In a rather unconventional choice, the other international act that was touring with Rise Against, Berri Txarrak, would be opening the night, ahead of the local act,
Dead Favours. Berri Txarrak being a band originating from Basque Country (an autonomous community in northern Spain), whose songs are sung completely in the Basque language (which is linguistically unrelated to any other known living language), they undoubtedly had a difficult job ahead of them to warm up the crowd. With both the language and extensive back-catalogue unknown to most of the audience, the performance was to be judged solely on their efforts tonight. Despite the barriers and the high-paced and highly distorted sound, the crowd was supportive and accepting of the new music. Berri Txarrak performed an energy-filled and driven show, bantering with the audience between tracks in English, teaching us how to count to four (bat, bi, hiru, lau), and winning the crowd over by mentioning how much better than Australia we are. Rise Against vocalist Tim McIlrath came out during
Denak ez du balio to replicate his guest vocals from the studio recording of the song, much to the excitement of the audience.
Slicing the strings on their guitars as they exited the stage, Berri Txarrak made room for
Dead Favours. The local Auckland group did their best to captivate the audience, keeping active on stage, and providing an instrumentally proficient display. Unfortunately, the sound was less than ideal, with certain instruments only audible in certain areas of the venue, creating an unbalanced melody to many. Vocally, Jared Wrenhall had some great clean vocals, but the volume of his screams came across as highly piercing and stood out from the rest of his vocals in a negative way. From the centre of the floor and balcony, however, the sound was good (albeit loud), and as the set progressed, and the band played through the three singles that they had released publicly to date, the crowd began to warm up, cheering loudly between tracks. With some deliciously creative displays of prowess on the guitars from Jared and Kyle Wetton, visibly exciting drumming styles from Charlie Smith, and some intricate finger-work from Ross Larsen on bass guitar, there were many positive aspects to the performance, that will hopefully expand their fanbase, despite the poor acoustics of the venue.
The crowd had yet to show any real enthusiasm during the opening acts sets, but as if a switch had been pulled, as was specified on the advertised set times, at 9:20pm on the dot, the crowd roared into life as Tim McIlrath and the rest of Rise Against took to the stage. Cheers overflowed throughout the centre as the band jumped straight into their set with gusto, starting with
Chamber the Cartridge and
Give It All, Tim wasted no time, jumping down to meet the front row of the audience, and pulling out the megaphone for added power to his vocals. The heavy, hardcore punk style renders itself well for both the band and crowd, with shorter song lengths allowing everyone involved to put in high levels of effort for every track, knowing a short break will soon be on the way. The lack of any truly lengthy songs meant the crowd’s energy on the floor was able to last well throughout the set, with a circle pit forming by the third song
The Violence, and all participants in the pit drenched in sweat and shirtless by the end of
Re-Education (Through Labor).
For a band that very frequently visits our shores (performing in Auckland nine times in the last 13 years), it is curious that they continue to rely on so much of their older material. Half of their set list originated from the
Appeal to Reason (2008) and
The Sufferer & the Witness (2006) albums and only 3 songs from the most recent
Wolves release to which the tour is named after and promoting. That being said, despite such frequent shows in Auckland, and a preference for playing the hits, there was no sign of boredom in the crowd, as the circle pit expanded, and they out-sang Tim on several occasions, especially during his acoustic interlude, where he performed
People Live Here,
Hero of War, and
Swing Life Away on his lonesome on stage.
The band returning for the second act, ploughed through their set, carving through 17 tracks before taking a break before their final encore performance. With a lighting show that leaned towards the excessive side; strobes, spotlights, and stage pieces were all used in quick succession, keeping in time with the pace of the set. The sound quality was still not optimal (although a substantial improvement from the sound quality at their Auckland Town Hall show on their last tour), and a lot of the instrumental melody was lost in distortion and vocals were infrequently lost in instances of feedback, but it mattered not to the audience; the power and emotion that is carried in the Rise Against tracks, is more than enough to carry the show, and is a testament to the quality of the content to still garner such crowds year after year, with growing passion. Slightly ahead of schedule, they performed two tracks in the encore, performing
Behind Closed Doors as well as the eagerly-anticipated
Saviour Review written by Alex Moulton