The Daily Weekly News, Politics, and Media

Afternoon 'Don't Forget Your Sunscreen' Edition
Posted May 16; 03:00 pm

Reverb Music & Nightlife

Too Many Shows Tonight
Posted May 16; 01:56 pm

Voracious Food News and Reviews

What's Better Than One Award-Winning Brewer?
Posted May 16; 04:11 pm

Thread Count Arts, People, and Style

Why We Need Daily Newspaper Arts Coverage
Posted May 16; 08:48 pm

Buzzer Beater Seattle Sports

Don't Drink And Drive a Golf Cart
Posted May 16; 05:51 pm


Slideshows

Newsletters

Stay up-to-date with the Seattle Weekly. We'll e-mail you a detailed rundown of what's on seattleweekly.com once a week.

Signing up is simple and you can opt out anytime. Give it a try.

Web Feeds

Use one of the buttons below to subscribe to Seattle Weekly's full Web feed. Or choose from our full list of Web feeds.

- For Newsreaders

- For Home Pages

Free Classifieds Seattle, WA

Silverchair Goes All Young Modern, Rejects Frogstomp at the Showbox

Australian power trio didn't die in the year 2000.

By Michael Alan Goldberg

July 25, 2007

Michael Alan Goldberg

Extra Info

Silverchair
July 20, 2007
The Showbox
Better Than: "Post-grunge."
Watch an audio slideshow of the concert.

For me, seeing Silverchair rock the Showbox was a little like running into that scrappy kid from high school—the one you were kinda friends with, but lost touch with years ago—at a reunion or something, and seeing how far they've come and how successful their life is. I suspect I wasn't alone in feeling that way: Although they've been arguably the biggest band in their native Australia for the past decade-plus, most American music fans think of the trio of Daniel Johns (vocals/guitar), Ben Gillies (drums), and Chris Joannou (bass) as the energetic 15-year-olds who led the post-grunge charge back in 1995 with their debut, Frogstomp, and its massive hit, "Tomorrow."

Since then, with the exception of 1999's "Ana's Song (Open Fire)," Silverchair have been pretty much MIA on U.S. airwaves. But over the past decade, the group has reshaped their attack into something much richer, expansive, and melodically sophisticated, without sacrificing all the potent, crunchy guitar hooks, and that impressive sound was put on display for a sold-out, all-ages crowd that was one of the most rabid I've ever seen at the Showbox.

Augmented by a touring keyboardist, Silverchair took the stage just before 10 p.m.—the magnetic Johns entering with a white head wrap and broad smile to ecstatic cheers. The 90-minute set that followed was heavy on the glammy, power-poppy new Young Modern, which came out in Australia in March and was released in the U.S. earlier this month. The band opened with a ripping version of "Young Modern Station," and subsequently played nearly every one of the disc's 11 tracks.

Current single "Straight Lines," which features an irrepressibly catchy melody, came off triumphantly, as did "Insomnia." Johns, voice clear and strong, worked the crowd like the seasoned pro he is, though he hardly had to beg for fans to clap along or make noise, and coaxed plenty of chewy riffs out of his guitar, occasionally playing it with his teeth and singing into the pickups. Joannou and Gillies seemed happy to cede the spotlight (quite literally) to Johns, though the powerful anchor provided by their tight grooves proved invaluable, especially when Johns would fuck around with his pedals and generate squalls of feedback.

In a buoyant mood throughout the night, Johns repeatedly thanked the crowd for coming to the show and even remembering the band (I think he said it'd been seven or eight years since Silverchair last played in Seattle), and he kept things light with numerous jokes. (Sample: "What's orange and sounds like a parrot? A carrot." Yeah, the one about the koala smoking a joint was funnier, but too long to recount here.) And while there were plenty of shouts for "Tomorrow" and other tunes from Frogstomp—an album Silverchair have all but disowned—the furthest the group reached back was for "The Door," from 1997's Freak Show. Yet based on the deafening adoration hurled at the band for the duration, I don't think anyone was disappointed.

Reporter's Notebook

Personal Bias: Unlike Beavis and Butt-head, I always liked "Tomorrow" and never really thought it sounded like Boston's "More Than a Feeling."
Random Detail: When they returned for their encore, Silverchair brought a fan onstage who proposed to his girlfriend. She said yes, of course. Said Daniel, "That was sooo romantic, so rock 'n' roll! That's how I shoulda proposed to my wife—onstage." (He's married to pop singer and fellow Aussie Natalie Imbruglia.) Here's a photo of the happy couple I snapped outside the Showbox after the gig:

 sc.jpg

Comments (0)

Reader Comments

No comments.

* indicates required fields. Please enable browser cookies before filling out this form. All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking Add Comment, you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.




(Characters are case sensitive)

Comments may take a few moments to process and appear on the site. Please do not click the "Add Comment" button again while your comment is being added.

More "Live Reviews"

More >>
Most 
Popular

I’m (Not) With Busey

News By Aimee Curl

Lunchbox Laboratory: Lab Coat Necessary

Food By Jonathan Kauffman

A Tea Two-fer

Food By Maggie Dutton

The Problems With Dr. Juice

News By Rick Anderson

The Intersection of Gentrification and Neglect

News By Mark D. Fefer

I’m (Not) With Busey

News By Aimee Curl

How to Stiff Immigrant Workers in Construction

News By Laura Onstot

The Problems With Dr. Juice

News By Rick Anderson

Salmon Caught in the Carbon Net

News By Brian Miller

Lunchbox Laboratory: Lab Coat Necessary

Food By Jonathan Kauffman
now click this

Travel
Pacific Northwest Getaways

Seattle Home Search
1000's of Listings and Detailed Neighborhood Information

Seattle Weekly Online Career Fair!
Where People & Jobs Find Each Other.

Sound Living ®
Seattle Metro Real Estate


To Do List

Friday, May 16

Bike to Work Day
We need Bike to Work Day for the same reason we need Mother’s Day, or ... More>>
City Hall, Fri., May 16, 7:30am

Clinic, Shearwater
Clinic bears an unfortunate, much-mentioned resemblance to the Beatles—... More>>
Neumo's, Fri., May 16, 8:00pm, $13 adv

Nas, D. Black, Grynch, DJ Nphared
How will Nas top his declaration that a nuclear winter had smothered hip-ho... More>>
Showbox SODO, Fri., May 16, 8:30pm, $37.40 adv./$40

164 more things to do today>>
Find a Restaurant

 
A work of love from charismatic man-about-town Waid Sainvil, Waid's is the only Haitian restaurant o...
Off the Delridge Way exit from the West Seattle Bridge, Skylark Cafe & Club is a genuine blue-collar...
The Northlake Tavern is proud to tell you that its small pie weighs more than two-and-a-half pounds ...
Entering Can Can is like walking into Moulin Rouge—not the Parisian tourist trap, the Baz Luhrmann m...
Find a Concert

Friday, May 16
Our Top Picks

Clinic, Shearwater
More>>
Fri., May 16, 12:00am, $13 adv

Nas, D. Black, Grynch, DJ Nphared
More>>
Fri., May 16, 12:00am, $37.40 adv./$40

Roy Loney, the Tripwires, the Fucking Eagles
More>>
Fri., May 16, 12:00am, $8

39 more shows today>>
Check out our Digital Jukebox!
Find a Movie

Find a Theater

Find a Club

The groan-inducingly named Thai One On in Lake City dims its lights and switches on the speakers at ...
Seattle resident Gabe Morgan was once in a constant mental, physical, and psychological battle with ...
I haven't eaten much steak this summer because I'm usually broke. When I discovered Ozzie's Wednesda...
Pure, unadulterated joy is the look permanently affixed to the face of a man doing the mambo to the ...
It's Saturday night between 10th and 11th on Pike Street, Capitol Hill's bustling new epicenter. The...
national

Headlines from Coast to Coast

SF Weekly

Viva Farolito!

Former pros from Latin America help make an "amateur" soccer team unstoppable. More >>

Village Voice

The Barely Legal Empire of Tony Alamo

A nutty polygamist pastor rebuilds his church--with help from New Yorkers. More >>

Miami New Times

Love is No Contract

A Florida man sues his girlfriend-for dumping him. More >>

Houston Press

The Myth of the Bachelor's Degree

A growing number of educators face a hard truth: not every kid is college material. More >>