This story first came out in The Manila Times in March 2012. The original version has since disappeared from the web, which is why I'm reposting it here.
Ben Gibbard in Manila, 2012 |
The line to get inside
the NBC Tent last Monday night for the Death Cab For Cutie show was so long it
snaked past the 7th Avenue curb all the way down 26th Avenue. It moved so
slowly a jogger completed three laps around the perimeter of the venue
before I finally saw the main entrance.
The wait was well worth
it, though. I have been to a lot of concerts over the years but the first
Manila show of the Seattle, Washington-based indie rock band was by far one of
the best in recent memory. It was an example of how different elements of a
live stage show—lights, acoustics, band, audience—could come together to
deliver a first-class concert experience that I suspect will be long-remembered
by those who were there.
My first and only gripe
about the show was that the opening act, local rock outfit Never The Strangers,
started playing when a significant number of attendees were still in line
outside. I’m not sure how that happened, but organizers should have anticipated
the sheer number of people who came out and either opened the doors earlier or
waited till everyone got in. Still, it’s a small grievance about the production
that was otherwise perfect from start to finish. (Besides, people were really
there for DCFC, natch).
At around 8:40, the
lights came down inside the packed NBC Tent (I’ve seen a few shows here and
this is the most full I’ve seen it). The familiar screams of anticipation rose
to deafening levels when vocalist Ben Gibbard appeared onstage. Seconds after
the recognizable opening guitar strains of “A Lack of Color” carried clearly
and confidently through a crystal clear sound system, a swell of whoops and
shrieks threatened to drown the frontman out. Not 30 minutes earlier I was
wondering if they would play the song, one of my personal favorites, and
suddenly, there he was, singing it as well as he does on record. It was as if
Gibbard knew, and as if he was singing it to me, personally. I suspect I wasn’t
the only one who felt that way.
The poster for the first DCFC show in Manila |
The band, composed of
Nick Harmer, Chris Walla, Jason McGerr and Gibbard, segued seamlessly into “I
Will Possess Your Heart,” one of their biggest hits. The long bass intro
thumped and throbbed and sent the audience into a frenzy. Gibbard moved around
the stage a lot. In his collared button-down shirt tucked into slim fit jeans
and his dark brown hair that swept across his forehead, the frontman
looked like your average comic book store geek. The band played nonstop like an
LP; after one song they launched right into the next. “Hello Manila,” Gibbard
finally said about four songs in. “We are in your lovely city because we have a
new record out, it’s called ‘Codes and Keys.’” They played a good mix of
material from the current and older releases, including “We Laugh Indoors,” “Photobooth,” “Doors Unlocked and Open,” “You Are A Tourist,” and “Long Division.”
The crowd went wild when
the band started on “What Sarah Said,” a plaintive song about waiting for
someone to die. “So who’s gonna watch you die?” Gibbard wailed. It’s simple,
extraordinary refrains like this—coupled with the frontman’s high-pitched,
emotionally charged singing—that elevates Death Cab from other, run-of-the-mill bands.
During the long,
two-hour set, the band carried the crowd to peaks of ecstasy, brought them down
to valleys of sobriety and plunged them to the depths of sorrow and nostalgia.
Throughout the show, Gibbard was bathed in pink, blue and white lights,
enhancing the overall mood. The song “I Will Follow You Into the Dark” starts
with the line, “Love of mine/ someday you will die/ but I’ll be close behind.”
The songs may be mournful, but a sliver of hope always shines through. Even the
dance-y, energetic “When Soul Meets Body” and the thoughtful “Cath…” bear this
DCFC signature.
There was a long,
extended instrumental jam towards the end of “We Looked Like Giants,” when
Gibbard showed off his drumming skill, but it was when they transitioned
flawlessly into “The Sound of Settling,” that the crowd just about lost it.
That chorus of “Pa pa/ This is the sound of settling/ Pa pa/ Pa paaa…,” with a
tent-ful of fans singing along, must’ve been heard outside the venue and
halfway around the world. After the main set, the band came back for four more
songs, which included “Home Is A Fire,” “Meet Me On The Equinox” (from the OST
of “Twilight Saga: New Moon”), “A Movie Script Ending,” and the big finish, “Transatlanticism.”
Nick Harmer, Ben Gibbard, Chris Walla and Jason McGerr. Walla has since left the band and has been replaced by touring members Dave Depper and Zac Rae |
“On behalf of my
bandmates,” Gibbard said, “I have to apologize. This is the first time we’re in
Manila. If we’d have only known you guys would be this awesome we would’ve come
a lot sooner.” Expectedly, the crowd screamed their approval and I nearly went deaf. “I have
a feeling this is the first day of a long and beautiful friendship,” he added.
Somehow,
onstage and in songs, the sensitive singer-songwriter always seems to know what
to say. Funny that this is the first time Manila and Death Cab For Cutie have
met and already the relationship feels familiar and fun. We can only hope it
won’t take long before we welcome our old friends back.
Death Cab For Cutie will headline this year's Wanderland Music Festival, happening this Saturday, March 5, 2016 at the Circuit Grounds, Makati. Doors open at 12nn. For more information, visit <wanderlandfestival.com>
Email
pjcana@gmail.com or follow me on Twitter and Instagram @pauljohncana
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