Todd's Reviews
Jane’s Addiction

“How many of you guys out
there wish there were more bands like Jane’s Addiction?” asked
Live’s front man Ed Kowalczyk before Jane’s claimed their stage
for Toronto’s “Jubilee Tour”. In a time after the Zepellin
landed, and before Nirvana happened, the Los Angeles quartet,
Jane’s Addiction emerged. The band’s mas influencia has reached
a global scale due to two groundbreaking albums. At the same
time, Jane’s has always delivered unparalleled live
performances. Each musician is one of the best in the world at
the instrument he plays, performing almost an identical set-list
of a decade old material with in-your-face lyrics about the
earth, love, sex and violence. Jane’s Addiction has always
celebrated an amazingly powerful experience onstage, while
serving as rock and roll’s most poignant humanitarians.
In 1986, a surfer named Perry Bernstein, the son
of a Jewish jeweler from Queens moved to the city of angels.
When longhaired dorks like Bon Jove and Poison, Perry borrowed
his big brother’s name, Farrell, and joined bass player Eric
Avery, guitarist Dave Navarro, and percussionist Stephen Perkins
to make up Jane’s Addiction. Camera’s got those images of Avery
and Farrell in multicolored biker shorts and long red hair from
the late 80s. Influenced by Zepellin, Floyd and Hendrix, Jane’s
Addiction’s live performances were fresh, and not yet wealthy
rock stars, Jane’s Addiction played with nothing but intensity
and wild stage props, such as blowing fire onstage. Meanwhile
Perry’s real-life lyrics about love, life, violence and politics
served as a voice of my generation.
At the turn of the decade, Jane’s reached
planetary fame until the release of the “Been Caught Stealin”
video, and opted not to continue on MTV’s mainstream game.
Instead, Jane’s, Ice T and Body Count headed up the original
Lollapalooza, where Perry preached about balancing out the
world. Originally slated as Jane’s Addition’s farewell tour,
Lollapalooza became one of the most influential concerts in
history, and paved the way for Pearl Jam, Smashing Pumpkins, The
Beastie Boys and Nine Inch Nails headlining future festivals.
Lollapalooza also set the template for the lucrative multi-band
festivals of the '90s to follow, including Lilith Fair, Ozzfest
and H.O.R.D.E. On the “Ritual” tour in the early 90s, Jane’s
played out a life-changing concert in Miami’s Bayfront Park.
With Suicidal Tendencies opening, “the pure energy on stage was
omnipresent.” In high school at the time, Chris Cimaglia, a
25-year-old music engineer from Miami explained the “Ritual”
concert experience was the “best decision of his life”.
Unfortunately, Jane’s Addiction left the music scene while they
were still on top to pursue other ventures.
The band never officially split, but each member
of Jane’s Addiction had gone onto separate projects. While Avery
dropped out of the public’s eye, Navarro joined the Red Hot
Chili Peppers. Perkins played drums Methods of Mayhem and Munk
With a Gun. Perry the visionary made a short film called “The
Gift”, and joined Perkins in another band, Porno for Pyros.
Jane’s Addiction revived in 1997 to bless the
continent with their “Relapse Tour,” and again put on an
unimaginable show in Miami’s Bayfront Park complete with
flexible dancers and other eye pleasing spectacles. Adamantly
anti-nostalgia, Eric Avery declined joining the reunions.
Rather, the just as powerful Flea, from the Chili Peppers,
filled the void. The new Jane’s released “Kettle Whistle”, a CD
of Jane’s archives, mixed with new material, such as “So What”
and “Slow Divers”. After “Relapse”, all four musicians returned
to their previous outfits; Chili Peppers, Mayhem and Porno.
Showing off a new musical outlet, Perry’s solo CD
was in the works, and he hit small clubs including Boca Raton’s
Radius, on a trek across the continent spinning records,
techno-style in the summer of 2000. In the intimate setting, the
deep lyrics associated with Jane’s were pushed aside, as Perry
danced with his fingers. Almost operatic, they were wild,
fantasizing. The beauty of his movement was a sensation not
unlike bliss.
In April of this year, Jane’s successfully
returned to their habitual rituals in the misty college bowl of
Santa Barbara, marking the band’s first performance together in
over three years. Again, Eric Avery wanted no part of the
reunion, and Flea has been working on a new album with the Chili
Peppers. Keeping it in the family, Porno for Pyro’s Martyn
LeNoble, filled in on the bass. The band was also augmented by
keyboardist Linda Good, of the former Chicago duo Twigs.
Needless to say, every member of Jane’s was completely thrilled
to be onstage together again. At the show, Perry dressed like a
matador in an off-yellow one-piece bull-fighting outfit. Under a
sloppy military buzz haircut, he danced with masked phantoms and
stripping nymphs, while two clowns on stilts stumbled around
elaborate stage designs. There was a glowing vibe of happiness
from Jane’s coming together onstage to create magic again. The
entire crowd laughed and raised their hands into the air as the
four shared a joint tossed up by someone in the audience. The
drummer, behind a couple of steel Puerto Rican drums and under a
mohawk, took his time enjoying the gift. To the audience’s
surprise, Flea appeared before the moshing started with “Been
Caught Stealin.” Every song played was from “Nothing’s Shocking”
or “Ritual”, as the crowd was denied Kettle Whistle’s “Slow
Divers” or “So What” and classic Stone’s covers “Sympathy” or
“Rock and Roll”.
Spreading the message of free expression via art,
Jane’s performed together a second time this year for the third
Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on April 28th,. The
massive outdoor fest that catered to all audiences in a crowd of
about 35 thousand sat on one flat acre, hidden between the hazy
highlands of Indio, three hours east of the Los Angeles. The
Woodstock-like show was modeled after Perry’s Lollapalooza which
ran for seven years. DJ Peretz joined Tool performing at the
first Coachella in 1999, and Weezer joined the festivities at
this year’s Coachella. This year’s Coachella consisted of an
extraordinarily glowing vibe, both onstage and in the crowd.
Perkins explained that when everybody in Jane’s is in a good
mood onstage, it’s just like lighting a firecracker. Similarly,
Farrell told a web-site, NME.COM, “It was sensational. It was
too short. I want to do more.”
The radiant mastermind got his wish, but not
before more solo work for Jane’s Addiction. Navarro released a
solo CD, Trust No One, featuring the song “Hungry”, while
Perkins kept himself busy with his latest band, Banyan. Perry’s
DJ release, Song Yet to be Sung, originally titled The Diamond
Jubilee, hit the streets after teasing fans for over four year.
Opinions vary on Jane’s’ front man mixing rock vocals with
electrica. Unlike his solo CD, Perry denied his audience any
lyrics when he spun at the grand opening of Miami Beach’s
Billboardlive. Everybody has their own opinion of DJ Peretz’s
skills behind a couple of turntables. Most just wanted to see
the legendary Farrell up close. Pulling 12-inch singles from a
milk crate behind his two turntables, Perry tweaked the knobs on
his mixer, amplified beats, and sliced out sonic ranges, laying
down jungle beats with trippy affects. As Perry spun, audience
members got a close up of the tattoo on his right arm. It is a
7-inch a mosquito. I wonder if it’s one of the same mosquitoes
that are addressed in “Ritual’s” introduction letter. Perry spun
immediately following the Jane’s show in several cities,
including St. Paul, Charlotte and Gainesville. Unfortunately for
the true ravers across the continent, there were no sounds that
Perry could create with his turntables that could overshadow the
radiant mastermind’s raw power on a stage. Nothing’s shocking
about that. DJ Peretz spun in New York, Pittsburgh and Dallas
before he embarked upon another mission with Jane’s.
Addicted to playing together, the two Jane’s
reunions in California blossomed into "Jubilee 2001" a few
months later. The name for the tour is derived from the biblical
Jubilee, a 50-year cycle in which debts are forgiven and slaves
are freed. The Jubilee theme has been carried out for thousands
of years across various cultures and faiths, while it carries a
message of peace and redemption through music. In fact, the band
is planning to post a video of the tour documentary on the
Jubilee Freedom Foundation web-site. “We are lucky to be living
during this Jubilee year,” Farrell stated in a press release.
“This is a 50 year cycle that peaks with mad conscience to be
free and to free others along the way.” Jane’s mission has been
to save children from sex trafficking and slavery, in order to
reunite them with their families. Meanwhile, Perry has recently
been marked for death by Islamic extremists for his public
campaign against slavery in Sudan.
American flags were waved throughout the massive
arenas on the “Jubilee Tour”. The shows in Canada were filled by
a young preppy crowd in their twenties. Dressed for a fraternity
function, there were neither drugs, nor fights apparent at any
of the shows in the great white north. The floor was general
admission in some venues found in Canada as well as The States.
The American dressed more grunged out. The crowd of 20 to 35
year-olds also sported plenty of leather and tattoos. True, the
“Jubilee Tour” was less intimate that past road trips. But if
there were 20,000 people who wanted to see Jane’s Addiction in
the city, and they picked a small venue, then 18,ooo fans would
have denied the experience.
The band Live opened with lead-singer Ed
Kowalczyk approaching the stage alone and kicked into an
acoustic version of “Lightning Crashes.” Following “I Alone”, Ed
showed off his voice with Lennon’s “Imagine”. Guitarist Chad
Taylor explained that John's son, Sean, toured with Live earlier
this year, and claimed to be overjoyed that they were covering
"Imagine." "Sean said the crowd would totally crucify him if he
ever tried," Chad explained to me after a set. Midway through
the set in Toronto, Ed explained how much of an honor it is to
be opening for Jane’s Addiction on this tour, and admitted to
personally owning two or three copies of “Ritual”.
Unfortunately, Florida was denied an appearance from Live the
next week, as Nigerian artist Femi Kuti and a DJ named Logic
opened For “Jubilee” in most cities, including Gainesville on
October 9.
Jane entered their stage with the lights off. The
arena illuminated an array of eye candy; lustful dancers and
juggling gymnastic grace in a strip-club atmosphere. It was a
visual feast of Christmas lights, lasers and dancers arranged on
stage, with a hand-painted backdrop of white and black bricks.
Navarro dressed in his customary black leather pants and a
nipple-ring, and Le Noble wore a white wife-beater. Still
sporting a mohawk, Perkins was the only one who dressed
differently each night. In Gainesville, the under-appreciated
artist wore a Clash T-shirt. Perry emerged in a parachute dress
that that stretched 6-feet around. Suddenly, Perry was picked up
four feet from the ground. While thousands pondered the man’s
elevation, Perry’s gown dropped and displayed five erotic
dancers, almost naked, emerging from under the garment to dance
erotically. The maidens’ bikini underwear didn’t left little to
the imagination. In Detroit, there was a male dancer onstage who
spotted the damsels with their acrobatics.
The sounds of “Up The Beach” kicked off as Le
Noble started pounding out the opening bass line. The first song
led strait into “Ocean Size”. Always making a grand entrance,
Perry emerged chugging from a bottle of whiskey. He put on a red
cowboy hat, a black scarf and a vest over his healthy six-pack.
The man never stopped dancing. Neither did the luscious dancers
on a few satellite stages, sporting mere bandages over their
nipples. There was no talking and all action onstage as Jane’s
jumped strait into “Ain't No Right”. Farrell's voice was
trumpet-like as he sang “I am skin and bones, I am pointy nose.”
He swung the mic stand around in circles and flung it backstage.
Circus-like, one dancer spun from a circular platform 9-feet
from the ground with her legs spread. A second woman joins in,
and they both spun upside-down. Kids on the floor moshed and
security swiftly yanked away the crowd surfers. The number
concluded with Perry repeating the phrase into the mic, “Mother
fuckin’ took that pain…” In a 10-minute version of “Three Days”,
Mr. Farrell sang about “Xiola”, an influential mistress that
always took her party to the limit. Perry also wrote about Xiola
with his pre-Jane’s band, Phi Com. After all, every Jane’s lyric
as based on a life experience. The ladies onstage kept
themselves entertained by grinding up to Le Noble and Navarro,
who smoked from a cigarette kept at the top of his 6-string.
Perry played some sambas, while Perkins thundered out
four-limbed drumming, with a 2-foot doll of the Muppets’
‘Animal’ hanging from his set. Giant cannons shot confetti onto
the floor and lights strobed during “Stop”. The versatile Perry
shook maracas up to Navarro and Le Noble who both stood with one
leg propped on a speaker, as the herd underneath the band
slammed into each other. In Gainesville, five video monitors
displayed the lyrics to the number’s slow part. The crowd sang
along with Perry, along the TVs. During the slow intro of
Summertime Rolls, two of the dancers rose up and down on an
enormous seesaw. Moments later, audiences heard an exotic
mixture of brutal power and sensuality in the number. In
Toronto, Perry questioned his audience, “Are you ready for a
change? Are ready for the change?”
Following a minimal stage-break, the four boys
fled to a satellite stage in the rear of the floor. Perkins, who
played the set with steel Puerto Rican drums, claimed to love
getting out there and actually taste what’s going on. The
intimate setting was reminiscent of the first two reunions over
the summer, where the boys were all smiles, and shared joints
tossed up to the B-stage from the crowd. Thousands of fans were
on there feet. Couples swayed together and kissed during an
acoustic version of “Jane Says”. The three original band members
have a friend named Jane. She’s alive and kicking. The way Jane
lives, addicted to living, and inspires the musicians’ concepts.
Perry shared his first conversation with the crowd and saluted
the audience members who study a lot in the tour’s college
towns. He dedicated the next number to “all of you beautiful
ladies,” and sang “Classic Girl”. Wearing a stuffed beaver cap
on his head, Perry shared his views on “a classic girl. She
gives her man great ideas.” Next, Perry sang one of his recent
solo numbers about the joys of life, “Happy Birthday Jubilee”.
One spectator lept up on the acoustic stage and accidentally
slipped, knocking into Perkins’ drums. Perry was startled at
first, but the two danced onstage together until security hauled
him off moments later. Orange spotlights shined on a few of the
dancers, each wearing a 3-foot long hair-pieces colored red, and
getting off on her own satellite stage in the crowd. One vixen
is a luscious oriental, who doesn’t deserve to be Perry’s
real-life girlfriend after she refused to take a picture of
Perry and I at Billboardlive last month. Perry dropped to his
knees singing, and found himself flat on his back by the
number’s conclusion. “We are psyched to be here with you
beautiful girls, handsome men, and good parties we’ll remember
all our lives,” explained Perry in Toronto. “You are a big
puddle of love to us.” Making the Toronto show stand out, Perry
asked Dave if he’d serenade the ladies with his beautiful and
largely unsung voice. “I sure will,” replied Navarro, who
obliged with the melodic “Hungry”.
While trekking back the main stage, Perkins
chanted for the masses to stand up and cheer. Perry changed into
a silver sequence suit and purple hat, when he sang “Mountain
Song”. Now chugging a bottle of wine, Perry never stopped
dancing around the stage, quite the opposite of the
energy-lacking solo gig in Miami’s Billboardlive last month. The
crowd surfed during “Been Caught Stealin’,” and many spectators
hoped for Flea to make another surprise appearance, as he did
twice during the song earlier this year in LA. But there was no
such luck on “Jubilee”. In “Ted, Just Admit It”, Perry hopped up
to the circular platform and never quit singing about “Sex is
violent”, even after he was thrown off to the floor. In New York
City, Perry sported a bright red tux while he replaced the word
‘violence’ with ‘terrorism’. “What a great country, America. If
they only knew what they’re trying to fuck up,” he expressed. A
giant glow monster with a whip hobbled around, while green
lasers shot from above Navarro, Le Noble and Perkins each
banging his own giant drum in the night’s concluding song, “Chip
Away”. Perry obviously felt comfortable with his audience,
shuffling around the stage in a pair of tighty whities as all
three of his bandmates banged his own stand-up drum. Of course,
Perkins hands moved too fast on his congas for the naked eye to
catch. He signaled for us all to cheer louder, and we obeyed.
Some fool in the front row screamed “You fuckin’ rock Stephen.”
The drummer smiled and winked at him. In the windy city, Perkins
kept yelling, "Don't sell out Chicago!" “You are awesome, I love
you,” Perry announced before he exited the stage chanting
“Earth. Earth. Mother Earth.”
Despite the sheer energy on stage, fans still had
a few complains. “Jubilee” was no more than 90 minutes long.
“That was too damn short,” explained Mathew Cshoka, a business
professional from New York. Others could see that Jane’s didn’t
play every night loving each other, or with the same excitement
as the glow found in this the two reunions this summer outside
of LA. Nor did Jane’s have the rage or energy of '91’s gig.
There was less talk than past Jane’s experiences. There was also
a shortage of new material. “I wold love to hear new Jane’s
Addiction songs. The world could use them, and so could I” said
Le Noble on an AOL chat. At the same time, thousands of fans
were denied favorites “Then She Did” or “Sympathy”. Yet, the
show was golden just the same. Some fans were soar to hear the
same set-list each night. Mid-way through the “Jubilee Tour”,
Perkins said that Jane’s loves playing the songs that they’ve
written and they ‘re merely having an exceptional time on tour.
Yet, the crowd was really weak in comparison to past Jane’s gigs
in Miami, where some of the most spectacular shows of their
career have been in Bayfront Park. So why would they choose the
college-town in the middle of the state? True fans are part of
an older generation, as most of us are part of an older
generation that was in grade school when “Ritual” happened.
“Jubilee” will cross The States and wrap things up on November
11 in Vegas.
Jane’s fans are still talking about the
astounding show in Madison Square Garden, saying it was one of
the most emotional, festive and best shows the band has ever
played. Despite Perkins saying ‘maybe it should be left at
that’, it appears that the “Jubilee Tour” will not end in Vegas.
According to Perry, they are planning to sell out three more
shows in New York City later this year. But in the last few
years, Jane's Addiction members have put out a few
underachieving solo projects and tours. Despite being well
received, the gigs were essentially exercises in nostalgia,
exactly the sort of impulse that both Jane’s and Lollapalooza
were brought about to destroy. Yet for Jane’s Addiction, as well
as the hundred of thousands of lives they’ve touched, life was
full of pleasure on 2001’s “Jubilee Tour”. These have been the
days to see Jane’s, such a classic show where playing a decade
old material still retained the passion and the energy from
years earlier. Thank you boys for hitting the road again as
undoubtedly one of the best shows of the year. South Florida is
looking forward to Navarro’s West Palm Beach appearance on
December 1.
After the Jane’s show in the swamp, DJ Peretz
spun a set at a small club called Simons. Always the fun guy,
Perry was on a natural high as an intimate room full of college
kids danced for an hour. After sharing the pictures of my time
chasing the rock icon, Perry explained to me that he loves his
fans, and “life is a mirror. What you put out is what you
receive, and what you are looking at is what you are.”
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