Post by chk on Mar 26, 2006 2:08:11 GMT -5
Apologies if it has been posted already.
This is a fun review from photog Rob Grabowski of the Feb 4 Chicago Theater show with some nice pix.
www.antimusic.com/rob/06/02/index.shtml
My favourite line "saying the crowd was warmed up would be like saying hell is a little hot."
Marty Casey and the Lovehammers with INXS
Chicago Theater Feb 4th 2006
Marty Casey and the Lovehammers
After success on the TV show Rockstar INXS, Marty Casey (who was the runner-up to J.D. Fortune) and his band the Lovehammers were signed to a major record deal and found themselves opening up on the INXS tour. The thing about the Lovehammers is that they have been around for about 15 years and were Chicago's little secret. They were a solid live act through the local bar scene selling their own CD's without the help of a major label and now they find themselves in a modern day Cinderella story. With that in mind, we fast forward to Feb 4th in the Lovehammers hometown, Chicago. They open up the show with a sense of urgency to show that they are the real deal. They play such songs as "The Riddle", "Rain On The Brain", and "The Tunnel" but, there was no mistaking that the crowd wanted to hear the radio friendly, "Trees". As the opening notes rang through the crowd, you could feel the electricity and quite possibly forget that they were the opening act as Marty belted out the chorus. The crowd did their part and sang along. To wind their set down, they played an awe-inspiring version of Johnny Cash's "Ring Of Fire".
INXS
To say that the crowd was warmed up would be like saying hell is a little hot. They were on fire and as a clock appeared on a screen counting down the time till INXS would hit the stage. It seemed to the audience that with every second counting down, it was taking a lifetime. The exuberance was overwhelming and as the clock got down to 10 seconds that indefinable intro to "Suicide Blonde" set the crowd into a frenzy unlike any I have ever seen. To continue on with "New Sensation" seemed appropriate with the new sensation in new lead singer J.D. Fortune. J.D. brought with him the charisma of a seasoned veteran and had a commanding presence as he stated to the audience "sometimes in life you want to touch it, sometimes you want to feel it, but no matter what, you always want to taste it!" as the ripped into "Taste It". There was no doubt that he breathed a fresh new life into old favorites like "Mystify", "Devil Inside", "Need You Tonight" and "What You Need". While these hits date back a few years the new breed along with the old school fans exploded during "Pretty Vegas".While INXS found a treasure with frontman Fortune, Marty Casey will be able to enlighten the world to his own brand of music. And even though he lost the competition, he just might be the biggest winner that ever lost.
cheers, Rob!
This is a fun review from photog Rob Grabowski of the Feb 4 Chicago Theater show with some nice pix.
www.antimusic.com/rob/06/02/index.shtml
My favourite line "saying the crowd was warmed up would be like saying hell is a little hot."
Marty Casey and the Lovehammers with INXS
Chicago Theater Feb 4th 2006
Marty Casey and the Lovehammers
After success on the TV show Rockstar INXS, Marty Casey (who was the runner-up to J.D. Fortune) and his band the Lovehammers were signed to a major record deal and found themselves opening up on the INXS tour. The thing about the Lovehammers is that they have been around for about 15 years and were Chicago's little secret. They were a solid live act through the local bar scene selling their own CD's without the help of a major label and now they find themselves in a modern day Cinderella story. With that in mind, we fast forward to Feb 4th in the Lovehammers hometown, Chicago. They open up the show with a sense of urgency to show that they are the real deal. They play such songs as "The Riddle", "Rain On The Brain", and "The Tunnel" but, there was no mistaking that the crowd wanted to hear the radio friendly, "Trees". As the opening notes rang through the crowd, you could feel the electricity and quite possibly forget that they were the opening act as Marty belted out the chorus. The crowd did their part and sang along. To wind their set down, they played an awe-inspiring version of Johnny Cash's "Ring Of Fire".
INXS
To say that the crowd was warmed up would be like saying hell is a little hot. They were on fire and as a clock appeared on a screen counting down the time till INXS would hit the stage. It seemed to the audience that with every second counting down, it was taking a lifetime. The exuberance was overwhelming and as the clock got down to 10 seconds that indefinable intro to "Suicide Blonde" set the crowd into a frenzy unlike any I have ever seen. To continue on with "New Sensation" seemed appropriate with the new sensation in new lead singer J.D. Fortune. J.D. brought with him the charisma of a seasoned veteran and had a commanding presence as he stated to the audience "sometimes in life you want to touch it, sometimes you want to feel it, but no matter what, you always want to taste it!" as the ripped into "Taste It". There was no doubt that he breathed a fresh new life into old favorites like "Mystify", "Devil Inside", "Need You Tonight" and "What You Need". While these hits date back a few years the new breed along with the old school fans exploded during "Pretty Vegas".While INXS found a treasure with frontman Fortune, Marty Casey will be able to enlighten the world to his own brand of music. And even though he lost the competition, he just might be the biggest winner that ever lost.
cheers, Rob!