God Said No tour to Red Hat Amphitheater Wednesday night. Apollo’s second studio album has received tall praise from various critics, including those from Rolling Stone, NME, Pitchfork, The New York Times, and more, and the love was shown in Raleigh, North Carolina. Apollo’s music is often mercurial and introspective but with a pop-indie foundation which makes for a full emotional experience when at one of his concerts.

    Malcolm Todd is a strong opener, along with his bandmates Jonah Cochran, Asher Kartman, Luke Tyler Shelton, and Charlie Ziman. In between songs, Todd mentioned he will be turning 21 in a few days while still on tour with Apollo. The energy was definitely high, while the music has such a calm nostalgic and groovy indie sound.

    Both artists’ music has that combination of loss whether that be from heartbreak or nostalgia which pairs so well together on tour. Kevin Abstract and Ravyn Lenae will be joining while they travel the West Coast. Apollo’s upcoming tour dates are shown on his website.

  • Fallujah, Persefone, Vulvodynia, Dawn of Ouroboros, & Detest the Throne @ Hangar 1819, Greensboro – July 6th 2024

    originally posted on Concert Addicts July 9, 2024.

    For Fallujah‘s 10 year anniversary tour of their sophomore album The Flesh Prevails, they are joined by PersefoneVulvodyniaDawn of Ouroboros.

    ©Marissa Straw; Fallujah @ Hangar 1819, Greensboro, NC, 2024 July 06

    On this sweltering second night of the tour it was wonderful to have a great mix of metal bands, from brutal to melodic and back again. Detest the Throne, a deathcore band from Charlotte, North Carolina, opened for the night and provided some powerful messages and music.

    Dawn of Ouroboros, the tour opener, is a beautiful melodic-melancholic death metal band California. Vulvodynia is a deathcore band from South Africa and really brought out the brutal metal with extremely high energy.

    Persefone is a melodic progressive death metal band from Andorra, and is in the United States for the first time in six years—they truly are a cannot miss band.

    ©Marissa Straw; Persefone @ Hangar 1819, Greensboro, NC, 2024 July 06

    Fallujah, a progressive death metal band, is based in California. They have been around since 2007, with their first album released in 2011. On stage, they have such positive energy actively keep the crowd engaged.

    Unique Leader Records’ remixed and remastered version of The Flesh Prevails was released on July 5, 2024.

    Fallujah’s North American tour still has several more dates through August 3rd and tickets are on sale.

    ©Marissa Straw; Vulvodynia @ Hangar 1819, Greensboro, NC, 2024 July 06
    ©Marissa Straw; Dawn of Ouroboros @ Hangar 1819, Greensboro, NC, 2024 July 06
    ©Marissa Straw; Detest the Throne @ Hangar 1819, Greensboro, NC, 2024 July 06
  • Orville Peck, Durand Jones, & Debbii Dawson @ Red Hat Amphitheater, Raleigh– May 30th 2024

    originally posted on Concert Addicts June 02, 2024.

    The second night of Orville Peck’s Stampede Tour was filled with laughter and dancing on and off the stage at Red Hat Amphitheater. Plus it was fairly nice outside for a North Carolina summer night—not much humidity, enough shade to go around, and everyone comfy in their Western getups.

    ©Marissa Straw; Orville Peck @ Red Hat Amphitheater, Raleigh, NC, 30 May 2024

    All three acts for the night and for the first leg of the tour fit a soulful, raw sound with a little country, folk, soul, or indie–or a mix of them all. The acts blended well together and made for a memorable night.

    First out on stage was Debbii Dawson, she stood alone with her guitar while delivering a powerful performance. Her voice is strong and beautiful, while also full of yearning, which pairs well with her dreamy guitar playing. 

    ©Marissa Straw; Debbii Dawson @ Red Hat Amphitheater, Raleigh, NC, 30 May 2024

    Middle act Durand Jones, who is performing as a solo act for this tour, played with a full band. He was full of energy and all across the stage with his saxophone and soulful singing.

    ©Marissa Straw; Durand Jones @ Red Hat Amphitheater, Raleigh, NC, 30 May 2024

    Crooning cowboy Orville Peck, the headliner, played songs across his collection with his touring band. The first three songs alone were off all three of his LPs–Pony, Bronco, and Stampede: Vol.1. Peck, like Durand Jones, sang and danced across the stage with fellow bandmates. His deep, soulful voice filled the amphitheater to lots of cheers. It is difficult to talk about Orville Peck without mentioning his signature look. His new Stampede-era style look, for tonight, included a black mask plus lots of colorful embroidery that contrasted well with his black ink tattoos; he had an embroidered: cowboy hat, jeans, and vest.

    ©Marissa Straw; Orville Peck @ Red Hat Amphitheater, Raleigh, NC, 30 May 2024

    Each and every performer had infectious smiles, foot tapping, and swaying, which audience members gladly mimicked.

    For the tour, Orville Peck is of course promoting his new album, Stampede: Vol. 1. Debbii Dawson also has an upcoming EP How To Be Human out on June 28, 2024. Last year, Durand Jones came out with Wait Til I Get Over.

    The Stampede Tour is one not to miss and has several upcoming dates from now through October, featuring several more accompanying performers such as The War and Treaty, Goldie Boutilier, Jaime Wyatt, Nikki Lane, Gold Star, Emily Nenni, and Vincent Neil Emerson.

  • Unprocessed @ Brooklyn Made, Brooklyn – April 11th 2024

    originally posted on Concert Addicts April 12, 2024.

    German progressive metal band Unprocessed played Brooklyn Made in Brooklyn, New York with three of their four band members. Manuel Fernandes (vocals, guitar), Christoph Schultz (guitar), and Leon Pfeifer (drums) played to an intimately packed venue.

    Unprocessed is known for their melodic, yet intricate sound and they were able to beautifully convey that during their set. Their set featured many songs off their most recent album …And Everything in Between (2023) and previous album Gold (2022). Interwoven throughout the set were songs from both albums plus singles (and favorites) “Deadrose” and “Haven.”

    Bassist David John Levy is able to make it for the rest of the tour and the full band played the next night at Jammin Java in Vienna, Virginia. Canadian metal band Red Handed Denial is touring with Unprocessed. In Brooklyn and Boston, American metal band Aviations opened.

  • Blue Karma “Shadows” Music Video @ Self Titled Media, Wilmington – February 9-10, 2024

    Neo-psychedelic band Blue Karma released their Shadows music video today. Filming happened over two days in Wilmington, North Carolina.

    Jacob Adams (Blue Karma) dedicated the song and music video to his friend and bandmate Zack Bowes. The raw sensitivity and care that Adams brought to the project carried over to the crew and allowed for a shared and heartfelt experience.

    This is the first time I have been a behind-the-scenes (BTS) photographer for a music video. I could not have been on a better crew and would love to work with everyone again.

    Credits for the music video include: Director/Editor: Josh Stevens / Self Titled Media; Cinematographer: Anthony Gabriel; Production Designer: Ashley Weston; Camera Assistant: Sydney Weston; Art: Nat Revell; BTS Photographer: Marissa Straw

  • Going Back a Bit

    In this post, the self portraits were taken when I was 15 and all other photos were taken when I was 16 or 17.

    Maybe this is a filler post so that I may finally publish my website. But here we go. I began photography long before I got into metal. It started with my love of Colorado.

    nature photography

    I was 6 the first time I met Colorado. For a decade, my family would go every summer to visit my grandparents. They lived in a tourist town, Estes Park. It has some of the best trails, as far as I know since they are some of the only ones I have hiked outside of North Carolina. I wanted to capture the silence. I did not know anything could be so silent and yet so vast.

    self portrait photography

    Photographers turn the camera on themselves at one point or another and I was about 12 when I began experimenting with (self) portraits. I could say all kinds of philosophical things about experimenting with self portraits but simply, it was a way to see myself.

    street (or candid) photography

    I was 13 or 14 when I turned the camera on people other than myself or family. I began going to seasonal camps in large cities and would capture people on the street or peers at events I attended. At this time I had been gifted a point-and-shoot camera that was easy to carry around.

    live music photography

    There was a small local music scene that I knew of as a (pre)teen and I began delving into it when I was about 13. I would take photos of bands out in parks, basements, garages, and then finally venues when I was 16.

    The first official concert I photographed was at the now defunct The Brewery, Raleigh, NC, on February 11, 2007. The headlining band was Ghost of a Fallen Age.

    why photography

    So maybe I started photography with amazement of silences, all the while believing I was not a part of them. I have since learned that it is the energy of place, time, feeling that I am photographing and sharing—of which I am a part. It has always been difficult for me to describe why I photograph but I have come to certain descriptors like the above: energy, beauty, rawness, haunting, loneliness, introspection, exploration, truth. The answer to the why of art is generally it is. A favorite motto of mine is c’est la vie (“such is life” / “it is life”) and it is the answer I provide for many things, including why I photograph, write, research, read, and so on.

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