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D Generation took the stage fashionably late for their midnight show at Coney Island High in downtown NYC on Friday, June 27, 1997. When they tore into the opening number, "No Way Out," I looked at my watch and it read 1:48 a.m. No matter, it was a good, head-twisting opener and the wave of bodies in the sardine can otherwise know as Coney Island seemed to respond well to it. Was it crowded on Friday night? Lets just say if a fire broke out, we would have all been toast. The last time I saw D Gen was in the larger environs of Irving Plaza, a little under a year ago, and I think its safe to say that the band thrives under these packed, sweaty situations. Behind a sea of people, Jesse Malins torso juts out from the crowd as hes suspended on someones shoulders. When he cold-cocks the microphone stand, its as if hes telling you that youre next in line if you dont watch your step. |
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The bands stage persona doesnt seem to have changed much in the past year. Between angst-ridden verses, Malin still paces the stage like a man with all of Travis Bickles rage and fury. (His hair extensions appear to have grown longer, however, and at this point he reminds me a little of the Statue of Liberty.) Bassist Howie Pyro still looks cool, his head jerking to-and-fro in epileptic seizures. Guitarists Richie Bacchus and Danny Sage do a good teeth-rattling job of pumping out a wall of sound on top of Michael Wildwoods steady pulse of percussion. |