I want to preface this week's regular posting of links to WOW and entertainment-related stories by sharing a bit of my thoughts on Wednesday's performances by Bury Your Dead, Suicide Silence, Static-X, Black Label Society and Mudvayne (in that order) at a "Pedal to the Metal" tour stop at Kellogg Arena.
This was Battle Creek's third concert of the year, following Buckcherry and Avenged Sevenfold in February and Disturbed in April. This was also the first concert of the trio where I and my photographer were to the front-of-stage area between the barriers blocking out the crowd and the band, and also backstage (I was within reaching distance of Zakk Wylde's guitars, a surreal experience).
Weary from a month of stress covering the opening of FireKeepers Casino, I stuck my head between the stage-front monitors during the Society's set and tried to let the noise of all those Marshall stacks just rattle my brain into a pulp. No dice, but it helped to shake some things loose.
Then I turned around and looked out over the crowd: 6,000 people screaming, pumping their fists,
leaping, pushing, shoving, happy, excited, venting frustrations.
And this was on a Wednesday, the exact point where Friday's paycheck runs out, and this was competing with the long-awaited opening of the casino, just a few miles east of there.
And Wednesday's showing was weak compared to the 8,000 or so at both of 2009's previous concerts.
You can read all the analysis on what that means for the arena and the local economy in this story from today's Enquirer, but I want to say this as a lifelong music geek, a junkie long withdrawn from a hometown scene of big-label, big-money, big-speaker performances: If the arena can keep this up, Battle Creek might become a hip little town.
I've grown tired of floating over to Detroit and crashing on friends' couches to catch a good rock show, or breezing down to Chicago to sleep in a stranger's loft to do do the same. It felt nice to get my face melted by a powerful Zakk Wylde guitar solo and then go home only 15 minutes away and sleep in my own bed.
It felt good to see the many people who would have to drive long distances to get home because they'd driven long distances to get there.
As recently as the early 1990s, Battle Creek still held its place in Midwestern coolness as the midway stop for big names traveling between Detroit and Chicago.
If we can find some way to keep making it work — and it will take support from music geeks, from arena folks and especially from those who hate the music, even hate the kids, but realize the greater good — then we can get back to that.
And now we have this monstrous (for us) entertainment facility of a casino in Emmett Township to help us out, so long as we don't let the acidic pessimism I call Battle Creek's "White Trash Ethic" tear it down.
Well, there you have it.
In today's WOW, you will find:
- This story: "Casino works with local, regional entertainers"
- This week's Top 5: Top 5 favorite concerts
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