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Review: Big Day Out 2005

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  • Review: Big Day Out 2005

    Stuff.co.nz, New Zealand
    Jan 22 2005

    Review: Big Day Out 2005
    22 January 2005
    By CHRIS SCHULZ

    In the end, the granddads showed everyone how to do it. Hip-hop
    golden-oldies The Beastie Boys, oozing old-school cool and displaying
    amazing technological prowess, saved the 2005 Big Day Out from being,
    well, a little disappointing.


    This year's sun-soaked event lacked the pulling power of, say,
    Metallica, and while the 40,000 crowd found plenty to enjoy, by the
    time 9pm rolled around there seemed to have been something missing.

    Thank God then, for The Beastie Boys. Their fantastic main
    stage-closing show featured four giant TV screens and began with a
    Lord of the Rings video piss-take and a thrilling introduction by the
    band's DJ, Mix Master Mike.

    Dressed in matching orange tracksuits and displaying an exuberance
    that defied their age, the B-Boys set spanned their entire 20-year
    career, included a lounge bar intermission and at one point had two
    of the trio running through the moshpit barricade. Not bad for men in
    their forties.

    Thanks to the new East Stand and several traffic flow innovations,
    Ericsson Stadium didn't appear to be as busy as past years. But that
    didn't stop the front row security barrier being tested by System Of
    A Down, who were in a very strange mood.

    Just what guitarist and vocalist Daron Malakian had been up to before
    their performance is unknown, but he seemed to be completely out of
    it.

    It didn't help that the Armenian-American metal giants tried to
    re-interpret their ageing back catalogue using keyboards and a voice
    decoder. Very prog-rock, guys, but don't you have a new album coming
    out?

    And when the show had to be stopped for a moshpit injury, Malakian
    took this as his cue to go wild, repeatedly shrieking 'man down'
    before launching into an impromptu acoustic anti-war song. Easily the
    most random act of the day.

    Over at the Essential Stage, British act Mike Skinner pulled a huge
    crowd and rewarded them with an upbeat interpretation of The Streets'
    brand of urban poetry.

    The set was a little loose - it may have been the four months Skinner
    has had off or that glass of beer constantly in his hand - but Dry
    Your Eyes had the entire crowd chanting and by the end of it there
    were a few blurry eyes.

    No one was crying when Slipknot hit the main stage in the early
    evening. They probably would have been beaten up if they were.

    The masked metallers, in their first New Zealand concert, put on an
    awesome - and terrifying - display.

    It takes a while just to take it all in, and at first the band seem
    slightly contrived. There's nine of them, they all wear horror-style
    masks and the clown's only role seems to be to hit a keg with a
    baseball bat as hard as he can.

    Still, there's a certain kind of danceable groove to their music, and
    anthems like Duality and The Heretic Anthem saw the day's biggest
    moshpit bouncing high. Wise folk stayed well clear of it.

    The Polyphonic Spree were the perfect antidote after that kind of
    hostile environment.

    Around 20 of the robed band played under a 'Hope' banner in the
    Boiler Room, bringing a sense of 60s psychedelia to proceedings with
    their trippy choir-backed pop music. But it appeared they were a
    little too weird for most punters, who emptied out of the tent and
    sort solace elsewhere.

    Local acts also burned bright. Scribe's main stage performance proved
    he has come of age. His album is ageing but he relished playing to
    such a huge crowd and Not Many resulted in a huge ovation. As did the
    Blindspot guest appearance on the nu-metal version of Stand Up.
    Shihad, The D4 and Steriogram also proved popular.

    Lowlights? Powderfinger's brand of Aussie pub-rock left little
    impression, while the hip-hop stage was - again - overcome by noise
    pollution. When will they find a better site for it?

    And, as usual, it's impossible to see everyone you want to,
    especially when the crowds make travelling between stages difficult.
    Sorry RJD2 and Kid Koala, I'll catch you next time.
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