FLYING COLORSÂ – Live In Europe (2013 Mascot Music)
There hasn’t been a new band that got me going like Flying Colors did in a dog’s age. Â Their 2012 debut is a fantastic album, and it’s only grown on me more since I first reviewed it. Â Songs like “Kayla”, “The Storm”, and “Shoulda Coulda Woulda” had me hooked on repeat — in the car, at home, it didn’t matter. Â Flying Colors has been on constantly for months.
That’s why I decided to get the double Live In Europe CD. Â I had to have more. Â Who cares that it’s a double live album immediately following a debut! Â All 11 songs from that album are here, plus covers and songs from each member’s past. Â I am glad to report that Live In Europe is as stunning as the debut, even over its long running time. Â When you have a band made up of guys like Mike Portnoy, Steve Morse, Dave LaRue, Neal Morse and Casey McPherson, you can count on a live show full of explosive instrumental pyrotechnics. Â And that is present. Â But it’s the quality of the songs and the humour of the band that makes it special.
The band open the set with three album tracks in a row, each different from the last. Â “Blue Ocean” is the long, breezy opener, which is followed by the pummeling “Shoulda Coulda Woulda”. Â Then, “Love Is What I’m Waiting For” is more soulful. Â All three are outstanding songs with stunning playing.
Portnoy does most of the talking, but Casey McPherson gets the first solo outing. Â “Can’t Find a Way” is from his former band Endochine, but played by Flying Colors, it fits seemlessly in the set. Â Its soft vibe is similar to some of the quieter material on Flying Colors, and McPherson’s emotive vocals set it apart. Â Steve Morse throws down one of his classic solos and seals the deal. Â This powerful number could have been on the album easily. Â They follow this one with my favourite song, “The Storm,” and the whole place ignites.
From 1978’s What If album comes the Dixie Dregs’ “Oddyssey”. Â Since Flying Colors don’t have a violin player, it’s very different, but every bit as jumpy and complicated. Â Coming back to something a little more straightforward, the band rock out to “Forever In A Daze.” Â Then McPherson stuns the crowd with Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah”. Â Yeah, it’s been a trendy song to cover lately, but when you pull it off as well as MacPherson does, why not?
The first CD ends with a mellow “Better Than Walking Away,” and by now a Flying Colors concert already feels like an emotionally uplifting experience. Â It is a song like this that underlines not just the chops, but the melodic tendencies of this band. Â It’s always fun to listen to a bunch of guys shred for 90 minutes, but it’s even better when they play a bunch of great songs, too.
The second CD commences with “Kayla,” which to me is already a classic. Â The vocal harmonies of Neal Morse and Casey McPherson really dance. Â After this, Mike Portnoy takes over, at the request of Neal Morse, sings lead on his “Fool In My Heart.” Â I quite this swinging little ballad, and there’s nothing wrong with Portnoy’s vocal. Â Dave LaRue’s solo piece, “Spur of the Moment,” leads into a Dream Theater classic. Â “Repentance,” from 2007’s excellent Systematic Chaos, is part of Mike’s “12 Step Suite.” Â As such it’s only fitting that he sings it himself. Â It’s not the whole 10 minute version, it’s pretty much just the first half, “Regret.” Â But it is every bit as powerful as Dream Theater’s original, yet very different.
From 1998’s The Kindness Of Strangers, Neal Morse performs “June” by Spock’s Beard. Â This bright ballad enables McPherson and Portnoy to harmonize very nicely with Morse. Â It’s certainly a nice respite before the slamming “All Falls Down.” Â After the band lays waste with that tune, it’s only epics from there forward. Â From the album, 8 minutes of “Everything Changes” is only topped by 12 minutes of “Infinite Fire”. Â While these two are still “songs,” the shredders get their wishes granted with some long-bomb jams.
In a band like Flying Colors, you can’t single out any one player as an MVP. Â It seems like a band powered by all five members equally. Â Having said that, Steve’s Morse’s guitar solos are always a treat, and it also a pleasure to hear the rhythm section of LaRue and Portnoy gel like this. Â They give the whole album a tremendous pulse. Â Turn up your bass and see what I mean.
5/5 stars
