Saved by My Chemical Romance

‘My Chem No.5′ – Bob the Builder Style

video by KyoCaz

August 24, 2007 Posted by savedbymcr | video | , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

My Chemical Romance – I’m not okay (old school version)

I prefer this video instead of the other one. Gee is so cute ;)

August 24, 2007 Posted by savedbymcr | video | , , , , , , , | No Comments Yet

Detroit News: My Chemical Romance electrifies crowd in Projekt Revolution tour

From the Detroit News:

The name at the top of the marquee said Linkin Park, but at the Projekt Revolution tour at DTE Energy Music Theatre Wednesday, the rap-rockers came in underdogs at their own concert.

Credit the crazed, show-stealing performance by My Chemical Romance, the New Jersey five-piece who didn’t waste any time on stage during their penultimate performance slot.

“Detroit!” frontman Gerard Way bellowed to the crowd of nearly 14,000 as soon as he took the stage. “We only have one hour to save the Earth. Are you with us?”

The crowd was with them, all right, and My Chem tore through an electrifying, high energy set that drew heavily from their grand, rock opera-esque 2006 release “The Black Parade.”

Geysers of flames and bursts of pyro erupted throughout the set, as Way — with the words “No War” scrawled across his neck — pranced around the stage in a fey yet ferocious manner.

The band carried itself like cartoon superheroes battling the forces of evil with their amped-up guitars and rock star poses, and occasionally indulged their rock star instincts.

At one point, at the close of “The Sharpest Lives,” guitarist Frank Iero attacked Way and tackled him for reasons known only to him.

Way — part ringleader, part prankster, all black-clad rock star — had fun playing with gender roles, goading the “boys” into the audience into taking off their shirts and wearing a feather boa during “Mama,” the studio version of which features guest vocals from Liza Minnelli (the two share more in common than you’d think).

The band and Way’s flare for the theatrical carried through to “Welcome to the Black Parade” and set closer “Cancer,” which found Way all alone at the center of the stage and backed only by a lone piano.

After My Chem’s 60-minute spectacle, Linkin Park had plenty to live up to. They poured it on thick, opening with three rousing hits from their catalog (“One Step Closer,” “Lying From You” and “Somewhere Where I Belong”), but gave the impression their forward progress has stalled.

Where “The Black Parade” marked a seismic leap in songwriting for My Chemical Romance, Linkin Park’s recent “Minutes to Midnight” album found the band was in a state of arrested development. It attempted to break the band out of its rap-rock roots but showed rap-rock is the best the band has to offer.

As did Wednesday’s show. The highlight came during set closer “Bleed It Out,” the new album’s blistering clap-along and one of two songs that lets rapper Mike Shinoda do his thing. The band extended the song, slowing it down and later speeding it up while the crowd clapped along.

Throughout Linkin Park’s 95-minute set, vocal shredding singer Chester Bennington prowled the stage like a gremlin, but his pained one-dimensional outcries — “shut up when I’m talking to you!” “the very worst part of you is me!” “put me out of my misery!” — revealed as much depth as a seventh-grader’s angst over doing chores.

The band sounded muscular throughout, but the new material — such as the meandering, vaguely celestial “The Little Things Give You Away” — stalled.

Though they’re the tour headliners, Linkin Park would do good to take a few cues from its opening act.

Wednesday’s 10-hour Projekt Revolution show — which was broadcast live on MySpace.com — also featured performances from Taking Back Sunday, HIM, Placebo, Mindless Self Indulgence and more.

August 24, 2007 Posted by savedbymcr | Uncategorized | , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

My Chemical Romance hits Pause

Here is an article from the Detroit News:

Here’s some news to make any My Chemical Romance fan wear black, if they weren’t already: Gerard Way says there won’t be another MCR album for quite awhile.

“I think it will be a couple of years before there’s another record,” says the MCR frontman, on the phone from New York last week. “I would say about 2009.”

Cue the tear-smeared eyeliner.

Way says the band will go on a hiatus of sorts “to really evaluate what the band is, to reshape it yet again,” following its 2006 epic “The Black Parade.” That album, an ambitious rock opera about life, death, hope and fear, established the New Jersey five-piece as one of today’s most ambitious and grandiose bands.

But don’t fret yet — touring commitments will keep the band on the road for the better part of the next year, and the band plays DTE Energy Music Theatre tonight as part of Linkin Park’s Projekt Revolution tour.

The pairing of the rap-rockers and MCR doesn’t seem natural at first — don’t Linkin Park fans beat up My Chem fans? — but Way says the billing is logical.

“Along the lines of their new material, I think it makes a lot of sense,” says Way, 30. “I think they took a giant risk and, creatively, they really pushed themselves, and I think they desired the same things out of this record we desired out of ours.”

To wit, Way saw “The Black Parade,” which has sold 1.2 million copies in the U.S., as a way to achieve “total separation from us and a lot of modern music, especially a lot of genre-specific modern music.” (He means emo, which he calls “garbage.”)

Mission accomplished.

“The Black Parade,” MCR’s third album and the follow-up to 2004’s “Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge,” was one of 2006’s most acclaimed releases, combining classic and modern-rock sensibilities. Equal parts Bowie, Queen, Green Day and Broadway, it put them on a plain altogether different from their peers.

Like most of MCR’s output, it is death-obsessed, a byproduct of Way’s Catholic upbringing.

But Way says, “I might be through with that subject.” He looks forward to refocusing the band “and come back with completely fresh ears and say, ‘What do we now want to say?’”

Meantime, Way says what he wants in his new Dark Horse comic “The Umbrella Academy,” a six-parter that debuts Sept. 19. It follows seven children raised by a space alien to save the world. Way describes it as “The Doom Patrol” meets “The Royal Tenenbaums.”

He’s writing it on tour, where he says he and his band have got a second wind after nearly bottoming out last winter. He hopes the energy carries through to the band’s next record, a long way off though it may be.

“You make a record if you have something to say,” Way says, in between puffs on a cigarette. “And I think I have at least one more great thing to say.”

One more great thing to say?! I say…

Let’s give them something to talk about!

No seriously, it’s disturbing to even consider only one more album in the future. It will end when they feel it’s time to end, I know… but I’m not ready. Although I’m not sure if I ever will be ready. I know they need a break, and I’m just hoping that they come back refreshed with a lot more to say. Events happen all the time that cause artists to want to speak out… in a way that’s almost how My Chem started… so perhaps it will happen in the future as well.

On a positive note… 2009 doesn’t seem so far off. Not that I expect it out then. Artists are usually six months to a year behind what they expect. It’s easier to see a date, though, than just hearing Gerard say they are taking a break. It just makes it seem likely that the band will in fact be back. My biggest fear was that they would take a few years off and decide they were done with the band.

Well, thankfully they will keep touring for awhile… maybe I will finally get to see them?

August 24, 2007 Posted by savedbymcr | Uncategorized | , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments