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Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Queens of the Stone Age Provide a Soundtrack for Stoners at the Fox Theater

Posted By on Tue, Apr 12, 2011 at 8:52 AM

Queens of the Stone Age frontman Josh Homme at a recent performance. - TODD OWYOUNG
  • Todd Owyoung
  • Queens of the Stone Age frontman Josh Homme at a recent performance.
Queens Of The Stone Age

April 11, 2011
@ Fox Theater, Oakland

Better than: Getting stoned in your bedroom and watching TV.

Remember that scene in True Romance when Alabama Worley is reflecting on her day of blood, death, and mayhem with her husband, Clarence? And she says that the three words running around her head during the chaos were simply "You're so cool, you're so cool, you're so cool"?

Well, it's difficult not to start this evening doing the same thing while you watch Queens of the Stone Age frontman Josh Homme. He might have a tendency to resort to a fair amount of clichés while talking to the crowd tonight ("You know what you should do? You should do whatever the fuck you wanna do!" he announces at one point before proudly smoking a joint), but -- gosh darn it -- you'd struggle to find a cooler human anywhere. And at one point this evening, he manages to inhale smoke; sing an entire sentence, note-perfect; exhale quickly; and then carry on singing without missing a beat. That's practically a magic trick. Josh -- also swigging regularly from a large bottle of vodka -- isn't the only one smoking, either. As you enter the grand doors of the Fox, the smell of weed hits you immediately. And as you get further into the venue, you realize that the fog in the room isn't a smoke machine, it's the audience getting stoned. It's a good job they're doing so, because this evening's set is aimed squarely at the stoners

TODD OWYOUNG
  • Todd Owyoung
Sure, there is incredible depth and power throughout the show -- "How to Handle a Rope" is particularly impressive, for example -- but it's difficult to appreciate that gargantuan wall of spiraling, rhythmic, multilayered, echoing noise for an entire set, when the tone never gets switched up and the pace never changes. It's just too easy for slow burn to turn into fizzle. Is this a perfect soundtrack to a night on a bong? Absolutely. But, for the nonsmokers here, it can get pretty repetitive -- even "Monsters in the Parasol" is lacking some oomph tonight.

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