Wednesday, April 8

Hot weather puts damper on fans’ experiences at outdoor concert


KROQ/Levi's Inland Invasion tests endurance of audience

  MINDY ROSS/Daily Bruin Senior Staff Brandon
Boyd
of Incubus played songs from "Make Yourself" and
their upcoming album, "Morning View," while on the main stage.

By Mary Williams
Daily Bruin Senior Staff

KROQ can be really cruel sometimes.

To stage a 10-hour-long outdoor concert in the notoriously hot
Inland Empire, in August no less, is to create an unnecessarily
uncomfortable endurance test for the participants.

And yet when the local radio station planned the
KROQ/Levi’s Inland Invasion, held Saturday at the Blockbuster
Pavilion in DeVore, this was apparently deemed a good idea.

Sure, it gave the viewers a weak sense of accomplishment to
merely survive the 100-degree heat, but it didn’t make the
experience any better.

To make matters worse, the first few hours dragged by with
mediocre bands on the side stages as the only entertainment. The
main stage acts didn’t start until after 4 p.m., opening with
a lackluster performance from the sluggish Long Beach Dub
Allstars.

Once the heat broke and better bands took the stage, however,
things turned around. KROQ’s ability to throw together an
impressive lineup of some of the most popular bands on the air
finally paid off, about five hours after the doors opened.

  MINDY ROSS/Daily Bruin Senior Staff Pennywise singer Jim
Lindberg performed at Saturday’s concert.

Weezer, Pennywise, Social Distortion, Incubus and Offspring all
helped to pick up the mood, and the cranky, sunburned, tired
audience was rewarded for their efforts.

KROQ improved on their usual festival-style show, usually seen
in the annual Almost Acoustic Christmas and Weenie Roast concerts,
by allowing the bands to play longer set times than usual. Rather
than half an hour, bands were given 45 minutes or, in the case of
closers Offspring, an hour to perform.

While it was nice to see more of each band, some sets still felt
rushed. Pennywise, in particular, seemed to have a hard time
running on schedule.

They apologized to the other bands for talking too much and
slowing things down, and later announced that they were told to get
off the stage, presumably after their set ran long.

The only band that seemed like they took their time was the
Offspring. Rather than racing through a set list, the band made
room for banter between singer Dexter Holland and guitarist
Noodles, as well as interaction with the audience.

During their encore, Holland even came onstage with a fire hose
to spray the audience with water, a gimmick that consumed more time
than the other hurried bands could give.

Even though tens of thousands of people showed up, the concert
was, unlike its predecessors, the Almost Acoustic Christmas and the
Weenie Roast, not sold-out.

This means the millions that didn’t attend are either much
smarter than those who willingly drove to arguably the hottest
place in the world, or they didn’t realize how much they were
missing.

After all the abuse the audience took from Mother Nature that
afternoon, the all-star lineup that followed was a nice reward.


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