Monday, January 26, 2009

"A sense of freedom and exhilaration that can't be found elsewhere."

Every summer, I spend my days working, spending time with friends, and just relaxing. But for the past few years, something has taken over and become the highlight of my entire summer-- the Warped Tour. A fifteen-year-old tradition, Warped Tour is the one day each summer that absolutely cannot be missed.

Each July, I pack up my drawstring bag full of water, sunscreen and cash, and drive an hour down to Cincinnati (always getting lost along the way) to stand in line with thousands of other fans. Upon entrance to the venue, teens and adults alike rush to the Vans tent to see what time their favorite bands are playing. Warped Tour attendees are quite a diverse group, and with approximately 100 bands performing each day, there are many styles of music-- something for almost everyone. Even with such diversity, Warped is a community-- a family.

At the end of 2008, WarpedTourDoc began following me on Twitter. I checked them out and saw that they were running a contest giving a way a free DVD and a ticket to the 2009 Warped Tour. The documentary sounded interesting and of course I could use a free ticket, so I began entering a few contests. After winning the "Most Embarassing WT Moment" contest, I received the DVD in the mail. A few weeks later, I watched it.

And I have to tell you-- Nothing could capture the spirit of the Warped Tour better than this documentary.

Right from the opening, which shows the show being organized and the stages being set up, I was intrigued. I've never been to a show before it started, so already I was being exposed to a part of the tour which I had not previously known.

The documentary works smoothly from one of the first few scenes in which a worker says, "Warped Tour has gone soft, yo," to the ending "feel-good montage," which captured the family feel of Warped, and made me incomparably excited for the 2009 show.

During the 91-minute film, directed by Jonathan Rach, I learned more about the Warped Tour than I ever could have in my nineteen years of life. When a tour, mostly targeted at teenagers, spans fifteen years, there are very few fans who have been around since the beginning. The documentary, The Warped Tour: A Concert, A Culture, An Entire Generation, covers the tour from the very beginning and includes onstage, backstage, tour bus, and fan moments that couldn't be seen anywhere else.

The documentary covers the politics seen at Warped Tour in a balanced and uncontroversial way that is perfect for a show that is about the people and their expression, more than it is actually about the political views of those people.

There is so much more I could say about Warped Tour and about this documentary, but this is already the longest blog I've written to date. I may add some more later, but for now I just leave you with my strong recommendation to check out this documentary and, if you haven't already, you should definitely check out the Warped Tour this summer.


Photos by Sarah Maloy at Cincinnati Warped Tour 2008
Top Right: Mike Ski of The A.K.A.s.
Bottom: A crowd watching The Gym Class Heroes perform "Peace Sign Up, Index Down" on the main stage.

Renovation.

I redesigned my blog.

Well... I'm working on redesigning my blog.

Comments? Opinions?

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Believers Never Die Part Deux

I've never wanted to go to a concert this badly in my entire life.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Are you on the bandwagon or not?

Fall Out Boy-- America's Suitehearts video



Do I seem a bit hung up on Fall Out Boy lately? Well perhaps that's because I am. But only because the entire world seems to revolve around them lately. I know Pete Wentz just married and had a baby with Ashlee Simpson, but does no one remember how many complaints there were about FOB following Infinity On High?

The fans couldn't handle the change, yet now everyone is back to throwing their money and their attention at a band who they ripped apart just twenty-three months ago. Fall Out Boy's newest album, Folie A Deux, which dropped on December 16, is not that different from Infinity On High. Lyrically it is a drastic change, given that the songs are for once not written from Pete Wentz's point of view, but musically, there have been very few alterations.

I've like everything of Fall Out Boy's-- from their unsigned garage-band punk days of Evening Out With Your Girlfriend, to the obnoxious popularity of From Under the Cork Tree, and even recently the new sounds of Infinity On High and Folie A Deux. I understand the attraction of Folie, but I'm just surprised that so many have jumped back on the bandwagon. Maybe fans have finally learned to look at present-day Fall Out Boy as a separate entity from past-FOB. But regardless of whether or not they are widely worshiped, I plan to continue listening.