Anti-Flag was the best
by MotherMotherhead on 2018-09-24Edmonton EXPO Centre - EdmontonRating: 4 out of 5Went to the concert for Anti-Flag and they killed it! Rise Against was Rise Agianst still very good!
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The lies are inescapable. On every screen, the merchants of disinformation exert their cruel dominion. There is the queasy sense that we're drowning in a slipstream of screeching noise and mindless ephemera. The water is rising. The ground is shaking. The shadows are long and the lights are low. It's the perfect time for a new album from Rise Against.
Few bands have ever been as accurately named as the Chicago punk quartet. While fleeting styles and fashionable imitations have entered and exited vogue, Rise Against have remained a north star of artful resistance. While continuously updating their formula, they've sustained their original spirit of rebellion over a quarter century - amassing a body of work that doubles as a chronicle of our collective unraveling. Melodic hardcore detonations co-exist in perfect tension with dire warnings about the looming dystopia. And on their latest Loma Vista release, Ricochet, they've made what might be their most visceral, urgent, and high-stakes song cycle.
In the four years since Rise Against's last opus, the world has continued to be torn asunder by shameless falsehoods, brazen greed, and episodes of shocking cruelty. This devolution has not gone unnoticed by the band. Ricochet takes these crises under the scope and dissects them with lucid clarity, raw emotion, and global perspective. Amidst a period of nationalist aggression and isolationism, the album reflects on our own interconnectivity. A form of chaos theory in which our unruly actions and anger wreak havoc in ways that aren't always easily understood.
"We rely on each other, whether we like it or not," Rise Against lead singer, rhythm guitarist, and lyricist, Tim McIlrath says. "Everything that you do will affect somebody. We're connected to other countries and other economies; we're connected to undocumented immigrants. We're connected to every decision that our leaders make. We are not as isolated as we think. What we do, good or bad, creates one big ricochet effect."
The album's gestation started after the marathon tours for 2021's Nowhere Generation. In their trademark fashion, McIlrath and the band's other songwriter, bassist Joe Principe, reconvened to gather and compare notes. When the ideas began cohering, they entered the studio with lead guitarist Zach Blair and drummer Brandon Barnes, with the stated goal of relinquishing the notion of what a Rise Against song needed to sound like. Enlisting producer Catherine Marks (Boygenius, St. Vincent), they trusted her vision to expand upon their naturally colossal rippers. While mixing engineer Alan Moulder (Nine Inch Nails, Paramore, The Killers) added a sophisticated and atmospheric touch to the finished product.
You can hear the subtle shift most acutely on "I Want It All" and the album's title track. The former is an infectious headbang-ready riff that almost sounds like a long-lost '70s FM radio classic from the Kinks (if the Davies brothers had somehow been raised on Fugazi). While "Ricochet" opens with slinky drum machine claps that feint towards electro-clash before swiftly ascending into a sky-rattling Kevlar anthem that should make arenas consider paying a higher premium of roof insurance before booking the band.
On "Nod," the album's first single, Rise Against capture the emotional turbulence shrouding the current zeitgeist ("the line...drawn between dreams and nightmares is thin like a razor"). Rolling Stone rhapsodized that it's a "particularly potent rallying cry for the moment." Vice raved that it was the "anthem that we need now" - one featuring Rise Against at their best - "passionate, confident, and encouraging." The second salvo, "Prizefighter," is a propulsive burner that invokes a boxing metaphor to explore the connection between an artist and their fanbase. Balancing introspection with the incendiary, the song builds on the characteristic duality of the band's previous Platinum and Gold-certified classics.
It's this three-dimensional nuance that has allowed Rise Against to write some of the most important rock songs of their generation. On Ricochet, McIlrath's lyrics navigate many of the most pressing crises of the moment, offering unerring righteousness without sanctimony, and empathy without letting malefactors off the hook. They cover apocalyptic scenarios ("Black Crown") and false promises sold to the youth ("Gold Long Gone"), the necessity of resisting blind allegiance ("Soldier"), mental health ("Sink Like a Stone"), and the sensationalism of the algorithmic entertainment-industrial complex ("State of Emergency). Throughout it all, there is a cautious optimism for real lasting change.
"The fight for a better world almost always starts with an unpopular opinion or a minority of voices," McIlrath says. "When you feel overwhelmed, when it feels like it's you against the world, it's important to remember that every resistance movement started as a small and passionate group. Our songs may take you to a dark place, but there's always breadcrumbs of hope to help get you out of there."
Like the band's literary hero, George Orwell, they have absorbed the maxim that "in a time of deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act." Ricochet is a success at simplest level: a collection of indelible rock and roll songs with infectious hooks that sound best played at eardrum-shattering volume. But it also functions as something more profound: a document of artists capturing the chaos of the moment, articulating complex truths with seismic power, and an awareness of the consequences that may befall us. This is an album built to be a part of the solution.
-Jeff Weiss
Encore
Encore
Encore
Went to the concert for Anti-Flag and they killed it! Rise Against was Rise Agianst still very good!
Loved the Venue, first time being at a show at the expo center and really liked the set up and sound.
I've seen the band before and they are amazing. That being said the venue and acoustics were awful.
Best mosh pit I've been in in Edmonton. Amazing show!!!
Rise Against put on a great performance, playing almost every song that I wanted to hear. I Wish AFI played a couple more tunes but they still killed it and put on an amazing performance. Unfortunately, I diden't arrive in time to catch Anti flag, which sucks because i really wanted to see them, so I cant comment on there performance but I have no doubt it was good. The venue was great, I liked the layout. It felt more spread out from side to side rather than from front to back like other shows I've been too in the past. When these guys come back, Ill be there!
It was great ! Tons of space at the venue! Loved that I could bring the kids and still have an adult beverage.
I’ve seen rise against in the past at the expo centre, both times it’s has been a blast.
Worst concert ever, never ever will I attend a concert in the Expo Centre. Couldn’t hear anything
Such an amazing show! So fun, So much energy, rise against did not disappoint
I was told RoseAgainst wasn’t the best love. They sing too fast they were really just meh.... OMG they were so good. Friends who have seen them before said it’s like a whole different band. They were awesome.
The show was awesome!! ❤️. Definitely recommend this show to any of my friends!
2yrs in a row rise against has proved to be the best energy out of many shoes I go to. And the fans are the friendliest people to party with can't wait till next year !!!
This was my fourth time seeing Rise Against - the second time at Echo Beach. I love the venue it's laid out well and the views of the stage and surrounding area are great. I would recommend putting out the few extra dollars to upgrade to VIP if you have the option. Being up on the VIP patio is great, I've done it both times I've visited this venue. You have access to your own bar and bathrooms (porta-potties, but still, better only a handful of people using them than the entire venue!). You also have unobstructed sight lines of the stage and the VIP areas are located pretty close to the stage. As for the bands, this was my first time seeing Anti-Flag and AFI. They both killed it. I felt empowered and inspired and their energy was great. I would see them both again. Rise Against is my favourite band and I have only good things to say. They always give so much and I appreciate every second. They sounded amazing, every song was huge. The crowd was into it and the band and the crowd fed off each other's energy. I will definitely be seeing them on their next visit to Toronto!!
While all 3 bands were amazing, AFI is unbeatable.
They were the fat wreck chords rise against!! Great older stuff. Had some of the crowd lost!! They weee punk rock, not alt rock!
So much energy and always a great show!!! Love Rise Against!!
As usual, Rise Against was awesome on a warm summer night at Echo Beach. With openers Anit-Flag and AFI Revving the crowd up, Rise Against finished the job with a high energy set interspersed by an short run of acoustic songs. The show was one of the best of the summer.
We arrived right on time and made our way to the vary front. It isn’t every day one get to experience two of their favourite bands back to back. Oddly, AFI discarded new material and opted to mostly play material from their hayday; 2000-2006. Rise Against was epic looking through the fog machine with the night sky in the background behind the set dressings. They played a grand selection of hits, even starting a swirling circle pit at one point. We ducked out during the last song of the night and was one of few in attendance that caught the early GO train home, perfect.
Everything was awesome other than the gross washrooms, porter potties or a small amount of indoor toilets that half didn’t flush.
Show was very good. Not great. Seen them do better.