We Love Music: A Perfect Circle @ DAR Constitution Hall, 7/17/11

A Perfect Circle 1
All photos courtesy of A Perfect Circle

When I heard that A Perfect Circle was coming to DAR Constitution Hall, I had a ton of questions. The band has been on hiatus for seven years; Maynard’s been working with Tool, Billy Howerdel formed Ashes Divide, and the other members ran off with Smashing Pumpkins, Marilyn Manson and Nine Inch Nails. Why reform the band? Do they still have ‘it’? Are they going to ruin my positive memories of the group? I’m pretty much required to go to this, having seen them and Tool every chance I’ve ever gotten, right?

When the songs were right, the show was fantastic. These guys are actually capable of writing beautiful songs, with rich harmonies and epic crescendos that moved the entire audience. But their setlist was tragic. Out of their three studio albums, the setlist was weighted heavily towards 2004’s Emotive, a political album about the Iraq war that they rushed to release in time for the 2004 election. This isn’t just my opinion; it is objectively true that Emotive is no fan’s favorite album. It’s an album of cover songs! That means almost half of the show wasn’t even original A Perfect Circle material! That might be okay for a bar band, but not for a major group that’s selling out DAR. I can’t think of a show I’ve seen that defied fan’s hopes and expectations more than this one.


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I mean, at this point in my fandom, I have to acknowledge that Maynard James Keenan likes to fuck with his fans. From all the leaks of fake tracklistings for new albums, to his joke band Puscifer, to his vineyard in Arizona, Maynard has to be the most enigmatic, least trustworthy frontmen out there. I understand what his music’s about, but I have no idea what he’s about. So to mess with us before A Perfect Circle’s set even started, Maynard chose a bizarre mix of showtunes as the vamp music – I guess he likes West Side Story? I also wonder how he chose the opening band, Red Bacteria Vacuum. They were a kickass, all-female noise group from Japan; they had a ton of energy and let out some great screams, so no complaints from me!

I thought the show had a lot of promise early on; after a slow opening (their cover of John Lennon’s “Imagine”, ugh), they ripped into “Weak and Powerless”, the first single from Thirteenth Step. I remembered when this track came out when I was in college; man, was I excited! I still knew every word to the song, and they delivered a great performance. The lighting was colorful, selectively illuminating their battlefield of a stage. (By ‘selectively illuminating’, I mean, they somehow managed never to shine light directly on Maynard. This wasn’t really surprising, as his modus operandi in his band Tool is to hide behind a curtain, revealing only his shadow.) Their next track “The Hollow” gave me chills; that track still sounds as fresh as when I played Mer de Noms for the first time, in my car driving home from Best Buy, and instantly knew I’d love this band.

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Oh, if only they’d kept up that energy level! The rest of their setlist alternated between their original songs that the fans love, and a bunch of covers that just drained the auditorium of any spark. Tracks from Emotive made up 10 songs – over half! – of their set. Now, I would argue that two of these would’ve been fine in the set: “Passive”, a track Maynard originally wrote for the abandoned Tapeworm project, was a strong anthem; “Counting Bodies” had one of the best audience reactions of the night, with some cool strobe effects and booming bass. And at least a few of the covers – “Annihilation” and “Gimme Gimme Gimme”, were re-worked enough that they sounded fresh. They used vocal melodies instead of the chanting monotone on the album. They still weren’t good songs, though. Even the people who stood up in their seats, headbanged, and lost control of their arms in a fit of fan-dom wound up taking time during the cover songs to hit the beer line, or just sit and rest their legs.

I’m fully aware that it’s cliche to complain about a band only playing their newer material, or forgetting your favorite songs. But this was just absurd; Emotive came out seven years ago and sucked then, and I expected the band would just admit by now that they were trying to close out their record contract and call it quits. I wanted to figure out why A Perfect Circle is back; whatever their reason, I can’t understand why they felt Emotive was important or entertaining enough to merit this much attention. You know, I did enjoy their new song, “By and Down” – it had their usual, dark alt-rock sound with minimalist riffs — and some post-rocky instrumental moments, which was definitely an interesting change that I hope they explore further. But it doesn’t sound like they’re working on a full-length album, so it was a teaser for nothing. It’s like they’re saying, ‘We can write songs you’ll love, even a decade after we formed, but instead we’re going to play a bunch of other band’s songs.’ What a bunch of jerks.

Martin Silbiger

Martin moved from Atlanta to DC in 2007. He works as a software developer for Soundexchange, a non-profit royalty administration organization. A self-proclaimed metal snob, Martin loves bands that push into unexplored territory. He also writes about pop culture here.

7 thoughts on “We Love Music: A Perfect Circle @ DAR Constitution Hall, 7/17/11

  1. Thank you! Most of their fans can’t seem to admit how disappointed they actually were.

    I saw them in Vegas this fall when they played only Thirteenth Step, and it was amazing. The DAR show put me to sleep.

    I knew that he liked to mess with his fans, but I really wish I would have saved the money.

  2. Hah! You know, at least it sounded so little like 3 Libras that I thought of it more as “playing a shitty song from their remix album that I’d like to forget even exists” than “ruining one of my favorite songs”.

  3. i paid $10 for this show and i felt ripped off. there was only one good song toward the end, had kind of a tribal vibe. i want my $ back. the asian chick opening act might have been better.

  4. wow. you’re calling puscifer a joke band?
    apparently you missed the 2 shows he played at the lincoln theater in feb. of 2010. those 2 shows alone far exceeded the tool show i saw the previous summer (’09 at patriot center). I think Puscifer’s a brilliant side project of his and don’t think it’s a “joke” at all. If it were why would he release material and tour for it?

    and to comment on the first comment: most of the fans can’t admit how disappointed they are, because they aren’t disappointed. the true fans are just happy they reunited and decided to tour. which we all thought would never happen. i found the show incredible. but i also happen to like emotive and their remixes too so i guess you can call me crazy.

  5. Mel your are exactly right. Thank you for setting the reviewer and other commentors straight. I thought it was an excellent show but then I really like Emotive. It is unique. Let’s turn this around. Perhaps the folks that are bashing most of the Emotive songs just can’t accept the that album was a departure for APC but nonetheless very good. APC gave folks a chance rediscover with this show how good it really is. But, some folks could not get past their thoughts of Emotive when it was released and listen with fresh ears. Sad!