A DAY TO REMEMBER W/ EVERY TIME I DIE, MALLORY KNOX
ALEXANDRA PALACE, LONDON 12.02.14
From their garage back home in Ocala to a garage overlooking the world
The best house parties are
the ones that keep their guests, nobody leaves early and many probably even
cancelled plans to be in attendance. 10,000 RSVP’d, pyros have been ordered and
according to their big screen introduction, Jeremy’s free house is the location
of the huge get-together. That house is on a stage and as the saying goes; home
is where the heart is.
New Yorkers Every Time I Die
are the gate crashers tonight, opener No Son Of Mine strikes up a joining force
between metal and dirty southern rock with Keith Buckley’s roaring vocals. They’re
hurling aggressive riffs and melodies with a mean punch through to Underwater
Bimbos From Outer Space.
Mallory Knox have had some
high standards expected from them recently but they’re playing to earn the
right to write “Mallory Knox was here” on the walls. The likes of Wake Up, Beggars and Lighthouse
make enough impact to prove their worthiness on the bill. They might not fill
the room but they boast more than enough energy to show that if they had been
absent they certainly would have been missed.
Parties are usually one of
two things. They’re either a) marking a celebration or b) just a reason to let
your hair down. Tonight it’s both. The celebration follows from their nightmare
ordeal with their former label and the relief of finally releasing their hugely
anticipated album Common Courtesy, after a judge took to their favour. The
stress and frustration for the Ocala bunch is over and they can breathe,
letting their hair down and seeing their new material welcome with open arms.
But it’s their entire back catalogue lying down the foundations. Emerging from
the garage of this house, All I Want commences before I’m Made Of Wax, Larry,
What Are You Made Of? shows how indestructible Jeremy McKinnon and co really
are; they fought the law, they fought critics and naysayers and the frontman
fought a recent illness too but their time is now. It takes five tracks in
before the new material makes an appearance. Right Back At It Again sums up
what this tour is partly about; recognising a birth of a band, playing in their
parent’s garage to playing in front of thousands across the pond. But to be
able to play the likes of Alexandra Palace there’s the need to remember where
they came from, the garage is behind them and the almighty sing-alongs and
hooks are ahead.
There’s no time to shoot some hoops (there’s a basketball net
attached to this onstage house!) as City Ocala and Life Lessons Learned The
Hard Way are performed for the first time in the capital. Between is You Had Me
At Hello and If It Means A Lot To You, showing that there’s more to ADTR than
ground shaking breakdowns. Scorching heat from the pyros, a frontman in a zorb
ball and a couple of Santa’s are a what the ****? moment but clearly they’re
funnier than a clown making balloon animals. Closing anthem The Downfall Of Us
All only kicks off once fake cops raid the stage to call time out and the band
plead for one more song. With the sound of a helicopter gliding above them the
curtain drops, some party huh?