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Best show I've seen from them since the early 90's. this line-up has now really come together. Absolutely loved hearing Norwood play Bonin' again. Gutted they didn't play Sunless Saturday and a shame I've never seen them in front of so few people. Hope that doesn't deter them from coming back again. I want them back real soon!! Still the best live band on the planet, even my novice friend I took with me agreed.
As usual I was early for the gig having to drive 120miles to get to London so I was loitering around the venue when I spotted Rocky and Dre lurking by the venue's stage entrance. I decided to go over and say hi and in fact John McKnight and John Steward were there as well. John McKnight was trying to fix the slide on his trombone which had been slightly bent when someone had packed it for him the gig before. We chatted for a while before he went in to change after getting white lube on his black tee-shirt!
The gig itself was probably the best I have been to as the bone were on fire imho - but earlier they had told me outside that it would be about the fifth gig of the tour when they would really get going!
Setlist
They said they hadn't played it in a LONG time.
They’ve gone through several line up changes however, and have also been dropped from a couple of major labels in the past. It’s the constant touring that has kept them going and I’ve been going to see them for the last 20 years. Out of this line up, Angelo Moore (vocals, various saxes, theremin) and Norwood Fisher (funky 5-string bass and vocals) are the two original Fishbone soldiers. Both look as young as when they first started, although Norwood has a little grey in his goatee these days. :-)
That’s not to say the rest of the band aren’t great musicians too. Rocky George has some blistering guitar solos and sounds ultra heavy on some of the songs. John Steward is a powerful, rock solid drummer who is both loud and funky, effortlessly playing the different styles that Fishbone songs mutate into. John McKnight is rock solid on guitar, vocals, keyboard AND that funky trombone, sounding like he could give Fred Wesley a run for his money.
It’s a blistering set with a lot of crowd surfing from the audience and the band. At one point Dre Gipson, the keyboard player and additional vocalist stands right at the edge of the stage and manages to do a front flip into the crowd where he gleefully surfs across the dancefloor before being deposited back onto the stage. There’s a lot of their uptempo, funky and crowd pleasing songs played tonight. Stand out tracks for me were “Bonin’ in the Boneyard”, the Sublime classic “Date Rape”, “Party At Ground Zero”, the Curtis Mayfield classic “Freddie’s Dead” that they play for an encore and “Chim Chim’s Badass Revenge” (from the 1996 album of the same name) which they said they haven’t played for a good long while. It still sounds good and makes me realise that I need to listen to this underrated album again really soon.
Uptempo, dynamic shows like this are what gigging is all about. Fishbone have always been great live and at the root of their shows is a firm belief in dancing, going nuts and involving their audience. The march of the Fishbone soldiers continues :-)
Peace
Oh by the way, for those that don’t know there’s a documentary being made about Fishbone called “Everyday Sunshine” and you can contribute to this film either financially or by sending in Fishbone memorabilia. Check out http://www.fishbonedocumentary.com/ for more info.