Saturday, 21 November 2009

To my angel...

You lived your life with such happiness and joy that others could only envy you.
But out of jealousy, our "merciful" God broke your wings and you couldn't fly no more.

I'll see you again someday, somewhere.

Sleep well, my angel. (RIP Sónia Rebouta)


Wednesday, 12 August 2009

Sonisphere Festival
Sunday, the 2nd of August, 2009


We woke up in the morning feeling a little bit better than the night before, but even so, my body was aching and complaining about having to get up.

After a good shower, we left the room and went down to have breakfast at the hotel. Our 3 Israeli mates were already there and already complaining about the food. Breakfast was a disappointment. We were hoping to have a Full English Breakfast so that we would have our bellies really full for this 2nd day of festival, but there were no scrambled eggs, sausages or anything like that. Not even croissants!!! We have only managed to eat some shitty bread with butter, some milk and cereals and the awful English bucket of coffee.

Since we weren’t able to fill up our bellies, we took from the hotel some supplies for the day (several cheese bars, cereal boxes, bread with butter, etc.), so that we had something to eat during the day without having to spend a lot of money on the festival area.

After breakfast, we took a taxi to the Festival, once again with our new occasional friends.

When we arrived, we noticed some things never change, whether you are in Portugal or in the UK. This 2nd day of concerts was going to be much heavier than the previous day, so there were security personnel doing searches at the Festival entrance. The day before there was nothing like that. Why do these people think that headbangers and all sorts of metal fans are dangerous??? It’s silly, indeed.

We’ve arrived at the Festival just in time to see Paradise Lost on the Saturn Stage. It’s sad to see this band opening one of the stages and playing only 30 minutes.


Paradise Lost at Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

I didn’t refer to this before but there’s a big difference between the festivals in the UK and in Portugal. In the UK they sign so many bands to play in a 2 day festival that almost every band just plays between 30 minutes to 1 hour. In my opinion, this makes no sense at all and I’ll be back to this theme (next post) just to add a few more thoughts on it.

Let’s get back to Paradise Lost again. It was nice to see this band once again but they are not the same as before. These guys still have good songs but not the same energy. The best moment of this short set was when they played some stuff from the album “Draconian Times”.

Paradise Lost Setlist: The Enemy, Pity the Sadness, Requiem, Hallowed Land, One Second, Say Just Words

After Paradise Lost, we moved on to the Apollo Stage to see some rock legends. The industrial pioneers Killing Joke are old but Jaz Coleman (singer) is still rocking like before. Although not knowing very much of their work, I really enjoyed the concert.

Killing Joke Setlist: Requiem, Wardance, Love Like Blood, Eighties, The Wait, Pssyche

We went back to the Saturn Stage for one of the worst performances of this festival. Saxon delivered a poor concert with an awful sound and with no energy whatsoever. For the curriculum these guys have, they are supposed to deliver a lot more. They should have seen the Thunder gig on the previous night.

Saxon Setlist: Battalions of Steel, Heavy Metal Thunder, Strangers In The Night, Let Me Feel Your Power, Princess Of The Night,Denim And Leather

On the main stage, Lamb of God were about to start so we went there to check it out. I heard them before on digital media and I wanted to see them live. Great musicians and a very brutal concert but for me they should get rid of their singer. No voice at all, just screaming without any intelligible words coming out of his mouth. I lost interest and we went back to the Saturn Stage to see one of the concerts I’d been waiting for.

Lamb of God setlist: The Passing, In Your Words, Set To Fail, Walk With Me In Hell, Now You've Got Something To Die For,Dead Seeds,Laid to Rest, Redneck, Black Label

Mastodon started their concert with the amazing song “Oblivion” from the masterpiece “Crack the Skye”. Very competent musicians and great singers (yes, all of them sing). Going through the new album and some of the old stuff, they gave us a short but one of the best concerts of this festival. Their performance of “The Czar” was just out of this world.


Mastodon at Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

How is it possible that Mastodon only had 45 minutes to play??? I’m eager to see them in a proper concert. Just them, nobody else. If you never listened to the album “Crack the Skye”, you’re missing one of the masterpieces of this century.

Mastodon setlist: Oblivion, Megalodon, Blood and Thunder, The Czar, Crack The Skye, Iron Tusk, March Of The Fire Ants

It was time to check out who were the Special Guests announced for this festival. It was not much of a surprise because it was Machine Head. Of course they were welcomed, but everyone was already more or less expecting them. They had cancelled their participation on this festival after some bickering with Sonisphere organization and with Limp Bizkit. It seems that there was some sort of agreement and here they were, ready to rock and rumble. And what a rumble!!! We were offered a brutal, powerful and energetic set were anything was possible in the mosh pit, besides taking eyes. Robb Flynn thanked the fans, telling us that we were the reason for this Machine Head at the Sonisphere Festival, not the f***ing organization or Fred Durst (Limp Bizkit).

Machine Head at Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

Machine Head setlist: Imperium, Ten Ton Hammer, Beautiful Morning, Old, Bulldozer, Struck A Nerve, Halo, Davidian

After Machine Head, and since we were not interested in seeing Feeder, we went to the Bohemia Stage to see Corey Taylor from Slipknot on his solo acoustic act. It wasn’t great. His solo songs do not betray his birthplace. On the 30 minutes he had available he played some songs with a strong country influence but without any flame to it. His set had a good moment: when he played the song “Bother” from his band Stone Sour. It was just a pity that the drummer seemed like he had never played or rehearsed this song before. But it was a good moment with the audience singing along.

We went back to the main stage to see Limp Bizkit. I have to say that I didn’t have many expectations about this return to the stages and my fears were confirmed. Limp Bizkit had retired a few years ago and one thing is certain: this should have remained that way. The big Limp Bizkit fans were enjoying it but for me there was something missing. Those Limp Bizkit songs that were great some years ago now seemed dated and old fashioned. Basically it was nothing new, just the same old crap. Hearing “Nookie” once again after all these years made me think why I liked these guys back in the day and I have to say that I don’t have the faintest idea. I don’t know what Fred Durst intends to do with his band in the future but if this is it I only have one thing to say: Good luck, all the best.

Limp Bizkit setlist: My Generation, Livin' It Up, Show Me What You Got, Hot Dog, Eat You Alive, Rollin', Break Stuff, My Way, Nookie, Faith, Take A Look Around

After that disappointment, we had the chance to see one of the best concerts of the day, and of the entire festival. Thank God Alice in Chains found this guy called William DuVall to replace the deceased Layne Staley. DuVall is without any doubt an excellent singer and performer. It would always be risky for Alice in Chains to get a new singer to replace the charismatic voice of Layne Staley, but they found someone with the same voice tone who doesn’t stay in the shadow of the former singer. DuVall has earned his place in this band and with a lot of merit. I saw Alice in Chains some years ago in Portugal and I was amazed with this guy. Now, after some years of playing together with the rest of the band, he is even more confident and well tuned. Really amazing. I can’t wait to hear their new album.

Alice in Chains gave us a 45 minute set list mixing old tunes with some of the new ones. The old classics sounded powerful and very good on the voice of DuVall, making justice to the work of Layne Staley. It seems like they’ve reviewed their songs and brought them to the 21st Century.
Successful themes like “Man in the Box”, “Would?” or “Rooster”, to name a few, just grew in shape, precision and powerfulness throughout the concert. For sure, it was one of the most enjoyable concerts at Sonisphere.

Alice in Chains setlist: Angry Chair, Man in the Box, Again, A Looking in View, Them Bones, Dam That River, Check My Brain, Would?, Rooster

After the amazing Alice in Chains concert, we went back to the Apollo Stage to see the reason why I went to this festival. Almost certainly, the last Nine Inch Nails gig in the UK, and their most likely last tour.

Trent Reznor (NIN) at Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

Trent Reznor has previously made public that this will be the last UK show from the band he uses as a platform for his distinct take on music. Without any doubt, Nine Inch Nails make a powerful, passionate noise that can compete in the heaviest of company, but what they certainly are not is a heavy metal band, and on this evening they stand up to the audience at Knebworth and make that quite clear. Nine Inch Nails could have come onto the stage and blown the crowd away with a set of heavy classics such as “Head Like A Hole”, “The Hand That Feeds” or “Closer”, but they didn't... they did something else - something very special instead.

I admit that playing all the classics would have been a great way to go out - and that's what I was expecting. But what we got instead was a very heartfelt goodbye. A restrained and experimental set focusing on the kind of heaviness that comes from within. It was a profound and cathartic performance that divided the crowd. This kind of show is usually done in a small, indoor venue, with an intimate atmosphere between artist and fan. To attempt the same at a rock festival this big, is extraordinarily audacious. “Something I Can Never Have” is achingly beautiful as is “The Downward Spiral”. To hear an entire audience singing along the masterpiece “Hurt” was more than special, it was just something else...

Me at the NIN concert in Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

Trent Reznor provided a set list for the fans rather than the festival crowd, but in my opinion there was no need to be a fan... it was just either for you, or it wasn't. For me the only problem with the Nine Inch Nails concert was that I wanted more, much more than just 1 hour concert. But thank God I’ve been there.

Nine Inch Nails setlist: The Way Out is Through, Wish, I Do Not Want This, Something I Can Never Have, Gone, Still, The Frail, The Wretched, Non Entity, Lights in the Sky, The Downward Spiral, Hurt

After that amazing moment it was time to eat something and just wait for Metallica. My interest for Avenged Seven Fold was near to nothing. It is just inflated hard rock without any substance.

It was noticeable that this was the moment that Knebworth was waiting for.

As Metallica take the stage to a video clip from “The Good, The Bad and the Ugly” even the most hardened sceptic would surely understand the attraction... Metallica are enormous. ENORMOUS. They are raw, crazy and loud.

Metallica at Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

James Hetfield continues to have that special ability to work the crowd in a way that no one else is able too. He is an expert in the field, delivering a speech that brings back flashes from the time he was in rehab (documented in the “Some Kind of Monster” film), and announces that he wants Metallica and the audience to "work together", to make "everything good".

Metallica can convince us of anything when they're this tight, this good.

Opening with “Blackened” and raising the bar with “Creeping Death”, Metallica has done what Metallica does best: grabbing you by the balls right from the beginning. After that, all the audience was on the palm of their hands. They delivered “Fuel”, “Of Wolf and Man” and “Fade to Black” in one go. Brutal, the frenzy was set.
Metallica were professional as always and delivered what we expect from them.
A Metallica concert is a pantomime at its best, a show in full speed and on flames, much different from Trent Reznor’s more introspective concert earlier in the evening - but they do it with style and they do it for you, the Metallica fan, to make your experience the best possible one... that's what this was all about. And what an evening it was... new songs (“Broken, Beat and Scarred”, “Cyanide”, etc.) mixed with the old classics (“Sad But True”, “One”, “Master Of Puppets”, “Nothing Else Matters”, “Enter Sandman”, “Hit The Lights”, “Seek & Destroy”), a full menu with everything we were entitled to.
We even had the joy of singing Happy Birthday to James Hetfield at the end of the show, while a kid (probably his son) was throwing custard pies at his face. Just one of the several traditions in a Metallica show that make us feel as part of the Metallica family.

Metallica setlist: Blackened, Creeping Death, Fuel, Of Wolf And Man, Fade To Black, Broken, Beat And Scarred, Cyanide, Sad But True, One, All Nightmare Long, The Day That Never Comes, Master Of Puppets, Dyers Eve, Nothing Else Matters, Enter Sandman Encore: Stone Cold Crazy, Hit The Lights, Seek & Destroy.

It was great, we were tired, and it was time to say goodbye to our first experience in an UK festival.

We’ve exchanged some phone messages with our taxi pals, but they were going to stay a little bit longer to see The Ataris on the Bohemia Stage at midnight (later on they told us the band didn’t show up).

With no taxi mates to share the fare, we decided to get the free bus to Stevenage and then try to find someone to share the taxi back to Luton.

We shared the taxi with two Luton residents who were completely gobsmacked with the fares the taxi drivers were asking at the Stevenage rail station (from £50 to £80 pounds or more). F***ing thieves!
While waiting for the taxi, we agreed with one of the taxi drivers (English, middle-age, seemingly more honest) who was waiting for clients, on a set price for him to take us to Luton Airport with a little stop at Luton town centre to drop the 2 Luton boys.
40 quid! Not bad compared to the others. We took it.
After leaving our taxi companions at the city centre, we finally arrived at the hotel, tired as hell.

End of day: a revitalizing shower and off to bed. Back home on the following morning.

Sunday, 9 August 2009

Sonisphere Festival
on Saturday, the 1st of August, 2009


We got the train to Derby, changed into another train to Leicester, and then another train to Luton Airport Parkway. Around 2h30m on trains…

Finally, we arrived at the hotel. When checking in, we found 3 guys that were going to the Festival also. You’ve guessed… people to share the taxi. While speaking to them, we found out that they were from Israel.

After some refreshing on the hotel room, we shared a taxi to the Festival and after 30 minutes, there we were… our first UK festival.

We swapped the printed tickets for the wristbands and off we went inside. Big camping site, two main stages (the Apollo Stage and the Saturn Stage), a big tent containing the third stage (Bohemia), some recreational stages (Jackson, Guitar Hero, etc.), merchandise stands and the normal festival shops for food and beverage.

Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

While strolling around the festival area there were several bands playing that we had never heard about before but nothing really interesting.

The first concert worth mentioning was from Anthrax. They gave a very powerful concert, giving a masterclass to some new bands on how to deliver a perfect gig. They gave it all and deserve entirely the good response from the audience. Trash old school. Respect!

Anthrax at Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

Anthrax setlist: What Doesn't Die, Fueled, Caught in a Mosh, Antisocial (Trust cover), Room for One More, Safe Home, I Am The Law, Only, Bring The Noise, Indians

After that, we checked from a distance the concert from Bjorn Again. Jesus!!! What the hell were they doing on a rock festival? For those that don’t know it, Bjorn Again is an ABBA cover band! Crickey!!!!!!!! Like we would normally say in Portuguese: Medo, muito medo!

Another concert worthwhile was Airbourne. Besides sounding like AC/DC, they gave a nice performance. I have to say that the lead singer is completely mad. He climbed the stage structure with his guitar on the shoulder and played there, way above the ground. There’s no word to describe it, so just check the picture below.

Airbourne at Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

Airbourne setlist: Stand Up For Rock 'N' Roll, Hellfire, Diamond in the Rough, Girls in Black, Cheap Wine & Cheaper Women, Too Much Too Young Too Fast, Runnin' Wild, Blackjack

I didn’t mention it yet but around this time it started raining, a lot, so we just went to the merchandise stands to get away from the rain. After a while, we decided to ignore the rain and just went back to the main stage to see Heaven and Hell.

Heaven and Hell at Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

This band is a musical collaboration featuring Black Sabbath members Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler along with former members Ronnie James Dio and Vinny Appice. We didn’t know what to expect but with the credits these four guys have, it would be a very competent concert for sure. And it was. It was a powerful concert full of epic songs. Tony Iommy is still one of the best guitarists ever and Dio still has a very strong voice. Don’t forget that one of the metal fans best known symbols was created by this man: the devil horns!

Heaven and Hell setlist: E5150, The Mob Rules, Children Of The Sea, I, Bible Black, Time Machine, Fear, Falling Off The Edge Of The World, Follow The Tears, Die Young, Heaven And Hell

Next we went to the other stage to check the concert from Bullet For My Valentine. I still don’t understand the big success of this band. I recognize that instrumentally they are good players, but personally I just hate the singer’s voice. Maybe that’s the problem, and it is just me and taking that into account I cannot give an impartial comment.

We decided to go and eat something more (the food that we prepared at home had already run out). I haven’t mentioned this before, but thank God for the food in the Portuguese festivals. The food in the British festival is even worse than the British food in general. From curries to giant Yorkshire puddings, from hotdogs to burgers full of awful sauces, you have a herculean mission in front of you just to choose something eatable.

Mental note: Que saudades do pão com chouriço, do caldo verde e dos “avestrugers”.

We chose a bagel with smoked bacon and brie. It wasn’t bad. We drank a coke mostly because we had already tried a beer and as we say in Portugal, it was dead and tasted like piss.

We finished eating just in time for the Linkin Park concert. It was a great performance with all the old hits and the new songs already sounding like old hits too. Musically and scenically perfect. Chester Bennington is singing better than ever. His voice may have lost the roughness and explosion that it had before, but it is now much more melodic and in tune. Odds-on, someone must have told him that if he continued to sing like he did, he would lose his voice.


Linkin Park at Sonisphere ©Torpes2009

Linkin Park setlist: Session, Given Up, From The Inside, Somewhere I Belong, No More Sorrow, Lying From You, Points Of Authority, What I've Done, Leave Out All The Rest, Numb, Breaking The Habit, Shadow Of The Day, Hands Held High, Crawling, In The End, Bleed It Out, Crawl Back In (Dead by Sunrise),Fire (Dead by Sunrise), My Suffering (Dead by Sunrise), New Divide, Faint, One Step Closer

The first Sonisphere day was almost over but there was still time to check out on the Bohemia stage what was going to be the last Thunder gig. This 80’s rock FM band gave a dated concert full of emotion, playing their 80´s big hits with all the audience singing along and enjoying this band live for the last time. It was something to remember and wifey was really pleased she had the chance to see one of the bands she enjoyed so much when she was a teenager. She grew up with these songs. For me it was a good show but I was never that much into Rock FM.

Thunder setlist: Dirty Love, Higher Ground, Low Life In High Places, Gimme Some Lovin', The Devil Made Me Do It, Love Walked In, I Love You More Than Rock 'N' Roll

End of day: Met the Israeli guys at our meeting point and took a taxi back to the hotel. An invigorant shower and off to bed. We were going to have a hard day ahead of us.

How did I get to go to Sonisphere Festival?


For those who follow me on Twitter, Facebook, My Space or Hi5, you already know that I’ve won a double ticket for the Sonisphere Festival in Knebworth, UK.

Yeah, you can say it: “You lucky bastard!!!”

After the initial surprise with my luck, I had to plan my journey to Knebworth.

There was no doubt in my head that I was going to enjoy this opportunity (tickets for festivals are really expensive in the UK. I will never complain again about ticket prices in Portugal).
I would regret forever if I wouldn’t have taken the opportunity of seeing Metallica, Linkin Park, Mastodon, Alice in Chains and some other bands for free and most importantly, Nine Inch Nails on what might be their last tour.

First of all, I decided together with wifey that we were going to stay in the hotel. The tickets included camping but we are getting to old for that. And with the British weather, we were not going to take any chances.

1st problem: I won the double ticket one week prior to the event so, when I tried to book the hotel, the nearest one was in Luton Airport. No worries, it is only 11 miles away, I thought… The only problem was that the public transports in the UK are just a pain in the arse. Taking this into account, we’ve decided to get a taxi to and from the Festival. There was always the possibility of sharing a taxi with people going to the Festival and also staying in Luton.

I booked the Hotel and bought the train tickets from Burton-On-Trent to Luton Airport. And so the adventure began…

2 days in a rock festival after 2 days of strolling in Manchester… one thing we already knew… we were going to be completely knackered on the following Monday…

Sonisphere Festival Line-Up

Thursday, 6 August 2009

Updates soon available...


I will need some time to update this blog with all the information from the last year and a half.

I came to the UK on January 2008 and since then, I've been travelling along this country for several reasons. Initially due to job interviews and after that, just as a tourist.

I will try to resume this, and post it here as soon as possible, but before that I'll post my last cultural journey on this kingdom.

My first experience on a outdoor festival in the UK!!!

Wednesday, 5 August 2009

Time to start this blog !!!! I hope...


My dear followers, finally I decided to write something on this blog and more importantly, I decided what to write about.

I know that I've been testing your patience, but the ones that have been waiting will decide by themselves if it was worth the wait.

I intended for a long time now to share my UK experiences on this blog and that's what I'm going to do.

But don't expect a lot of day to day bullshits, bickering or just some bits and bobs. I will focus more on cultural activities (music, cinema, theatre, exhibitions, etc.) and some travel reports.

Other things that I may find curious or just of some general interest could also appear here, but the main idea is not that. This blog will be a journey through the British culture and heritage.

Being Portuguese, I will inevitably compare the British and the Portuguese culture and heritage. I will try to be as honest as possible and to avoid taking sides.

So, hold on to your chairs, the journey is about to begin...

Wednesday, 3 June 2009

My first entry on the blog...

... and it's just a test !!