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    Bush concert review

    '90s alt-rock legends Bush keep Everything Zen at Houston concert

    Johnston Farrow
    Sep 6, 2024 | 5:59 am
    '90s alt-rock legends Bush keep Everything Zen at Houston concert

    The Nineties are back, baby.

    The power of sweet nostalgia was on full display in front of 4,000 fans at 713 Music Hall on Thursday night, there to see the avatar of post-grunge cool in the form of chisel-jawed Bush frontman Gavin Rossdale. Headlining a bill of who’s-who acts from that decade, the band is on the road promoting its latest release, Loaded: The Greatest Hits.

    Gaining popularity at the peak of the Seattle sound, Bush went on to be a favorite alt-rock group of their era. With over 24 million records sold, 1 billion streams, and a string of No. 1 singles, it’s hard to turn on the car radio or go to a sporting event without hearing one of their tracks. For better or worse, the band’s success was also a sign of the shift towards heavier, yet catchy, names on alt-rock radio.

    It would be a disservice not to mention the solid opening lineup that included Bones UK, the Seattle-based rock act Candlebox, and Alice in Chains guitarist/songwriter Jerry Cantrell. Known for hit singles such as "You" and "Far Behind," Candlebox put in a respectable set. The uber-talented and influential axe-slinger Cantrell’s slot was gratefully heavy on Alice in Chains songs, including a ferocious “Man in the Box,” “Would,” and “Rooster,” with vocalist Greg Puciato coming across as a sonic spitting image of the late-Layne Staley.

    After a quick break, the now 58-year-old Rossdale emerged on stage and immediately put every middle-aged man in the building to shame, a specimen dressed in a white jacket, black trousers, and trainers. Rossdale’s stage presence this evening amounted to a 90-minute pogo aerobics video punctuated by a hammering rhythm-guitar attack. The women in the crowd — and there were many — were appreciative to see the jacket come off to reveal a loose tank top for the rest of the gig, the Brit as lithe and ripped as ever.

    The extremely receptive audience was testament to the group’s pervasiveness and Rossdale’s resiliency as the only remaining member of the band’s original lineup. However, don’t be mistaken — Bush 2.0 featured an extremely talented guitarist in Chris Traynor, a flat-brimmed, cowboy hat-wearing assassin along with a powerful rhythm section in bassist Corey Britz and drummer Nik Hughes.

    We are nearly upon the 30th anniversary of Bush’s breakout album, Sixteen Stone, a multiplatinum monster that enthralled millions of young Americans in a way that a band from Britain rarely could at the time. Hit singles from that record bookended the night, starting with the one-two punch of debut single “Everything Zen” and stadium-anthem “Machinehead,” both sounding as exciting as they did years ago.

    Rossdale and co. showed they weren’t there to rest on their ‘90s laurels though, digging into their later career singles and deep cuts that showed their evolution as artists. The newer songs, such as “Bullet Holes” from 2020's The Kingdom and “Identity” from 2022’s The Art of Survival were heavier and sharper than their early input, veering into metal territory.

    Those heavier moments were interspersed with the superior singles Bush fans have come to know and love, such as “The Chemicals Between Us” from 1999’s The Science of Things and the setlist surprise of “Greedy Fly” from sophomore album Razorblade Suitcase, brighter and more dynamic than the original version.

    Highlights included an all-synth solo version of “Swallowed” from that same album, a remix that recalled Madonna’s “Like A Prayer,” Rossdale striking Christ-like poses in the white spotlights. Sixteen Stone banger “Little Things” closed out the main set in rousing fashion.

    Meanwhile, the encore brought it all together with the radio-hit opener “More Than Machines” with three out of the four band members adorned with Houston Astros Space City jerseys, a nice touch. A searing version of The Beatles’ “Come Together” threw back to Rossdale’s British upbringing.

    Suitably, the night ended with two other Sixteen Stone hits, the classic alt-ballad “Glycerine” and the still great “Comedown,” a guitar freakout ending the night on a high note.

    Rossdale seemed joyful during the evening, acting as the ringleader bringing the masses together. The crowd, decades on after Bush hit it big, was interspersed with teenage and pre-teen children enjoying the atmosphere with their Gen X and millennial parents.

    “Music brings people together, it’s a great form of communication,” he said before launching into “Flowers on a Grave,” another cut from The Kingdom that saw him walk through the amped-up crowd. “In this really lonely, crazy world, it’s really great to be together tonight.”

    Admirably, Bush staked a claim as an alt-rock institution that not only made an impact years ago, but one still breaking new ground, something few acts from the era can demonstrate. It was a high-wire act of mixing the old and new that often falls flat on its face, but in the case of the night's performance, worked perfectly. And as long a Rossdale looks and sounds the way he does, he’ll pull a healthy mix of fans to his shows for the foreseeable future.

    The Nineties are back, and based on tonight’s show, they’ve aged mighty well.

    Setlist
    Everything Zen
    Machinehead
    Bullet Holes
    The Chemicals Between Us
    Greedy Fly
    The Sound of Winter
    Identity
    All Things Must Change
    Swallowed
    Heavy Is the Ocean
    Flowers on a Grave
    Little Things

    Bush
      

    Courtesy Jeff Arnhart Photography/Rocking H-Town Live

    Bush revisted classic album Sixteen Stone at 713 Music Hall on September 6.

    Encore
    More Than Machines
    Come Together (Beatles cover)
    Glycerine
    Comedown (with Jerry Cantrell)

    concertsconcert review
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    Movie Review

    New horror film M3GAN 2.0 turns up the campy fun of the original

    Alex Bentley
    Jun 27, 2025 | 1:01 pm
    M3GAN in M3GAN 2.0
    Photo by Geoffrey Short/Universal Pictures
    M3GAN in M3GAN 2.0.

    When a studio releases a movie in January (aka Dumpuary), the general rule of thumb is that they’re trying to get rid of a movie that isn’t very good. Of course, there are exceptions to every rule, as M3GAN was in 2023, which rode the comedy of a killer AI robot who likes to dance to over $180 million worldwide.

    A sequel was a given, and now with a built-in fanbase, M3GAN 2.0is a prime summer release. After running into trouble with her robot invention, Gemma (Allison Williams) has seemingly seen the error of her ways, now focused on creating things like a mechanical exoskeleton that can benefit society. Little does she know that the code she used to create M3GAN (aka Model 3 Generative Android) has been co-opted to create AMELIA (Ivanna Sakhno), a new robot which is being used for nefarious purposes.

    Naturally, the only thing to do is to bring M3GAN (played by Amie Donald, voiced by Jenna Davis) back from the “dead,” which is easy to do because — surprise! — she has been lurking inside the smart house in which Gemma and her niece Cady (Violet McGraw) now live. The inevitable showdown between the two robots is alternately helped and hindered by people like billionaire Alton Appleton (Jemaine Clement), fellow tech entrepreneur Christian (Aristotle Athari), co-worker Cole (Brian Jordan Alvarez), and others.

    Written and directed by Gerard Johnstone, who also directed the first film, M3GAN 2.0 doesn’t stray from the original formula, delivering way more laughs than scares. Because there’s a familiarity with the character, Johnstone leans into the campy side of things, essentially winking at the audience for much of the film. Whether it’s temporarily imprisoning M3GAN in an innocuous desktop robot or a number of one-liners, there is a lot of comedy to be found.

    The film is a type of horror, though, and it delivers in the mild, PG-13 way that won’t offend non-horror fans. AMELIA (aka Autonomous Military Engagement Logistics and Infiltration Android) gives off Terminator vibes, and she lays waste to virtually all challengers. M3GAN doesn’t get to show off her skills as much as she did last time, which might be a tad frustrating for some, but she gets in enough punches and kicks for the experience to be worth it.

    The story itself starts off strong before devolving into an overly complicated mess. The arc of AMELIA is particularly strange, as the strength of her powers and the level of her autonomy seem to change at will in the second half of the film. Gemma develops a rivalry with another character that might have worked better if it had been hinted at early in the film instead of being dropped in as a surprise.

    Davis’ voice performance as M3GAN is once again fantastic, as she delivers sarcasm and menace equally well. Sakhno isn’t asked to do much but look terrifying, and she accomplishes that job. Williams is up and down in her role, stronger in the moments when she’s not being asked to prove her tech bona fides. Clement is his usual over-the-top self, which suits his character.

    As with the first film, if you go into M3GAN 2.0 not expecting anything more than some goofy violent robot action, you’ll walk away satisfied. The unlikely breakout hit for Blumhouse Productions may not be able to support a good story, but it entertains in the way it’s supposed to do.

    ---

    M3GAN 2.0 is now playing in theaters.

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