Sceneazine Jul. 2014 | Page 4

4 hood pub) the opening chords of the evening’s opener, AudioShot, began to rumble from the stage. A mix of classic and 90’s era rock, the hits kept coming…. a perfect prequel to the show we had all come to see, the climax of the musical ménage a trois that we were all eager and willing participants in this night: The… (energy continuing to build!) climactic return to the stage, after a three-month hiatus, of Columbia, SC’s own Stardog! S An Evening with Stardog by Wil Clement I t was a humid, downright sultry evening in Irmo, SC as I walked toward the entrance to Hemingway’s, a local ‘beer and pretzel’ pub by day, live music hall by night - and the sweat was already beginning to bead on my forehead as I approached the door. Kinda excited, I was. As I drew closer to the entrance, I noticed something else in the air besides the humidity… there was an energy: a palpable electricity of the sort that seems to be all-too-rare at concert events these days. The energy reminiscent of days gone by, when, as you entered the doors to a concert (think Carolina Coliseum) you wondered who you would see there. Who would they be with…what would they be wearing? The energy that, as you stand in line for your pre-concert refreshments, electrifies you and compels you to hurry to your seat to catch your first glimpse of the stage, and eagerly chat with those around you about the band and their show on this tour. A s Michelle and I took our seats, after the precursory tour around the concert hall (so transformed from the normal unbecoming neighbor- tardog, a group composed of well-seasoned and travelled rock veterans Artie Joyner- stylistic frontman with ‘ole Ironlung/ Dio-esqu pipes, Beau Long- talkin’, no…wailin’, no… SCREAMIN’ guitars, Dale Raszewski- thunder from beyond Down Under fretless bass, Jayson Moore- Rockenfield meets Aldridge meets in-yo-face drums, and keyboardist Mark Foy-that seamless, necessary touch that ties it all together, have accomplished their mission of bringing an urgency and musically-sexual innocence back to the sound of modern music with the thespring release of their self-titled EP this year. The same urgency that was unmercifully stripped from the scene with the onslaught of the much-ballyhoo-ed scowling Seattle bands of the early 90’s. The grunge sound… ugh. The grunge look…ugh-LY! An urgency that I, for one, welcome back. T his night: June 27, 2014… a date that will live in infamy, Hemingway’s is invaded by the forces of the Empire of hard-rock. In this dastardly blow to the false ‘peace-bystinging-reality’ promised and enforced by the Seattle Treaty of 1990, perhaps we may enjoy a return to a simpler time, if not music, envisioned by the country of Led Zeppelin, nestled in the Mountains of Rush, on the continent of Dio, bordered by Black Country and protected by The Foo Fighters teamed with the Kiss Army. Bye-bye, Seattle Accord, hello Stardog. O n this night, Stardog does not disappoint. From the opening strains of the intro to their mega-hit Black Mountain Rain (from which they Artiefully (sic) segued into Dirty Flower, we are thankfully bombarded with the kind of fist-pumping music that really does make one want to get up, move your feet and lose your seat. It is truly a testament to the values that these guys built Stardog upon that they even pulled the evening off: Artie Joyner, frontman, had been battling a throat infection, yet insisted the show must go on… what a work ethic, and what a show it was! You know, it is one thing to cram a bunch of lights onstage and howl cover songs at a drunken audience week after