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LIVE AND DANGEROUS: Gigantour attacks

Live at Cox Arena: Megadeth, In Flames, Job for a Cowboy and more.

Amy Ebersole, Staff Writer

Issue date: 5/27/08 Section: Tempo
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Media Credit: Lindsey Martin/Staff Photographer

This isn't pop music. This is metal.

To untrained ears metal may sound like a car crashing, drum busting, death screaming explosion. But to metal connoisseurs, its mathematical precision is as clear as a modernized version of classical music. Scratch the orchestra and bring in long hair, head banging and guitar slinging with dark lyrical undertones, and voila, you have metal.

An ensemble of tattooed, black T-shirted fans flooded into Cox Arena for the fourth annual Gigantour headed by the pioneers of thrash metal, Megadeth. Other bands such as Children of Bodom, In Flames, Job For a Cowboy and High on Fire were also the nucleus of the stadium.

Lights, camera, action - the DVD filming was a placebo for energy as ecstatic fans threw up hand horns while the camera probed the audience and a vivacious anthill of swarming, sweaty bodies in the mosh pit.

Some complained of Cox Arena's lack of "social lubricant," aka alcohol, while others disappointedly saw their $50 Ticketmaster tickets were being sold for $10 a pop at the door.

But the high intensity raged regardless, picking up after High on Fire and Job for a Cowboy, as fans rushed in for the experimental heavy metal band from Finland, Children of Bodom.

The solo work and innovated song structure highlighted the band's phenomenal talent. Fans hypnotized by Janne Warman's insane keyboard antics stood out like a deer caught in headlights.

But more head bashing awaited.

"Scream for me San Diego," hair-dreded growling vocalist of In Flames, Anders Fridén said.

This melodic, Swedish death metal band's high energy matched its heavy shredding, wanking and riffing as it crashed through intros, solos and breakdowns. The hyper-power ballads were cocked and loaded.
When getting past the doomsday aspects, mythology and underlying thread of evil, there thrives an intense complexity.
"In Flames' heavy riffs and complex song structure may challenge beginning metal listeners," career musician and metal lover Matt Youell said.

And then came Dave Mustaine. The lead guitarist, singer and songwriter of Megadeth from La Mesa lived up to his dark God-like reputation. As founder of Gigantour, former Metallica lead guitarist and one of the most influential people in heavy metal history, Mustaine's tenor range vocals and trade-off guitar solos provided rapture to headbangers.
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Comments below do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Daily Aztec. Comments may be edited or denied for length, grammar, spelling, punctuation and The Associated Press style. Comments go through an approval process and will not immediately appear. Comments may also be published in the print edition. If you have a lengthy comment, please send it to letters@thedailyaztec.com with your full name, year, major and occupation if applicable.

Viewing Comments 1 - 2 of 2

adam

posted 5/29/08 @ 2:44 AM PST

Were tickets actually sold for an extra low rate at the door? I guess they were trying to pull people in for filming because the arena was nowhere near sold out. (Continued…)

Kevin

posted 5/30/08 @ 2:13 PM PST

What's not to like about Gigantour? This metal festival has really made huge strides as one of the premier metal tours. Having seen Megadeth a bunch of times already, much like a fine wine they just get better and stronger with age. (Continued…)

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