My first concert was Judas Priest at the Erie County
Fieldhouse. An Australian band called
Heaven opened up. This was on Judas
Priest’s “Screaming For Vengeance” tour.
This was a seminal moment for me.
It was inconceivable that the mighty Judas Priest was coming to our
hometown to play the songs that we listened to at every keg party for the
previous three months. We lived in Erie
PA for God’s sake. Coming here? The very idea that a metal band from England
that had videos on MTV and records at Record Den would be rocking out at the
same place where the Erie Blades minor league hockey team played was mind
blowing. What next? Are you going to tell me that Demi Moore was
coming to Homecoming?
Five very overstimulated teenage boys drove to the
Fieldhouse that night in a large American car drinking Michelob Light which had
been painstakingly acquired thanks to a deal brokered with an older guy in our
school named Randy. Randy had a beard
like a Greek sailor by age 14. Randy
could be counted on to be able to buy 12 packs from a bar named Haggerty’s
without incident as Haggerty’s had stopped asking this wayward Greek sailor for
his obviously forged ID months ago. They
must have assumed Randy had a very serious drinking problem as he was at
Haggerty’s almost daily buying three or four different brands of twelve packs. Looking back, a bar that existed primarily by
selling cases of domestic beer that had been razor bladed in half to sell out
the back door probably wasn’t too concerned about a very hairy high school boy.
I was sitting in the back seat as we all screamed over the
blaring Judas Priest on the car stereo.
This was a key component of going to a concert that I think may have
disappeared over time. The drive to the
show had to consist of nothing but the latest album of the artist in question
played so loudly that even basic communication in the car was next to
impossible. This was full-on
pregame. Knock back a couple of beers
and get psyched by listening to “Electric Eye”.
As we rolled up onto the gravel parking lot Erie’s metal community could
be spotted walking to through the haze of dust and red tail lights to the
building entrance. It looked like a post
apocalypse as skinny guys in jean jackets with metal band patches slunk into
the building in small packs of three and four like gangly trolls. It was an ugly outsider’s version of Oscar
Night or a Heavyweight Title Fight.
Without question, it was the biggest concert of the year for Erie.
This was all new to me.
I wasn’t really sure how to play it cool. Everyone else seemed to know how to act. The scenesters standing around posing in
their special concert outfits. The packs
of girls with hair sprayed out impossibly high.
The raw teenage energy of expectation was heavy in the room. My friends and I were all like deer in
headlights as we attempted pretend it was all just another day at the office. I can only imagine what dorks we looked like
(and were for that matter). Miraculously
we bought beers from the concession area.
The well trained and professional concession staff at the Erie County
Fieldhouse must have served literally anyone. The drinking age in Pennsylvania was 21, and I
looked about 11. I think it was Stroh’s. They were draft beers in wax paper cups, the
kind that you have to drink quickly before the bottom literally falls out.
We entered the arena itself.
I use the word “arena” in the loosest possible sense. It was in actuality a big tin shed. It had metal walls and a metal roof. We stood on the floor on boards which had
been placed over the ice of the rink and stared at the stage. An enormous wall of Marshall Amps lined the
entire backline with a ridiculously large drum kit that sat atop an enormous
riser. This was the age of metal, and
the lighting and props were so over the top it would be fall-down laughable
now. Even those guys in The Darkness
couldn’t have imagined a more ridiculous set up. The best part was that in front of all this gear
was a tiny area with a few amps that Judas Priest graciously allowed Heaven to
attempt to put on a performance. One of
the guys that I went to the show with leaned over to me and said, “We are going
to get blown away.”
Heaven started playing, and I had never heard anything as
loud as that in my life. The sound was
absolutely horrible. The drums
boomed. The voice was lost in
delay. The guitars were distorted. The whole thing bounced around the tin walls
and ceiling making it sound like a squadron of F-4s were landing simultaneously. The spectacle was awesome.
Heaven’s set was nothing but an obstacle to endure until
Judas Priest came on. We didn’t know any
of the songs. We couldn’t make out any
melodies, hooks, or lyrics. It was all a
loud fuzzy explosion. The singer guy yelled
out about “partying” once in a while, and people seemed to like that. I noticed the move appeared to be to raise
both hands in the air and scream out “Woooooooo!!!!” whenever “partying” was
mentioned. I had to remember that in the
future. I drank my Stroh’s needing to
take a piss, but afraid of never being able to return to my precious area close
to the stage. There were probably about
5000 people there. 4998 of them were
smoking. It was a real scene.
Judas Priest pulled all the rock star moves. They made sure Heaven sounded like shit in
the mix. They waited about an hour
before coming out to play. I didn’t know
the drill then. Had I been there now I
would have groused and complained. “What
the fuck. We’re standing around on a
fucking ice rink. Get out here already
you assholes.” Finally the house lights
went down. They, of course, started with
the instrumental “The Hellion”. It was
so fucking loud. I had been totally
unprepared for what a metal band of means could do with a ton of gear and a
good soundcheck. Holy fuck. That’s them.
When the instrumental section ended and “Electric Eye” started singer
Rob Halford came out and people went totally fucking crazy.
Let’s get this on the record. Not one of us in that arena had any inkling
that Rob Halford was gay. I understand
that idea seems totally ridiculous now as a man in leather bondage gear and
little leather hat couldn’t have been any more obvious about it unless he was
fisting Liberace on that stage. The
concept that homosexuality could have crossed into the masculine world of metal
was absurd. There is no way we could
have wrapped our heads around that idea.
Freddie Mercury? Clearly
gay. Rob Halford. All man.
Tough guy.
We were a bit naïve.
The show was awesome.
They played all the hits. Glenn Tipton
and KK Downing played guitar solos for a week that were even more stupid than
Spinal Tap. Halford rode out on the motorcycle
for “Hell Bent For Leather”. (How did we
not know he was gay? Right? Hell Bent For Leather?) Then it was over. I had never seen anything like it. “Oh, I want to do that again” immediately went
into my head. We drove home screaming over
the Judas Priest being played on K-104 the terrible local rock radio
station. The guys dropped me off with my
¾ length sleeve “Screaming For Vengeance” baseball shirt, which I would wear to
school the next day as was the social custom.
My ears rang for five days.
This week I saw a picture of a metal band playing a festival
with “prop amps”. Their entire backline
was literally a two dimensional prop, wooden facsimiles of giant Marshall Amps
to give the impression that they were a powerful rock band. What a damn shame to have been a kid
attending that show as his first concert.
Maybe things really were better back in the Good Old Days. Back in the days when men with leather
fetishes sang to oblivious teenage boys and caused hearing damage in tin barns. When those same teenage boys drove home drunk
reeking of pot and cigarette smoke ready to take on Geometry 2 the next
day. When an amp was really an amp…
Thanks for bringing that memory back. I also saw Judas Priest on that tour, in Pittsburgh, but Krokus opened here.
ReplyDeleteA few 8th and 9th graders, a corncob pipe dumped in a panic into a bathroom trash can, said offender was forced to dive for it.
Same ear ringing, and somehow I still have that concert tshirt in a box in the closet, ironic - insert chuckles here.
Thanks for bringing that memory back. I also saw Judas Priest on that tour, in Pittsburgh, but Krokus opened here.
ReplyDeleteA few 8th and 9th graders, a corncob pipe dumped in a panic into a bathroom trash can, said offender was forced to dive for it.
Same ear ringing, and somehow I still have that concert tshirt in a box in the closet, ironic - insert chuckles here.