I started having my Gram drop me off at shows for local high school bands when I was about 13 or 14. Since I didn't have much musical talent myself, I was always awestruck by kids close to my age who could shred guitar or go nuts some drums. At that age my friends and I mostly just drank ginger ale and ate pretzel knots at basement shows. My very first real rock show was when I went to see Orgy on tour with Crazytown (pre-shitty "Butterfly" song) sometime in '99-'00 at Bogart's in Cincinnati. They were hot off the first ever Family Values tour, which is a live album that I still queue up on the iPod to this day. Torrent that one if you don't have it. Mind you, this was long before Bogart's became the vile cesspool that it is today. My boys and I stood in the back and tried not to be noticed. We barely even nodded our heads to the beat. I still have that ticket stub somewhere, not because the show was all that great, because I remember it as the start of something wonderful...
Anyone else remember this album cover? It was EVERYWHERE! |
I digress...I was at that particular show to catch P.O.D. At that time they were a virtually-unheard-of rap metal band who marketed themselves as a straight-edge, straight laced, band of Christian brothers whose primary objective was to spread the teachings of God. Today they still have the same beliefs, but their fan base has gotten so big they chose not to estrange anyone by pushing their beliefs on them. (Maybe someday when my fan base is big enough I'll make peace with Oprah, and Double-K..wouldn't want anyone to feel left out...) Even their name, P.O.D., stands for Payable on Death and is a reference to a persons sins in life ultimately leading to how they will spend eternity. The symbol on all of their album covers represents the Holy Trinity and is also featured on the cover of the New King James version of the bible. With all the religious "turn he other cheek", "the meek shall inherit the earth", and "do unto others" mumbo jumbo that book has in it, I figured I should be pretty safe. If I came into harms way for whatever reason, God, in all his glory, would protect me right? Someone should have told me that God forgot about Bogart's a long time ago....
Not King James. |
One particular group of P.O.D.'s fans referred to themselves as Jah Warriors. Sounds pretty pussy right? WRONG! They were all 6'18" tall and were 432lbs rock solid skin heads with tribal tattoos. I hadn't hit my growth spurt yet, so naturally, I was terrified of these gladiators. They obviously smelled my fear and proceeded to beat the living piss out of me in my very first mosh pit experience. The set was about 12 songs in length. It was a bloodbath. A baptism by fire welcomed me with open arms to the world of rock-n-roll. During my 'initiation' I got headed-butted in the face (not by accident) and then kneed in the stomach hard enough to make me vomit on some unfortunate girl's back...Wherever you are now, pukeskank, I owe you an apology too. Pride would not let me leave the pit no matter how many teeth I'd lost, and in the end Sonny, the lead singer, gave me props for taking my licks. "Check out that crazy bloody dude! You having a good time?? *thumbs up* Awesome man!" We eventually hung out with P.O.D. and the Warriors outside for a couple of hours once the show ended. They skated some and we talked about music, touring, Jesus, and some other random topics. In my typical, angsty, and insecure adolescence I felt truly accepted by them. It might seem lame now, but I belonged with those neanderthals. My little ego grew three sizes that day. I wouldn't learn until later that not all bands and their fans were as cool as those guys..
This is one of the Warriors I met at the show. His name is Tom. We still talk. |
To Be Continued....
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